'OPINION
Wayne and Helen Peters appeal the trial court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Donald Forster. Upon appeal, the *416 Peters claim that the trial court erred in granting Forster's motion for summary judgment on their claim of negligence, and raise the following restated issue: Does an independent contractor who performs work in knowing or negligent violation of applicable building codes owe a duty to third parties injured as a result of the defective condition where the work has been completed and accepted by the owner or general contractor.
We reverse.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In the summer of 1998, Earl and Avonda Hamm purchased from their daughter's neighbor a ramp to access their home. The Hamms were both in poor health, and Earl was bedridden in a hospital bed in the living room of the couple's home. Donald Forster, an independent contractor and landlord, agreed to have two of his employees transport and attach the pre-built ramp to the Hamm residence. The installation of the ramp was completed in a matter of hours, and Forster received approximately seventy-five dollars for the work. Forster testified that the ramp was too steep and in violation of the applicable building codes for handicapped ramps. However, he stated that he did not believe the ramp was to be used as a handicapped or wheelchair ramp. Forster was not familiar with the applicable building codes for ramps that are used for other purposes besides handicapped ramps.
On March 15, 1999, Wayne Peters delivered a meal to the Hamm residence. As he left the home, his feet slipped from underneath him on the ramp, and he fell and injured himself, He incurred more than $134,000.00 in medical bills and has been unable to work. The Peters subsequently filed a lawsuit against the Hamms, alleging they were negligent in the maintenance of the ramp. By amended complaint, Donald Forster was later added as a defendant. The Hamms were dismissed from the case after the claim against them was settled. Forster moved for summary judgment, which the trial court granted:
Upon review of facts and evidence presented at hearing on "Motion For Summary Judgment", [sic] the Court now having: considered the "Defendant's Motion For Summary Judgment" and being duly advised of the premises and pursuant to Trial Rule 56-B, does hereby grant the Defendant's motion and enters judgment for the Defendant, finding as a matter of law that the Defendant, Donald Forster, did not owe a duty to the Plaintiff, that his work was for [the Hamms].
| This work was done in accordance with their request, accepted, and paid for. The contract was a limited contract to move and reattach a ramp, not to construct or reconstruct a ramp. The Defendant was hired for a limited seope of employment, and complied with the requirements of that limited seope for the benefit of the property owner and in accordance with their wishes.
Appellant's Appendix at 1.
The Péters now appeal the trial court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Forster.
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
~ The purpose of summary judgment is to end litigation about which there can be no factual dispute and which may be determined as a matter of law. LeBrun v. Conner,
To succeed on a negligence claim, the Peters must prove that: 1) a duty was owed to them by Forster; 2) a breach of that duty by Forster; and 83) injury to them proximately caused by that breach. Wickey,
Forster argues that he owed no duty to the Peters because his work had been accepted by the Hamms. Indiana has long followed the rule that, in general, independent contractors .do not owe a duty of care to third parties after the owner has accepted the contractor's work. (Blake v. Calumet Constr. Corp.,
In determining whether acceptance occurred, several factors are evaluated and include whether: "'(1) the owner or its agent reasserted physical control over the premises or instrumentality; (2) the work was actually completed; (8) the owner expressly communicated an acceptance or release of liability; or (4) the owner's actions permit a reasonable inference that the work was accepted.'" Id. (quoting Blake,
*418
In Blake, our supreme court reexamined and reaffirmed the acceptance rule first established in Daugherty. Blake,
Applying the four factors in the acceptance inquiry, the court determined that there was insufficient evidence to establish that the owner had accepted the contractor's work as a matter of law. The only evidence that the contractor presented of acceptance was that it had been paid in full before the plaintiff's injury occurred. The court noted that there was no evidence in the record that the owner was satisfied with the contractor's work. The record was also silent about who controlled the premises at the time of the injury and whether the contract was completed according to specifications. Because of this lack of evidence of acceptance, the court held that the contractor was not entitled to summary judgment on the duty issue. Id. at 171-72.
The Blake court further stated that "[alithough contractors under Daugherty owe no duty to third parties after the owner has accepted the work, several exceptions have been carved out from this general rule." Blake,
The Blake court determined that the lack of a guardrail at a dark construction site was sufficient to present a jury question on the loading doeck's status as an imminently dangerous condition. Blake,
In Jacques v. Allied Bldg. Servs. of Indiana, Inc.,
*419 The record evidence on the four considerations identified in Blake is conflicting, when viewed in the light most favorable to Jacques, the nonmovant. First, Allied never had physical control of Marsh's premises, but it continued to assert the control that it did have-responsibility for maintenance of the sales floor-and never relinquished that responsibility to Marsh. The work was not completed because it was provided under an agreement to perform regularly-scheduled cleaning and on-demand service. Marsh never expressly communicated an acceptance to Allied. [The store manager] examined the store floor on the day that Jacques fell, and saw nothing wrong; however, he noted that a condition of slick wax would not be apparent by visual inspection. This evidence does not establish acceptance as a matter of law.
