[J-66-2022]
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
WESTERN DISTRICT
TODD, C.J., DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, BROBSON, JJ.
DAVID L. BROWN, INDIVIDUALLY AND : No. 6 WAP 2022
AS EXECUTOR OF THE ESTATE OF :
KATHRYN A. BROWN, DECEASED : Appeal from the Order of the
: Commonwealth Court entered
: September 1, 2021 at No. 337 CD
v. : 2020, reversing the Order of the
: Court of Common Pleas of Venango
: County entered February 28, 2020 at
CITY OF OIL CITY : No. 589-2016 and remanding.
:
: ARGUED: October 26, 2022
v. :
:
:
FRED L. BURNS, INC. :
:
:
v. :
:
:
SCOTT AMSDELL, INDIVIDUALLY, AND :
MACON, INC., AND HAROLD BEST, :
INDIVIDUALLY, AND STRUXURES, LLC :
:
:
APPEAL OF: HAROLD BEST, :
INDIVIDUALLY, STRUXURES, LLC, AND :
FRED L. BURNS, INC. :
OPINION
CHIEF JUSTICE TODD DECIDED: MAY 16, 2023
In this appeal, our Court is asked to determine whether Section 385 of the
Restatement (Second) of Torts imposes liability on a contractor to a third party whenever
the contractor, during the course of his work for a possessor of land, creates a dangerous
condition on the land that injures the third party, even though, at the time of the injury, the
contractor was no longer in possession of the land, and the possessor was aware of the
dangerous condition. For the reasons that follow, we conclude, as did the Commonwealth
Court below, that a contractor may be subjected to liability under Section 385 in such
circumstances. Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the Commonwealth Court.
I. Relevant Legal Principles
As we deem it helpful in understanding the issue our Court is called upon to resolve
in this appeal, we begin with the text of Section 385 of the Restatement (Second) of Torts
and comment c to that section, as well as a brief discussion of the relevant caselaw from
our Commonwealth’s intermediate appellate courts interpreting those provisions,
inasmuch as they are the primary focus of the parties’ respective arguments.
Section 385, entitled, “Persons Creating Artificial Conditions on Land on Behalf of
Possessor: Physical Harm Caused After Work has been Accepted,” provides, in full:
One who on behalf of the possessor of land erects a structure
or creates any other condition thereon is subject to liability to
others upon or outside of the land for physical harm caused
to them by the dangerous character of the structure or
condition after his work has been accepted by the possessor,
under the same rules as those determining the liability of one
who as manufacturer or independent contractor makes a
chattel for the use of others.
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 385 (1965). Our Court has established that Section 385
is applicable to tort cases within the jurisdiction of the courts of our Commonwealth.
Gresik v. Pa. Partners, L.P., 33 A.3d 594, 599 (Pa. 2011) (“Gresik II”).
Comment c to Section 385 provides:
A manufacturer of a chattel who puts it upon the market
knowing it to be dangerous and having no reason to expect
that those who use it will realize its actual condition is liable
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for physical harm caused by its use (see § 394). As the liability
of a servant or an independent contractor who erects a
structure upon land or otherwise changes its physical
condition is determined by the same rules as those which
determine the liability of a manufacturer of a chattel, it follows
that such a servant or contractor who turns over the land with
knowledge that his work has made it dangerous in a manner
unlikely to be discovered by the possessor is subject to liability
both to the possessor, and to those who come upon the land
with the consent of the possessor or who are likely to be in its
vicinity.
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 385, cmt. c (“comment c”).
Almost three decades ago, in the case of Gilbert v. Consolidated Rail Corp., 623
A.2d 873 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1993), the Commonwealth Court considered the question of
whether an entity which made alterations to physical property at the direction of the
property’s possessor, but then surrendered the property to the possessor after the
alterations had been made, could be held liable under Section 385 to a third party for
injuries caused by a dangerous condition created by the alterations. In Gilbert, the
Consolidated Rail Corporation (“Conrail”) was in control of property containing its rail
trackage, which surrounded a train station used by passengers of the Southeastern
Pennsylvania Transit Authority (“SEPTA”). Conrail erected a track crossing on the
property at the direction of SEPTA. Two years after Conrail had surrendered control of
the property containing the crossing to SEPTA, an individual was killed using that crossing
while trying to board a SEPTA train.
The individual’s parents brought a wrongful death suit against Conrail, contending
that it was liable for the death of their son because Conrail had created a dangerous
condition through its defective design of the crossing. The trial court dismissed the
complaint, relying on comment c to Section 385. It concluded that, under comment c, a
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contractor who is out of possession of property cannot be held liable for a dangerous
condition that it created on the property unless the condition is “undiscoverable or latent.”
Id. at 875.1 The allegedly defective design at issue required an individual using the
crossing to walk through a gap in the fence separating the parking area from the train
tracks and then cross both the northbound and southbound tracks on a wooden walkway,
which became unusable whenever trains were using or stopped on either set of tracks.
