San Diego Business Law

Free Articles - Table of Contents

Business Matters

Deducting the Business Use of Your Home

Should You Incorporate Your Business

Valuation Discounts

Where to Sue  

Human Resources

ADA Protects Employees with Cancer

New 401K Overtime

Update Social Security Number Verification for Employers

The Dangers of Employee Internet Use

The Hazards of Resume Screening  

Real Estate

Landlord/Tenant-Insurer May Sue for Fire Damage  

Miscellaneous

Good News For Those Who Struggle With Legal Risk

How To Assess Your Legal Risk

Partnerships And Limited Liability Companies

Electronic Signatures

ESOP Talk

Sale Of A Business

Trademarks & Service Marks

A Few Well Chosen Words About Contracts

AEDs Help Treat Heart Attacks

Contractor Shielded From Liability

Junk Fax Protection Act

"Pop-ups" Annoy But Don't Infringe

 

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.