
WINTER 2004/2005 ISSUE
CONTRACTOR SHIELDED FROM LIABILITY
A business hired architects for a renovation project
involving a parking lot, a retaining wall, and a loading
dock. The plans, as drawn up by the architects, did
not call for a guardrail along the top of the retaining
wall. A construction firm completed the project according
to the architects' plans. The contractor had not broken
ground until a building permit was in hand, and when
the work was done a building inspector gave it his blessing
with a certificate of occupancy.
When a pedestrian fell from the retaining wall and
injured his knee, he sued the contractor for negligently
failing to put up a guardrail. The issue for the court
was whether the contractor could defend against liability
on the ground that it was "just following orders
(or plans, in this case)." A state supreme court
sided with the contractor. The court reasoned that builders
and contractors are justified in counting on the experience
and skill of architects and engineers. To subject contractors
to liability under the circumstances of this case would
be to unfairly require contractors to follow architectural
plans at their own risk and, in effect, to ensure the
correctness of specifications given to them, not just
their own workmanship.
Of course, there are limits on the extent to which
contractors can use the plans as a shield from liability.
If the results called for by the plans are so obviously
dangerous that no competent contractor would follow
them, the contractor can be held liable for building
according to those defective plans. The individual who
fell off of the retaining wall made this argument, but
the court concluded that there was not enough evidence
that the wall, even though it had no guardrail, was
obviously dangerous.
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