In such situations, users of the walkway would be forced to cross the tracks outside of the
walkway area, which is what the decedent was doing when he was struck and killed by a
train. In the trial court’s view, the design of the crossing created an “open and obvious”
defect; hence, it determined that Conrail could not be held liable. Id. at 874.
On appeal, a split panel of the Commonwealth Court reversed, finding the trial
court’s interpretation of comment c to be erroneous. The panel majority, reading
comment c in conjunction with the text of Section 385, interpreted comment c “as
expanding a contractor’s potential liability for a dangerous condition that it created on the
property.” Id. at 875. Thus, under the majority’s construction, “[s]ection 385 limits [a
contractor’s] liability to third persons, while comment (c) provides for potential liability to
third persons and the possessor of the property when the condition may be considered a
latent defect.” Id. (emphasis added). Accordingly, the majority held that the wrongful
death suit could proceed against Conrail because it made the changes to the property on
behalf of SEPTA, and, thus, under Section 385, it could be held liable for any defects in
1 As a general matter, “a latent defect is a defect which cannot be discovered by
observation or inspection made with ordinary care,” whereas “[a] patent defect is a defect
that could have been discovered without undue effort.” 4A Bruner & O'Connor
Construction Law § 13:10 n.5 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
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the crossing’s design and construction. Consequently, because Conrail admitted, for
purposes of the motion, that it knew or should have known that the opening in the fence
and the walkway were dangerous after its employees had designed and built it, the
majority found the trial court erred in determining that it was entitled to judgment as a
matter of law under Section 385.
The Honorable Silvestri Silvestri dissented to the majority’s construction of Section
385 and comment c, reasoning that the majority
completely overlook[ed] the language of comment (c) which
mandates that liability will only attach to Conrail if it turned
over the station to SEPTA with the knowledge that its work
had made it ‘dangerous in a manner unlikely to be
discovered by the possessor.’ . . . The phrase ‘unlikely to be
discovered’ implies that the condition be latent and
therefore not open or obvious in order for liability to attach.
Gilbert, 623 A.2d at 877-78 (Silvestri, J., dissenting) (emphasis original). Because the
dissent perceived the purported defects in the track crossing to be of an obvious nature,
it agreed with the trial court that Conrail had no liability under Section 385.
Sixteen years later, in Gresik v. Pa. Partners, L.P., 989 A.2d 344 (Pa. Super. 2009)
(“Gresik I”), a panel of the Superior Court rejected the majority holding in Gilbert and
adopted the reasoning of the dissent. Gresik I involved a negligence suit against a prior
owner of a steel plant for modifications it had made to the plant that included the removal
of a drawbridge which workers tending to an electric furnace would use to escape should
molten steel breach the sides of the furnace. The prior owner sold the plant to a second
company in this modified condition. Subsequent to the sale, one steelworker employed
by the plant’s new owner was killed and another sustained serious injury when an
explosive rupture occurred, and they had no means of escape due to the fact that the
drawbridge had been removed.
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In their lawsuit, the plaintiffs — the injured steelworker and the personal
representative of the deceased steelworker — alleged, inter alia, that the removal of the
drawbridge constituted a breach of the prior owner’s duty of care to third-party employees
such as themselves under Section 385. The prior owner filed a motion for summary
judgment, which the trial court granted based on its finding of a lack of duty under Section
353 of the Restatement (Second) of Torts (describing the liability of a vendor of property
for undisclosed dangerous conditions known to the vendor).
The Superior Court sustained the trial court’s entry of summary judgment, but did
so by relying on comment c to Section 385. In construing the language of comment c,
the Superior Court opined:
We reach this conclusion based on the plain language of
Comment (c), which, as the dissent [in Gilbert] noted, the
majority completely overlooked. On two occasions, the
comment states that the danger must be of such a nature that
it is unlikely to be discovered. Liability under Section 385 is
determined by the same rules defining the liability of a
manufacturer of chattel. The first sentence of Comment (c)
states that a manufacturer of chattel is liable when it supplies
a product “knowing it to be dangerous and having no reason
to expect that those who use it will realize its actual
condition.” RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF TORTS § 385
Comment (c) (emphasis added). . . . The comment concludes
that it follows, therefore, “that a servant or contractor who
turns over the land with knowledge that his work has made it
dangerous in a manner unlikely to be discovered by the
possessor is subject to liability.” Id. Based on the foregoing,
we conclude that as a precondition for establishing liability
under Section 385, a plaintiff must show that the danger was
one unlikely to be discovered by the possessor or those who
come upon the land with the possessor’s consent.
Id. at 350-51 (emphasis original).
The court thus decided that, because the facts showed that the employees of the
mill’s current owner knew of the removal of the drawbridge, and the attendant hazards
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this created in the event of a furnace breach, the trial court did not err in dismissing the
plaintiff’s complaint based on Section 385.2
Our Court granted allowance of appeal from the Superior Court’s decision in Gresik
I, but we did not resolve these competing interpretations of comment c by the
Commonwealth and Superior Courts, as we deemed it unnecessary given our disposition.
