Court Opinion

ID: 1838689
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-30 07:34:54.593919+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T10:36:53.560652
License: Public Domain

24 Mich. App. 32 (1970)
179 N.W.2d 712
ROULO
v.
AUTOMOBILE CLUB OF MICHIGAN
Docket No. 6,693.
Michigan Court of Appeals.
Decided May 26, 1970.
Leave to appeal granted July 30, 1970.
*33 McCabe & Middleton, for plaintiff.
Rouse, Selby, Dickinson, Shaw & Pike (William H. Morman, of counsel), for defendant.
Before: LEVIN, P.J., and J.H. GILLIS, and BRONSON, JJ.
Leave to appeal granted July 30, 1970. 383 Mich. 811.
BRONSON, J.
The trial court granted defendant Automobile Club of Michigan's motion for summary judgment on the ground that the plaintiff has failed to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.[*] From this decision, plaintiff appeals.
Plaintiff's complaint alleges that he is a plumbing and heating contractor, that defendant published written specifications for the construction of its Utica division office, that plaintiff was furnished with a copy of the specifications for the purpose of bidding on the plumbing and heating work as provided for in the specifications, and that his bid was accepted by the general contractor Siklitch and Little, Inc.
One of the specifications provided that Siklitch and Little, Inc. would "obtain a labor and material bond and a performance bond, each in 100 per cent of the contract amount". Siklitch and Little, Inc. did not, however, secure either a labor and material bond or a performance bond, and has since been adjudicated bankrupt. Plaintiff contends that defendant is liable for damages under a theory of negligent misrepresentation in tort because it failed as promisee to exact performance from the promisor, Siklitch and Little, Inc., to the detriment and loss of plaintiff.
*34 We are concerned in the instant case with a rather unique problem: Whether in the case of a private general construction contract the owner (promisee) can be held liable to a subcontractor, who is not a party to the contract, because the owner fails to exercise due care to see to it that the general contractor (promisor) performs his contract with the owner.
Defendant says that no duty was owed plaintiff to see to it that the promisor, Siklitch and Little, Inc., would procure the required bonds although Siklitch and Little, Inc. was obliged to do so by contract.
Plaintiff concedes in his brief that defendant initially owed him no duty to require the furnishing of bonds for the protection of materialmen and subcontractors. It is only after it assumed to act, even though gratuitously, argues plaintiff, that defendant becomes liable if it failed to act with due care. Plaintiff does not, however, state what the defendant did, other than entering into the contract with the general contractor, which evidences its "assumption to act". The defendant here, unlike the defendant in Ray v. Transamerica Insurance Company (1968), 10 Mich. App. 55, did no more than enter into a contract. In the Ray case the defendant, a workmen's compensation insurance carrier, not only entered into a contract with the plaintiff's employer but additionally "undertook to provide safety inspection services and [plaintiff claimed] that it negligently performed this undertaking."
A search of the leading treatises on the law of torts has not revealed any relevant comment or cases directed to this issue. Certainly there are categories of doctrine, cutting across many sectors of the law, which stand for the proposition that a promisee may be vicariously liable due to the failure of his promisor to perform properly his obligation. These *35 exceptional cases appear to involve "nondelegable duties" of the promisee, e.g., inherently dangerous activities, and the liability of a landowner for defective repairs even if made by an independent contractor (Prosser on Torts [3d ed], §§ 68, 70, pp 470, 488; 2 Harper and James, Torts, §§ 26.11, 18.6, pp 1395, 1044) or situations where the promisee has a right to control the conduct of another, e.g., the liability of a master for the acts of his servant (Prosser on Torts [3d ed], § 69, p 472; 2 Harper and James, Torts, §§ 26.3-26.5, 18.7 pp 1366-1374, 1053). We are not persuaded that these principles should be extended to this kind of case. The relationship of an owner and a general contractor is markedly different from the relationship of a master and his servant; the owner does not owe a subcontractor a nondelegable duty to provide payment and performance bonds.
In the public contract sphere, the legislature has seen fit to ensure that materialmen and contractors are protected by placing a duty on public officers to exact security by bond for the payment of obligees to the contract. See MCLA § 570.101 (Stat Ann 1970 Rev § 26.321); Lake Shore Stone Co. v. Westgate (1920), 211 Mich. 540. However, the mechanic's lien remedy, available as to the private contract, does not extend to public property. McClintic-Marshall Co. v. Ford Motor Co. (1931), 254 Mich. 305; Knapp v. Swaney (1885), 56 Mich. 345.
The existence of a remedy for plaintiff through the vehicle of the mechanics' lien act (MCLA § 570.1 [Stat Ann 1970 Rev § 26.281]) buttresses our conclusion that defendant owed the plaintiff no duty to see to it that the general contractor performed his promise to furnish payment and performance bonds. The defendant is not liable for damages in tort.
*36 Summary judgment pursuant to GCR 1963, 117.2 (1) was properly granted.
Affirmed. Costs to defendant.
All concurred.
NOTES
[*]  GCR 1963, 117.2(1).