The plaintiff suffered serious injuries when struck by a motor vehicle in the course of his employment as a construction worker on a highway rebuilding project. After receiving workers’ compensation benefits from his employer,
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a subcontractor, he brought this action in tort against The Barletta Company, Inc. (Barletta), the general contractor on the project. A jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and assessed damages in the amount of $900,000.
1
After judgment entered on the verdict, the defendant moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial, see Mass.R.Civ.P. 50(b),
There was evidence from which the jury could find the following facts. On July 11, 1974, Barletta entered into a contract with the Department of Public Works (Department) to reconstruct a ten-mile length of Route 24 between Brockton and Bridgewater. The contract stated that Route 24 was a major high speed, high volume thoroughfare. Barletta subcontracted portions of the work to several independent contractors, including Richard F. Lyons, Inc. (Lyons). The plaintiff was employed by Lyons as a laborer on the project. One of the plaintiff’s responsibilities was the placement and removal of orange marker barrels of the type used to redirect traffic past highway construction sites. Each subcontractor on the job had employees whose responsibilities included the placement and removal of traffic barrels.
On the afternoon of September 26, 1974, the plaintiff was riding in a truck as a passenger, with his foreman as driver, *465 travelling southbound on the median strip that divided the northbound and southbound portions of the highway. The foreman observed several isolated traffic barrels on or near the white lines separating the passing lanes from the travel lanes on the southbound portion of the highway. Those barrels had not been placed in accordance with Department regulations. When the foreman saw the barrels, he realized that they had to be moved. He stopped the truck at the northernmost barrel, and the plaintiff began to remove the barrels from the highway onto the median strip. This process was repeated several times until the plaintiff was struck by a truck, driven by a person not connected with the project, which had come around a curve and was proceeding up a gradual incline in the highway. Three subcontractors of Barletta were working in the vicinity of the accident on the day in question but there was no direct evidence concerning which one had incorrectly placed the barrels in the roadway. The contract between Barletta and the Department incorporated the Department’s regulations which required Bar-letta to inspect the placement of the traffic control barrels set out by its subcontractors. After the accident, in addition to workers’ compensation benefits, the plaintiff received a settlement, prior to trial, from the driver of the truck that struck him.
1. Vicarious liability by virtue of inherently dangerous activity. Based on the foregoing evidence, the plaintiff contends that Barletta was vicariously liable for the negligence of one of its subcontractors in misplacing the marker barrels, on the ground that the subcontractors were engaged in inherently dangerous activity. For its part, Barletta argues that it was error to deny its motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict because the plaintiff was an employee of a subcontractor and not a member of the general public and that therefore Barletta could not, as matter of law, be held to be vicariously liable for any harm suffered by the plaintiff as a result of the negligence of any of Barletta’s subcontractors.
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In general, it has been held that “the employer of an independent contractor is not liable for physical harm caused to another by an act or omission of the contractor or his servants.” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 409 (1966).
Herrick
v.
Springfield,
The question presented by this case — whether the duty of care owed by the employer of the independent contractor who is performing inherently dangerous work, such as on a public highway, extends to employees of the independent contractor — has not been decided in Massachusetts. There is a marked split of authority on this point throughout the country. Several States have held that the vicarious liability doctrine as applicable to inherently dangerous activity does extend to employees of independent contractors.
Van Arsdale
v.
Hollinger,
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We have chosen to follow the latter view and hold that, in the circumstances of this case, an employer of an independent contractor cannot be held to answer for an injury to the employees of the independent contractor, occasioned by the negligence of that contractor or other independent contractors, solely on the basis that the work so delegated poses an inherent danger. Our result rests upon the rationale behind the development of the concept of vicarious liability for inherently dangerous work. That doctrine grew out of the basic premise that a landowner who requests the performance of work which is of such a nature that members of the general public will probably be injured unless special precautions are taken should not be allowed to evade liability through the device of a contract with an independent contractor.
Davis
v.