Rather, we focused on Section 385’s proviso that it applies only where a “contractor or
servant of a separate possessor of land” makes alterations thereto. Gresik II, 33 A.3d at
600. We concluded that, because the prior owner of the steel mill performed the work of
removing the drawbridge while it was in possession of the premises, and thereafter sold
it to the subsequent owner in this condition, there was no time when the prior owner “could
have acted as a contractor or servant.” Id. Consequently, we upheld the Superior Court
decision on that alternative basis. While thus not reaching the question of whether
Section 385 only applies to latent defects, we noted, in this regard, that the Superior
Court’s resolution of this question “is not obvious from Section 385’s plain text.” Id.
Having set forth this foundational background, we turn now to the factual and
procedural genesis of the instant appeal.
II. Factual and Procedural History
2 The Superior Court continues to employ the rationale of Gresik I in finding contractors
liable under Section 385 for dangerous defects created by their workmanship only if the
danger was unlikely to be discovered by either the possessor, or those who enter the land
with the possessor’s consent. See, e.g., Longwell v. Giordano, 57 A.3d 163 (Pa. Super.
2012) (paving contractor who created a sharp drop-off edge between the asphalt
driveway it poured and the surrounding grassy area, which was alleged to have caused
the plaintiff to trip and fall, owed no duty under Section 385 to the plaintiff, as the condition
of the steep edge caused by its work was known to the possessor of the property, due to
the fact it observed it via visual inspection after the paving project was complete).
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In 1904, the Oil City Library (the “library”), a stately granite and stone edifice
located in the heart of Oil City in Venango County, Pennsylvania, opened its doors to
serve the residents of that city and county. During the years following its opening, the
library, which is owned by Oil City, gradually acquired extensive additions to its collection
of books, as well as expanded its library services to make them more widely available to
the residents of northwestern Pennsylvania; thus, the library now functions as a district
library center for the 14 public libraries of Venango, Clarion and Jefferson Counties, and
it serves over 15,000 people annually.3
By 2011, due to weathering and aging, the condition of the concrete stairs leading
to the entrance of the library had significantly declined. As a result, Oil City contracted
with Appellants Harold Best and Struxures, LLC, to develop plans for the reconstruction
of the stairs and to oversee the implementation of those design plans. The actual
reconstruction work, which involved the removal of the failing stairs and the installation of
wholly new concrete ones, was performed by Appellant Fred Burns, Inc., pursuant to a
contract with Oil City. Best, Struxures, and Burns are collectively referred to as
“Contractors.”4 5
Contractors finished performing installation work on the stairs by the end of 2011.
Trial Court Opinion, 10/25/19 at 2; however, shortly thereafter, in early 2012, Oil City
began to receive reports about imperfections in the concrete surface, which also began
3 See https://oilregionlibraries.org/locations/oil-city-library/.
4 This factual background is derived from Appellee David Brown’s amended complaint
and the lower court opinions in this matter. It is presented in a light most favorable to him
as the plaintiff and opponent of Contractors’ motion for summary judgment. Gresik, II, 33
A.3d at 595 n.1.
5 Contractors have filed a joint brief with our Court in this matter.
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to degrade. Id. These defects were of sufficient concern to Oil City that it notified
Struxures on February 28, 2012 that it considered the stairs dangerous and defective.
Brown v. City of Oil City, 263 A.3d 338, 341 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2021) (en banc) (quoting
Brown’s Amended Complaint, 5/25/17, at ¶ 20). Subsequently, on September 12, 2013,
Oil City informed Burns of what it considered to be its defective workmanship in creating
the dangerous condition of the stairs. Id.
Between February 28, 2012 and November 23, 2015, the condition of the stairs
continued to worsen; however, neither Oil City nor Contractors made any efforts to repair
the stairs, or to warn the public about their dangerous condition. Id.
On November 23, 2015, Appellee David Brown (“Brown”) and his wife Kathryn
exited the library and began to walk down the concrete stairs. While doing so, Kathryn
tripped on one of the deteriorated sections, which caused her to fall and strike her head,
suffering a traumatic head injury. Tragically, this injury claimed her life six days later.6 Id.
As a result of his wife’s death, Brown, in his individual capacity and as the executor
of his wife’s estate, commenced a wrongful death suit. In an amended complaint filed
therein, he asserted negligence claims against Oil City, as owner of the library, as well as
Contractors who performed the work on the stairs pursuant to their contract with Oil City.
6 Although the parties presently dispute the exact date of the completion of Contractors’
work, and, indeed, whether Oil City ever actually accepted the work as satisfactory, see
Contractors’ Brief at 10; Appellee's Brief at 4-5, we need not resolve these competing
contentions in order to address the question on which we granted allowance of appeal,
given that all parties agree that: Oil City was in possession of the stairs from January
2012 until the date of Kathryn Brown's fall; the hazardous condition of the stairs became
known to Oil City during this time period; and neither Oil City nor Contractors performed
any repairs on the stairs prior to the accident.