Id. at 609. We reiterated that "a visual inspection of the floor would not have revealed its condition." Id. at 610. Accordingly, even though there was a visual inspection by a manager, the wax build-up presented a latent defect.
Applying the above case law, we initially conclude that the Hamms accepted the work. Here, the work was actually completed, the Hamms reasserted physical control over the premises, and their actions in reoceupying the construction site permit a reasonable inference that the work was accepted. Although there is evidence that Mrs. Hamm did not expressly communicate an acceptance, the reasonable inference to be drawn from the evidence before us is that the work was in fact accepted.
This, however, does not end our inquiry. We must now examine whether either of the two exceptions to the acceptance rule are applicable here. We conclude that latent defects existed because the ramp failed to comply with the applicable building codes in effect at the time of the accident. Here, Forster installed a ramp, the quality of which did not comply with the building codes, and which created a dangerous condition that was not easily ascertainable by the Hamms. The latent defects, which were not discoverable by the Hamms reasonable inspection, revealed themselves after installation of the ramp. Forster, as the independent contractor, was in a better position to prevent the harm given his experience and expertise. Although he was not hired to build the ramp, but rather to install the ramp, he was better suited to take measurements, research the building codes, and determine if the ramp met the building code. ©
There was evidence that the ramp had multiple latent defects. Donald Richard, a registered forensic engineer hired as an expert, inspected the ramp after Peters fell. He issued a report in which he concluded in relevant part that:
In summary, based upon the information available at this time, I am of the opinion that:
In 1998, when the ramp was installed, the 1997 edition of the CABO One and Two Family Dwelling Code was in effect for the State of Indiana.
The ramp has 3 direct CABO Code violations, these include: >
Item # 1 The 21.4% slope exceeds the maximum allowed of 12.5%.
Item # 2 The 4-inch handrail gripping surface is less than the 4.71-inch minimum. :
Item # 3 The upper part of the ramp has no land and the lower end is undersized.
The handrail is loose and is not sufficiently anchor [sic] to provide the lateral resistance required to support the weight of an average adult.
The ramp is covered with a carpet that becomes slick when wet. °
*420 If the ramp had been used as a wheel chair ramp several additional violations would exist under the Indiana Hand-capped Accessibility Code, 'as stated in the last paragraph above.
Appellant's Appendix at 61.
Further, Mrs. Hamm denied in her deposition that Forster ever made her aware of the fact that the ramp did not meet building codes. She contends that she was not informed about the quality of the work. Meanwhile, Forster maintains that he was aware that the ramp did not meet the specifications for a handicapped ramp and that he was not aware of the building codes for an access ramp, such as the one he installed for the Hamms. In this case, the onus of determining whether latent defects existed in the ramp should not be placed upon the Hamms. Instead, Forster was in the better position to determine whether the ramp complied with the building codes. - Independent contractors should not be immune when they knowingly or negligently violate building codes. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Forster and remand for further proceedings.
We further note that the Peters point out in their brief that our supreme court in Blake put aside the issue of whether the acceptance rule should be abandoned in favor of the foreseeability rule, which is in effect in a majority of jurisdictions. The acceptance rule as adopted. in Indiana is the minority rule, and the Peters urge that it is. time for our supreme court to reexamine whether the reasons: giving rise to the rule apfily today. Our supreme court ree-ognized this in Blake: ,
Indiana law on these two points. mirrors RestapemEnt (SEconp) Or Torts § 385 (1965); see also Building Contractor's Liability: An Extension of MacPherson v. Bwick, 24 IND. L.J. 286 (1949) (presaging 'Second Restatement). Some more recent authority conditions the contractor's duty of care on general foreseeability principles, regardless of the time the work was accepted. W. KEEron, Prosser & Keston On Tus Law Or Torts 722-23 (5th ed.1984); but see 41 AM. JUR.2Z2D 'Independent Contractors § 78 & n. 52 (1995) (listing jurisdictions still following current Indiana approach). A Palsgraf-like foreseeability standard may have some advantages because it obviates possible confusion «caused by terms like "acceptance" or "imminently dangerous." Cf., eg., Heins v. Webster County,250 Neb. 750 ,552 N.W.2d 51 (1996) (discarding common-law distinction between invitees and licensees and holding that landowners owe duty of reasonable care, predicated upon foreseeability, to all persons lawfully on land). However, we do not consider in this case whether Indiana law should revisit the acceptance rule because this issue has not been briefed, and neither party has asked us to disregard established Indiana precedents.
Blake,
The Peters cite to the Modern Status of Rules Regarding Tort Liability of Building or Construction Contractor, T4 ALR. 5th 528, 544,
Reversed.
