delivered the Opinion of the Court.
We granted certiorari to review the court of appeals' judgment in Grynberg v. Agri Tech, Inc.,
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In 1985, the Grynbergs invested in a cattle program administered by Respondents. Respondent Agri Tech, Inc. ("Agri Tech") was in the business of feeding cattle owned by its customers. Respondent A T Cattle Company, was an affiliate of Agri Tech, which was in the business of importing eattle from Mexico for Agri Tech and its customers. Respondent Morgan County Feeders was also an affiliate of Agri Tech, whose business was to lend money to Agri Tech's customers to cover the cost of purchasing, caring for, and feeding the cattle (Agri Tech did not require its customers to use the services of Morgan County Feeders).
Beginning in 1985, and continuing for five years, the Grynbergs invested approximately $95 million in 185,000 cattle using the services of Agri Tech and its affiliates. At the beginning of the relationship, the parties were operating without a written contract.
Over the course of the five year period, the Grynbergs became displeased with their investment returns. The Grynbergs ultimately sued Respondents, asserting both contract
Respondents appealed the judgment and the court of appeals reversed the judgment on the negligence claim, finding that the economic loss rule barred the assertion of this claim. The court concluded that Respondents breached no duty independent of their contractual obligations and, thus, the Grynbergs' claim for negligence could not stand.
We granted the Grynbergs' petition for writ of certiorari to review the judgment of the court of appeals.
II. ANALYSIS
The Grynbergs contend that the court of appeals erred in applying the economic loss rule to bar their negligence claim. This case, along with Town of Alma v. AZCO Construction, Inc.,
A. Economic Loss Rule
As we discussed in Town of Alma, id. at 1259, the economic loss rule emerged largely from the development of products liability jurisprudence. Although its initial development was in direct response to the emer-genee of strict liability in tort theories, its ° application is now much broader as it serves today to maintain the boundary between contract law and tort law. See id.
The proper focus in an analysis under the economic loss rule is on the source of the duties alleged to have been breached. Thus, our formulation of the economic loss rule is that a party suffering only economic loss from the breach of an express or implied contractual duty may not assert a tort claim for such a breach absent an independent duty of care under tort law.
The Grynbergs rely on several of our cases for the argument that our precedent dictates that they should be allowed to proceed on both negligence and contract theories We engaged in a discussion of three of these cases, Lembke Plumbing and Heating v. Hayutin,
Our holdings in these cases do not support the Grynbergs' contention that they should be permitted to maintain their negligence claim. Unlike these cases, the Grymbergs have not shown that any duty independent of the oral and written contracts was breached. As the court of appeals noted, the Grynbergs are seeking the same relief in both their contract and negligence claims: damages for the alleged failure of Respondents to properly manage the cattle investment program. The duties allegedly breached by Respondents were created by the contracts. The contracts between the parties imposed a duty of care on Respondents to care for the cattle according to the customary standards of the industry. The feeding agreement between the parties specifically requires Agri Tech to
Therefore, absent the duties imposed by the contractual relationship between the parties, there is no independent duty of care owed to the Grynbergs by Respondents. The Grynbergs assert that they are relying on Agri Tech's common law duty to design and implement the Grynbergs' investment program with the relevant standard of care. However, they cite no support for the existence of this common law duty of care, nor are we aware of any cases where we have recognized such a duty in this context. Moreover, the Grynbergs fail to explain how a "common law duty" would impose a different duty of care on Respondents than that already provided for by contract. This is a classic example of a case where the plaintiffs are seeking to recover damages for the loss of their bargain with defendants these are pure economic loss damages based on disappointed expectations. An action to recover damages for the loss of a bargain is the exclusive province of contract law. See Detroit Edison Co. v. NABCO, Inc.,
The Grynbergs also rely on our decision in Cooley v. Big Horn Harvestore Systems Inc.,
Unlike the facts in Cooley, all of the actions undertaken by Respondents in the instant case were called for in, and governed by, the contracts between the parties. Respondents did not provide any services to the Grynbergs that they were not already required to provide by the terms of the contracts. As discussed above, the contracts in this case imposed a duty on Respondents to administer a cattle program by purchasing, caring for, and selling cattle. The contracts explicitly required Respondents to care for the cattle according to the customary standards of the cattle industry. Because Respondents undertook to provide no services outside the seope of their contractual duties, we disagree with the Grynbergs' contention that our decision in Cooley lends support to their argument that they should be permitted to maintain their negligence claim.
We also disagree with the Grynbergs' argument that our decision in Webb v. Dessert Seed Co.,
The Grynbergs also rely on a series of cases in which we have allowed a tort action for purely economic loss in certain special cireumstances. We find these cases inapplicable to the resolution of the issue before us, because in each of these cases we recognized that the nature of the special relationship between the parties created an independent duty of care that supported a tort action even though the parties had entered into a contractual relationship. See Bebo Constr. Co. v. Mattox & O'Brien, P.C.,
IIH. CONCLUSION
In sum, we hold that the economic loss rule bars the Grynbergs' negligence claim in this case because the Grynbergs have alleged the breach of contractual duties only resulting in purely economic loss. As such, we affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.
Notes
. Testimony indicated that it was common in the industry to transact business without a written contract.
. We granted certiorari on the following issue:
Whether the court of appeals erred in holding that Petitioners' negligence claim against Respondents could not be maintained because it was based solely on the breach of a contractual duty and involved purely economic damage.
. In these cases recognizing special relationships, we have been careful to maintain the independent duty distinction between contract and tort actions. See, e.g., Greenberg,
. We also are not persuaded by the Grynbergs' reliance on Bayly, Martin & Fay v. Pete's Satire,