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Specifically, with respect to Contractors, he alleged they “knew or through the exercise of
reasonable care should have known” that:
“by failing to exercise reasonable care in the performance [of
their] contractual obligations would create an unreasonably
dangerous condition and increase the risk of harm to third
parties, such as Kathryn A. Brown.”
“the dangerous condition caused by the degradation of the
front steps of the [library] created an unreasonable risk of
harm to individuals having need to use the steps, such as
Kathryn A. Brown.”
“Kathryn A. Brown would not discover or realize the
dangerous condition, or would fail to protect herself against
it.”
Brown’s Amended Complaint, 5/25/17, at ¶¶ 49-51; 56-58.
Brown further alleged that Contractors “breached their duty to exercise reasonable
care in the performance [of] their contractual obligations so as to not injure third parties,
such as Kathryn Brown.” Id. at ¶¶ 52, 59. He alleged they did so by, inter alia:
“Failing to properly design steps or provide plans for the
construction of the front steps of the [library] safe for the
intended use;”
“Failing to properly reconstruct the front steps of the [library]
in a safe and reasonable manner;”
“Failing to reconstruct the steps in a reasonable manner such
that they would not unreasonably degrade;”
“Fail[ing] to warn the Plaintiff of the dangerous condition;” and
“Fail[ing] to protect the Plaintiff from the dangerous condition”.
Id.
Oil City and Contractors joined additional defendants involved in the design and
construction process, and filed cross-claims seeking indemnification from the other
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defendants.
After discovery was complete, each of the Contractors filed a motion for summary
judgment, which asserted the same claimed basis for relief – namely, that they owed no
duty to third persons, as they were not in possession of the premises at the time the injury
occurred. Brown filed a response to the motion, asserting, inter alia, that Contractors
“had a duty to third parties, such as Kathryn Brown, and they breached that duty
regardless of whether they ceased to have a possessory interest in the Stairs.” Plaintiff's
Response to Contractors’ Motion for Summary Judgment, 7/29/19, at 7 (R.R. at 1246a).
Brown identified, inter alia, Section 385 as the source of authority for the establishment
of such a duty. Id.
Because each of the Contractors’ motions for summary judgment raised the same
issue regarding an out-of-possession contractor’s duty to third parties, the trial court, by
the Honorable Robert Boyer of the Court of Common Pleas of Venango County,
considered the motions together, and granted them on October 25, 2019. In its opinion
accompanying the order, the trial court acknowledged the divergence between the
interpretations of Section 385 by the Commonwealth Court in Gilbert and the Superior
Court in Gresik I. However, the trial court ultimately agreed with the Superior Court’s
interpretation of Section 385 in Gresik I as limiting a contractor’s third-party liability to only
those situations where the contractor created a dangerous defect that the possessor was
unlikely to discover.
The trial court concluded that it could not find that Contractors “made the area of
the stairs in a way that . . . Oil City was unlikely to discover.” Trial Court Opinion, 10/25/19,
at 7. The trial court further found that “Oil City was aware of [the] defective nature of the
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stairs for years as evidenced by the meetings and letters that were sent pertaining to the
poor condition of the stairs after the work was completed.” Id. Additionally, the trial court
noted that Oil City’s manager, its solicitor, and the library’s interim director, were all
notified of the defects in the stairs after Contractors completed the reconstruction work
but before Kathryn Brown’s fall. Id. Thus, following the rationale of Gresik I, the trial court
determined that Contractors could not be liable to the Browns as they did not violate any
duty to them, and it entered summary judgment for Contractors on that basis.
Thereafter, Brown reached a settlement with Oil City for $500,000, the maximum
amount of liability of a local agency such as Oil City under the damages cap contained in
the Political Subdivision Tort Claims Act.7 The trial court approved the settlement by order
dated February 28, 2020.8
Brown appealed the order granting Contractors summary judgment to the
Commonwealth Court.9 In a unanimous published en banc opinion authored by President
7 See 42 Pa.C.S. § 8553(b) (“Damages arising from the same cause of action or
transaction or occurrence or series of causes of action or transactions or occurrences
shall not exceed $500,000 in the aggregate.”).
8 This order did not dismiss Oil City from the case, and its counterclaims against the other
defendants for indemnification, as well as those defendants’ indemnification claims
against it, remain pending.
