McELVY, JENNEWEIN, STEFANY, HOWARD, INC., Appellant,
v.
ARLINGTON ELECTRIC, INC., J.F. Hoff Electric Co., a Joint Venture, Appellees.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Second District.
Anthony A.B. Dogali, Blasingame, Forizs & Smiljanich, P.A., St. Petersburg, for appellant.
James S. Telepman, Murphy, Reid, Pilotte & Ross, P.A., Palm Beach, for appellees.
PER CURIAM.
McElvy, Jennewein, Stefany, Howard, Inc., an architectural design firm, appeals a final judgment finding it liable in tort for negligently interpreting provisions of a construction contract betweеn the City of Tampa and its general contractor. We reverse.
The contract between the City and the architects concerned principally the design and specifications for construction of the Tampa Bay Performing Arts Center. It also required the architects to use good faith in advising the City on the interpretation and application of the plans and specifications *48 during construction. The architects had no duty to supervise the сonstruction or the general contractor with whom the City subsequently contracted to carry out the work.
The architects included in the design sophisticated state-of-the-art acoustical and theatrical systems. The specifications contained three approved suppliers of performance lighting systems Strand Century, Kliegl Brothers and Dilor Industries Ltd. When the architects had completed the design and specifications, the City solicited bids. Great Southwеst Corporation was the winning bidder as the general contractor. Great Southwest's bid had included the appellees as its chosen electrical subcontractors. The appellees own subcontracting bid, which is considered part of the larger general contractor's bid, listed Dilor as their performance lighting supplier. The bid proposals became part of the construction contract and construction began in 1984.
The appеllees soon began experiencing problems with Dilor's performance. There were rumors to this effect which reached the City's representatives as well as the architects' representatives on the constructiоn site. These problems became a subject of discussion among the City's on-site project manager, the architects' representative, and the general contractor at certain progress meetings. In August, 1984, the appellees finally requested in writing to the general contractor that they be allowed to switch to another approved supplier. The City denied this request in a letter dated December 26, 1984, to the general contractor. The City's denial was based, in part, on the architects' advice. The City determined that the appellees had not provided sufficient substantiation to grant the request. In February 1985, Dilor withdrew from the project. The appellees then renewed their request to use another approved supplier and, since Dilor was unwilling to perform, this request was granted.
The appellees filed a suit against the architects contending that if the architects had correctly interpreted the contract between the City and the general contractor, by applying the correct standard to their request to switch suppliers, the appellees would not have been economically damaged. The damages the appellees claimed they suffered resulted from the delays caused by the architects using the stricter "substitution" standard for changing suppliers under the contracts instead of the easier to meet "сontractor option" standard. The architects consistently argued throughout pretrial and trial phases that the appellees could not state a cause of action in tort against them for recovery of their рurely economic losses since there was no duty owed to the appellees under the architects' contract with the City and there was no claim for personal injury or property damage. The jury ultimately returned a vеrdict finding that the architects had negligently breached a duty owed the appellees under the City-architect contract.
We agree with the architects that A.R. Moyer, Inc. v. Graham,
Cases attempting to apply Moyer to a given set of facts underscore the necessity that supervisоry duties exist in order to allow a case to be tried under a tort theory where the plaintiff lacks privity or status as an intended third-party beneficiary. First American Title Insurance Co. v. First Title Service Company of the Florida Keys,
Although we conclude that Moyer doеs not support an affirmance because the supervisory element is lacking, we consider whether there is a remaining theory under which the judgment can be affirmed. See Escambia County v. Stichweh,
In light of the provisions of this contract to advise and consult, neither Moyer nor First American Title support a view that intended third party beneficiary status exists here. On the foreseeability of injury issue we look to Max Mitchell, where the supreme court adopted the Restatement (Second) of Torts, section 552 (1976), approach to an accountant's duty to provide information in a non-negligent manner. The supreme court was persuaded to adopt this approach because it saw the wisdom in limiting liability to those persons or classes of persons whom an accountant knows will rely on his opinion rather than on those he "should have known" would rely on it. The supreme court considered this preferable because the accountant does not control his client's accounting records nor the distribution of his financial reports and opinions. Max Mitchell,
Here, the architects contracted with the City of Tampа to draw plans and specifications and to render thereafter good faith advice to their client on a continuing basis in interpreting those plans and specifications in a consulting capacity. The architects did not agree to render the ultimate decision on the interpretation of the contracts. They knew that the client, the City, would use their advice in whatever manner it saw fit in reaching a final decision. They also should have known that the cоntractors, *50 both general and subs, would be impacted by the City's final decision although any reliance by a contractor would be on the City's final decision and not on the architect's advice. Like accountants, this is the point wherе an architect's reasonable liability should end. As the supreme court said of the accountant's role:
[The Restatement (Second) standard] balances, more so than the other standards, the need to hold accountants to a standard that acсounts for their contemporary role in the financial world with the need to protect them from liability that unreasonably exceeds the bounds of their real undertaking.
Max Mitchell,
This rationale and result accord with Goldman wherein the fifth district affirmed a judgment on the pleadings in favor of a roofing consultant who had been sued by the roofing subcontractor for negligently evaluating the roof job and advising the owner to reject it. The court found that there was insufficient "nexus" between the allеged cause of the injury, i.e., the advice of the consultant, and the plaintiff's economic loss. The roof consultant had nothing to do with the design or construction of the roof and had only undertaken to render an opinion to thе owner on how well the roof had been built. The architects in the case before us did undertake the design of the plans and specifications but those plans and specifications are not the basis upon which the appellees here sought recovery from the architects. The appellees sued the architects solely on the theory that the architects negligently rendered advice to the City that the appellees had not met the substitution of supplier standard under the contract. We find, like Goldman, that such alleged cause of injury provided an insufficient nexus here, too.
The final judgment in favor of the appellees is reversed and the cause is remanded to the trial court with instructions to enter a judgment in favor of the architects.
Reversed and remanded.
SCHOONOVER, C.J., and SCHEB and THREADGILL, JJ., concur.
