David Helms, Jr., was injured while working as an employee of a subcontractor on a residential construction project. Un
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der Bagley v. Insight Communications Co.,
(1) where the contract requires the performance of intrinsically dangerous work;
(2) where the principal is by law or contract charged with performing the specific duty;
(3) where the act will create a nuisance;
(4) where the act to be performed will probably cause injury to others unless due precaution is taken; and
(5) where the act to be performed is illegal.
Id. at 586.
Helms sued the general contractor, alleging that the general was liable for negligence of the sub under the second exceeption-a contractual or legal duty imposed on the general-based on the general's undertaking in the building permit to construct the project in compliance with applicable law. The trial court granted summary judgment to the general and the Court of Appeals affirmed, holding that this exception did not apply because there was no contractual or legal duty. Helms v. Carmel High Sch. Vocational Bldg. Trades Corp.,
We grant transfer, however, to address an alternative ground given by the Court of Appeals for affirming the trial court's grant of summary judgment to the general contractor. In PSI Energy, Inc. v. Roberts,
to the extent an independent contractor is employed to redress or correct a problem for the principal, even if the contractor's activity may be viewed as either intrinsically dangerous or may require precautions, employees of the contractor have no claim against the principal based solely on either acts of the contractor or the condition to be remedied, or some combination of both.
Id. at 958. This holding addressed both the first and fourth of the Bagley exceptions and disposed of the plaintiff's claim in Roberts.
As the Court of Appeals noted, however, our opinion (by this author) in Roberts went on to state that "in the absence of negligent selection of the contractor, an employee of the contractor has no claim against the principal based solely on the five exceptions to the general rule of nonli-ability for acts of the contractor." Id. In view of this language, the Court of Appeals reasonably concluded that Roberts ruled out a principal's liability under the second exeeption (contractual or legal duty) on which Helms relies. Helms,
As already noted, we agree with the Court of Appeals that the principal in this case had no contractual or legal obligation *347 to Helms, and for that reason affirm the judgment of the trial court.