9 Contractors filed a motion to quash the appeal, asserting that the Commonwealth Court
lacked jurisdiction because Oil City was not a party to the appeal given its settlement with
Brown. The Commonwealth Court denied the motion, noting that, inter alia, under 42
Pa.C.S. § 762(a)(7), the Commonwealth Court has jurisdiction to hear appeals in all
matters in which local government immunity has been asserted, even if the local
government agency was not a party to the appeal before it. Before our Court, Contractors
do not renew their challenge to the Commonwealth Court's jurisdiction, nor do they
suggest that our Court lacks jurisdiction for that reason, although they somewhat
nebulously assert that they “never conceded” that the Commonwealth Court had
jurisdiction. Contractors’ Brief at 18 n.3. Contractors further incorporate “by reference”
the arguments they made to the Commonwealth Court challenging its jurisdiction into
their brief to our Court. We have emphasized that incorporation by reference is not a
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Judge Emerita Mary Hannah Leavitt, that tribunal reversed the trial court. Brown v. City
of Oil City, 263 A.3d 338 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2021) (en banc).10
The court began its analysis by discussing our seminal case in Prost v. Caldwell
Stores, 187 A.2d 273 (Pa. 1963), involving the liability of a contractor for harm caused to
third parties by its workmanship, after the work has been accepted by the possessor. In
Prost, contractors who had installed a terrazzo tiled entrance for a department store were
sued after a customer slipped and fell on the tile. The plaintiffs alleged that the contractors
were liable for their injuries due to the negligent manner in which they had installed the
tile, but the contractors disclaimed liability, asserting that they could not be held liable for
conditions that arose after the store accepted the work. At most, according to the
contractors, their liability extended only to the department store with whom they had
contracted. However, our Court rejected that argument, emphasizing that a party to a
contract has a broader duty to all individuals who are not parties thereto – namely, that
he perform his “contractual undertaking[s] in such manner that third persons — strangers
to the contract — will not be injured thereby.” Id. at 275 (quoting Evans v. Otis Elevator
Company, 168 A.2d 573, 575 (Pa. 1961)). This duty, our Court concluded, was reflected
in Section 385 of the Restatement (First) of Torts, which utilized virtually identical
language to that presently contained in Section 385 of the Second Restatement at issue
proper manner to raise an issue for our Court’s consideration, Commonwealth v. Briggs,
12 A.3d 291, 342 (Pa. 2011), and we will not consider issues presented in this manner.
Regardless, we discern no error in the Commonwealth Court’s conclusion and, thus, find
no impediment to our jurisdiction. See 42 Pa.C.S. § 724 (empowering this Court to grant
discretionary review of all final orders of the Commonwealth Court).
10 The other jurists joining the majority opinion were then-Judge, now-Justice, Kevin
Brobson, then-Judge, now-President Judge, Renee Cohn Jubelirer, and Judges Patricia
McCullough, Christine Fizzano Cannon, Ellen Ceisler, and J. Andrew Crompton.
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herein. Our Court reasoned that the contractor who installed the tile floor had a duty to
the plaintiffs not to create a hazardous condition thereby, and the fact that the contractor
had finished the work and was not in possession at the time the injury occurred did not
bar the plaintiffs’ claims. Prost, 197 A.2d at 277.
The Commonwealth Court below found its decision in Gilbert to be consonant with
Prost, because it recognized that Section 385 “expanded the liability of a contractor
beyond the limits of its contract with the possessor of land to recognize a social duty to
others for physical injuries caused by the contractor’s work. . . . [T]his social duty includes
third persons who are ‘strangers to the contract’.” Brown, 263 A.3d at 344 (quoting Prost,
187 A.2d at 275). The court characterized its Gilbert decision as having established the
scope of that social duty by interpreting comment c as clarifying “that the third persons to
whom the contractor has liability under Section 385 can include the ‘possessor’ of the
property, but only where the defect is latent and not known to the possessor.” Id.
The court acknowledged the split of authority between it and the Superior Court,
with the Superior Court’s adoption, in Gresik I, of the rationale of the dissenting opinion
in Gilbert. However, the court below observed that, while it generally regards Superior
Court precedent as persuasive, it was not compelled to follow such precedent where, as
here, it conflicted with its own. Moreover, the court noted that, in its view, Gresik I was
inapposite, given that our Court found in Gresik II that Section 385 did not apply under
the facts of that case. Id. at 346.
Accordingly, the court applied Gilbert and found that the fact that Oil City had
knowledge of the defective nature of the stairs did not relieve Contractors of liability under
Section 385:
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As we explained in Gilbert, Section 385 extends a contractor’s
liability to third persons who are injured by an artificial condition
of the land created by the contractor after the possessor has
accepted the completed work. Nowhere does Section 385
state that for liability to attach the artificial condition must be
latent. Comment c to Section 385 of the Restatement may limit
the contractor’s liability to the possessor to the situation where
the defect is latent. Otherwise, the possessor cannot hold the
contractor liable in negligence. However, the fact that Oil City
was aware of the defective nature of the library steps is
irrelevant to the liability of Burns and Struxures to “others.” At
most, this fact may relieve them of liability to Oil City, the
possessor.
Id. Consequently, the court held that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment
to Contractors.
Contractors sought allowance of appeal, which we granted in order to consider the
question of “[w]hether an out-of-possession contractor can . . . be subject to liability under
Section 385 of the Restatement of Torts for injuries to third-parties where the dangerous
condition of the structure erected by the contractor is well-known to the possessor of
land?” Brown v. City of Oil City, 273 A.3d 506, 507 (Pa. 2022) (order).