John L. Whiting & Son,
In reaching our decision, we have considered the availability of workers’ compensation benefits. Persons like the plaintiff who are injured on the job are not left without compensation. If, however, we permit recovery against Barletta on the basis of vicarious liability, not only would the plaintiff be able to collect more than an injured employee of Barletta, but also we would provoke a variety of consequences that could create an imbalance in the allocation of risks intended by the Legislature in enacting the comprehensive workers’ compensation statutes. See
Squillante’s Case,
*470 2. Direct liability of Barletta. As an alternative basis for the jury’s verdict, the plaintiff claims that Barletta was liable to him by virtue of its own negligence. He does not contend that any employee of Barletta placed the barrels improperly in the roadway. Rather, the plaintiff argues that there was sufficient evidence before the jury that Barletta was independently negligent in failing to supervise adequately the placement of the traffic barrels. Barletta contends that there was insufficient evidence to withstand its motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.
Viewed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff
(H.P. Hood & Sons
v.
Ford Motor Co.,
The record contains no evidence as to which of the several subcontractors operating in the vicinity of the accident site misplaced the traffic barrels. There was also no evidence that Barletta had failed to undertake periodic inspections of *471 the area on the day of the accident or was on actual notice of the misplacement of the barrels. There was no evidence about the length of time that the barrels had been present on the highway and consequently, no basis for a finding that Barletta was on constructive notice of any hazard.
Therefore, any verdict based upon a finding that the cause of the plaintiff’s injuries was the negligence of Barletta in failing properly to supervise the safety procedures undertaken by its subcontractors would “rest[ ] in surmise and conjecture.”
Currie
v.
Lee Equip. Corp.,
Because of our holding, we need not address the defendant’s third contention of error. The defendant’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict should have been granted. The judgment is reversed and the case remanded to the Superior Court for the entry of a judgment in favor of the defendant.
So ordered.
Notes
The jury, in response to special questions, found both the plaintiff and Barletta negligent, but attributed ten percent of that negligence to the plaintiff and ninety percent to Barletta.
At trial, the defendant had moved for a directed verdict at the close of the plaintiff’s case and at the close of all the evidence.
The Restatement (Second) of Torts contains twenty sections (§§ 410-429) devoted to the exceptions. One distinguished commentator has noted that the number of exceptions “is sufficient to cast doubt upon the validity of the rule.” Prosser, Torts 468 (4th ed. 1971). See also Whalen v. Shivek, supra at 150, which states that “it has been said with some plausibility that the general rule is ‘now primarily important as a preamble to the catalog of its exceptions.’”
Inherently dangerous work has been described as work which necessarily creates, during its progress, conditions containing an unreasonable risk of bodily harm to others unless special precautions are taken.
Ducey
v.
Springfield Co-op. Bank,
In addition,
Poirier
v.
Plymouth,
The Restatement (Second) of Torts has not taken sides in the controversy. All of the illustrations set out in §§ 410-429 which discuss the exceptions (see note 3,
supra)
refer only to the liability of those whose contract with an independent contractor for injuries to members of the general public. A Special Note in Tentative Draft No. 7, at 17-18 (1962) of the Restatement would have expressly excluded the employees of inde
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pendent contractors from recovery under all exceptions to the general rule. The Special Note was not included in the Restatement (Second). In
Hagberg
v.
Sioux Falls,
In the past, our courts have considered the distinction between the duty owed to members of the public and that owed to employees of an independent contractor to be significant. See
Burr
v.
Massachusetts Elec. Co.,
The plaintiff contends that Barletta was vicariously hable for his injuries on a second theory. According to the Restatement of Torts (Second) § 424 (1966), “One who by statute or by administrative regulation is under a duty to provide specified safeguards or precautions for the safety of others is subject to liability to the others for whose protection the duty is imposed for harm caused by the failure of a contractor employed by him
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to provide such safeguards or precautions.” See also
Boucher
v.
New York, N.H. & H.R.R.,