II. Arguments of the Parties
Contractors argue that the Commonwealth Court should have adopted the
Superior Court’s approach set forth in Gresik I, or the dissent in the Commonwealth
Court’s decision in Gilbert, limiting liability for an out-of-possession contractor to latent
defects in the property. They contend that, instead, the Commonwealth Court, through
its decision in this matter, created an arbitrary distinction between the liability of an out-
of-possession contractor to the possessor of the land and his liability to third parties. In
their view, the instant Commonwealth Court decision stands for the proposition that
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liability of a contractor to the former is limited under comment c to Section 385, but not to
the latter.
Contractors further assert that the Commonwealth Court erred in relying on Prost
in its decision, inasmuch as that case, unlike this one, did not involve the question of an
out-of-possession contractor’s liability for a defect which was either known or
discoverable.
Contractors submit that the Superior Court has repeatedly reaffirmed its conclusion
that comment c limits the liability of an out-of-possession contractor to only defects that
are unlikely to be discovered by the possessor of the land. Contractors’ Brief at 34-35
(citing Longwell11). They criticize the Commonwealth Court’s construction below, and the
majority interpretation in Gilbert, that comment c expands Section 385 liability to
possessors (in addition to the public) when a defect is latent. Id. at 36. They stress their
view that, because the defect herein was obvious, “liability should rest solely on the
possessor of land (Oil City) who knowingly chose the manner in which to address the
defect,” and Oil City did not involve the Contractors in this process. Id. at 36-37. Further,
they contend that, inasmuch as Oil City had exclusive control over the property, it bore
the “responsibility to decide what course of action to take with regard to the obvious defect
so as not to potentially cause harm to its invitees.” Id. at 38. Moreover, they submit that
“[n]o one was permitted to do anything without the express instructions from Oil City,” id.
at 39, and that, at no time, did Oil City request Contractors to make repairs.
Additionally, Contractors offer public policy arguments as to why out-of-possession
contractors should not be liable for obvious defects in property they may have created
11 See supra note 2.
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through their work. They take the position that “[t]he Commonwealth Court’s decision . .
. rewards property owners for failing to inspect property of which they are in possession
and remedy dangerous conditions upon such property by shifting that burden upon
contractors not in possession of the property.” Id. at 40. In their view, this contravenes
well established principles of premises liability which have as their objective the protection
of persons entering property from dangers that are not open and obvious, given that they
cannot take steps to protect themselves from the harm such dangers pose.
Moreover, Contractors claim that, under Pennsylvania law, possessors of property
have an established duty to inspect their property for latent defects, so that they may find
and repair them. Contractors’ Brief at 41 (quoting Argo v. Goodstein, 265 A.2d 783, 787
(Pa. 1970) (invitee of possessor of land is entitled to expect that the possessor inspect
the property to discover latent defects and to repair them, or provide appropriate
safeguards or warnings against them)). They contend that requiring the possessor of
land, rather than an out-of-possession contractor, to take such protective measures
should be encouraged, because the possessor is in the best position to remedy defects,
rather than a contractor who has had no contact with the property since completing its
work.
Finally, Contractors aver that limiting an out-of-possession contractor’s liability to
only latent defects is consistent with the policy undergirding Section 385, due to the fact
that Section 385 plainly states that the liability of a contractor is to be determined “under
the same rules as those determining the liability of a manufacturer of chattels.” Id. at 42
(quoting Section 385); see also Restatement (Second) Torts, cmt. a (“The rules
determining the liability as one who as manufacturer or independent contractor makes a
[J-66-2022] - 17
chattel for the use of others, are stated in §§ 394-398, and §§ 403 and 404.”). Contractors
highlight that these rules impose requirements on a manufacturer to eliminate, safeguard
against, or warn of, risks of harm to others created by their product or work which it is
aware of, but which the end user of the product is not able to discover. Contractors argue
that those rules do not apply to them in this instance, since, once again, the obvious
defects in the stairs were, in fact, discovered by Oil City.12
12 The Philadelphia Association of Defense Counsel (“PADC”) filed an amicus brief on
behalf of Contractors. Like Contractors, it asserts that the Commonwealth Court’s ruling
misallocates risks by shifting the burden for correcting patent defects in land to an out-of-
possession contractor and not the landowner. In its view, this creates perverse incentives
for possessors of land to do nothing, as “[s]hould a third party sustain injury, the
landowner can shift liability to the contractor.” PADC’s Brief at 9. Indeed, PADC posits
that, under the Commonwealth Court's ruling, a possessor could “prohibit a contractor
from remedying the dangerous condition, but still have the ability to seek recompense or
contribution from the contractor when a third party suffers injury.” Id. (emphasis original).
PADC also argues that Section 385 borrows from the rules governing
manufacturers of chattels, and under those rules a contractor “cannot be liable if it informs
the possessor of land about the dangerous condition, or if that dangerous condition is
known to the possessor of land.” Id. at 7 (citing Restatement (Second) Torts § 388). In
that vein, PADC submits that, because Section 385 establishes the same rule for
contractors as for the manufacturers of products, the Commonwealth Court’s decision
below could be applied to eliminate the ability of a contractor who does work involving
asbestos for a manufacturer to raise the sophisticated-purchaser defense in Restatement
(Second) of Torts § 388, comment n, in litigation brought for harm caused by the asbestos.
Id. at 14.
Lastly, PADC submits that the Superior Court’s approach in Gresik I, imposing
liability only for latent defects, is followed in “most other jurisdictions.” Id. at 15. It states
that courts of those jurisdictions “hold either that a known dangerous condition eliminates
the contractor’s legal duty or that the landowner’s failure to fix it is a superseding cause
of the third party’s injury.” Id. (citing cases from Alaska, Brent v. Unicol, 969 P.2d 627
(Alaska 1998); California, Sanchez v. Swinerton & Walberg, 55 Cal.Rptr.2d 415 (Cal.
App.2d Dist.); Maryland, Council of Co-Owners, Atlantis Condominium v. Whiting Turner
Contracting Company, 517 A.2d 336, 344 (Md. 1986); New Hampshire, Russell v. Arthur
Whitcomb, 121 A.2d 781 (N.H. 1956); New Mexico, Tipton v. Clower, 356 P.2d 46 (N.M.
1960); New York, Sternbach v. Cornell University, 558 N.Y.S.2d 252 (N.Y.A.D., 3 Dept.
1990); Rhode Island, Pastorelli v. Associated Engineers, 176 F.Supp. 159 (Dist. R.I.
1959) and Wyoming, Lynch v. Norton Construction, 861 P.2d 1095 (Wyo. 1993)). By
contrast, it contends only two states – Alabama, McFadden v. Ten-T Corp., 529 So.2d
[J-66-2022] - 18
In response, Brown contends that the Commonwealth Court’s decision in this
matter correctly decided the question of the liability of an out-of-possession contractor for
a patent defect it created. Brown quotes at length from our Court’s decision in Prost,
which he characterizes as setting forth the basic duty of out-of-possession contractors to
third parties in its adoption of the nearly-identical Section 385 from the First Restatement,
and he underscores that our Court did not therein exempt a contractor for liability merely
because the defect was patent or obvious.
While conceding that neither Prost nor Gresik II addressed the relevance of the
latency of the defect in determining a contractor’s liability under Section 385, Brown
nevertheless submits that the Commonwealth Court in the instant matter correctly found
that latency is irrelevant to a Section 385 analysis. Brown avers that the Commonwealth
Court correctly analyzed the language of comment c by reading its first sentence as
establishing that, whenever a contractor creates a dangerous condition that an injured
third party had no reason to be aware of, i.e., a latent defect, the contractor is liable to
that third party. Thus, in light of that fact, Brown suggests the second sentence of
comment c was properly read as expanding the category of parties to whom the contractor
could be liable to also include the possessor of the land. But Brown stresses that “[t]here
is simply nothing in the plain text of either Section 385 or Comment (c) that preconditions
the out-of-possession contractor’s liability to a third-party user — who lacks knowledge of
the dangerous condition created by the contractor — on the knowledge of the possessor.”
Appellee’s Brief at 23-24. He contends that any other interpretation would “unreasonably
192 (Ala. 1988), and New Jersey, Totten v. Gruzen, 245 A.2d 1 (N.J. 1968) – impose
liability on contractors for patent defects.
[J-66-2022] - 19
and unnecessarily harm innocent third-party users to the benefit of tortfeasors contrary to
the purposes of tort law,” because it would deny them their right to be fully compensated
for their injuries by all of the responsible tortfeasors. Id. at 24. This, according to Brown,
would constitute an unjust financial windfall to contractors by relieving them of
responsibility for damages which they caused.
Addressing Contractors’ argument that the Commonwealth Court’s interpretation
creates an incentive for the possessor to ignore defects, and thereby escape financial
responsibility for failing to repair them, Brown notes that the facts of this case belie that
contention, given that Oil City settled for $500,000, the maximum of its liability under the
Political Subdivision Tort Claims Act. The possessor’s knowledge of the defects resulting
from a contractor’s work, in Brown’s view, should not insulate the contractor from its share
of the liability. Rather, it ensures that both tortfeasors – the possessor of the land and the
contractor – bear their respective responsibility.
Brown contends that the lower court’s interpretation does not conflict with the other
Restatement sections referenced in comment a to Section 385 – Sections 393-398 and
403-404. Indeed, he notes that it is consistent with Section 396, which states: “A
manufacturer of a chattel is subject to liability under the rules stated in §§ 394 and 395
although the dangerous character or condition of the chattel is discoverable by an
inspection which the seller or any other person is under a duty to the person injured to
make.” Appellee’s Brief at 28 (quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 396). Moreover,
Brown contends that the Commonwealth Court’s conclusion is buttressed by comment b
to Section 396, which provides: “The fact that the inspection, if made, would have
disclosed the dangerous character of the chattel . . . subjects the one who fails to perform
[J-66-2022] - 20
the duty [to correct it] to liability . . . . It does not, however, relieve from liability the
manufacturer to whose negligence the dangerous condition is due.” See id. at 29 (quoting
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 396, cmt. b)).13 14
13 Brown responds to the assertion by amicus PADC that the Commonwealth Court’s
interpretation could somehow “deleteriously affect the sophisticated-user defense” used
in asbestos litigation, which is derived from comment n to the Restatement (Second) of
Torts § 388; he contends such an argument is a “red herring” not implicated by the facts
of this case. Appellee’s Brief at 30. Besides the fact that this is not an asbestos case,
but, rather, a conventional slip and fall case, to which ordinary principles of negligence
law apply, Brown points out that the sophisticated-user defense would be, in any event,
inapplicable under the particular facts of this matter. Brown emphasizes that there is no
evidence that Contractors provided any warning to Oil City that the stairs were dangerous,
or that they reasonably expected Oil City to inform users that they were dangerous.
Additionally, Brown disputes PADC’s contention that the lower court decision
conflicts with the law in most other jurisdictions. He asserts there is, in fact, a split in
authority, and he contends that “at least two other jurisdictions have followed an approach
that holds contractors liable for patent or known dangerous conditions.” Id. at 33
(discussing Totten and McFadden, supra note 12). Furthermore, Brown contends that a
“significant number” of the cases cited by PADC “find that the possessor/employer’s
knowledge or discovery of the defect constitutes an intervening cause that relieves the
contractor of liability” and, thus, are inconsistent with Pennsylvania law, as our law
requires that “the actions of another tortfeasor to not only be intervening but so
extraordinary as to be unforeseeable and, thus, superseding in order to relieve the original
tortfeasor from liability.” Id. at 35-36.
14 The Pennsylvania Association for Justice (“PAJ”) filed an amicus brief on behalf of
Brown. PAJ aligns with Brown’s argument that the Commonwealth Court correctly
construed comment c to Section 385, and that such a construction is consistent with
Prost. Addressing Contractors’ contention that the lower court decision rewards property
owners for doing nothing, PAJ asserts that their argument “misses the point,” which is
“that Section 385, as applied by this Court in Prost, is intended to assure the injured victim
the opportunity to recover damages from either the contractor who created the hazard, or
the possessor of property on which the hazard existed. No reward is bestowed on the
property owner. To the contrary, a contractor may seek contribution from other
tortfeasors if it pays more than its fair share of the liability.” PAJ’s Brief at 10 (emphasis
original). PAJ buttresses this contention by highlighting the observation of the New
Jersey Supreme Court that relieving a contractor of liability in such circumstances is
“somewhat strange and illogical in thus terminating the possibility of liability of the party
basically at fault.” Id. (quoting Totten, 245 A.2d at 6). PAJ avers that the Totten court
advocated a “sounder approach,” which is to treat the possessor’s inaction as “simply
add[ing] him as another possible tortfeasor.” Id. at 11. PAJ points out this approach was
taken by the Commonwealth Court in the instant matter and in Gilbert.
[J-66-2022] - 21
III. Analysis
This case involves the construction and application of provisions of the
Restatement (Second) of Torts, matters of a purely legal nature; accordingly, our review
is both plenary in nature and conducted de novo. Gresik II, 33 A.3d at 599. Furthermore,
we remind that an appellate court may reverse a trial court’s entry of summary judgment
only if it finds that the trial court erred in concluding both that the matter presented no
genuine issue as to any material fact, and that the moving party was entitled to the entry
of summary judgment as a matter of law. Feleccia v. Lackawanna College, 215 A.3d 3,
10-11 (Pa. 2019). When conducting this review, we examine the factual record of the
case in a light most favorable to the non-moving party. Id.
As set forth previously, Section 385 provides:
One who on behalf of the possessor of land erects a structure
or creates any other condition thereon is subject to liability to
others upon or outside of the land for physical harm caused
to them by the dangerous character of the structure or
condition after his work has been accepted by the possessor,
under the same rules as those determining the liability of one
who as manufacturer or independent contractor makes a
chattel for the use of others.
Further, PAJ contends that the Superior Court’s conclusion in Gresik I is based on
a misreading of comment c to Section 385. PAJ offers that the plain language of comment
c confirms that liability to the property owner is imposed on a contractor “who turns over
the land with knowledge that his work has made it dangerous in a manner unlikely to be
discovered by the possessor.” Id. at 14 (quoting Section 385, cmt. c)) (emphasis omitted).
But, PAJ contends that the Gresik I court took the meaning of the phrase “unlikely to be
discovered” out of its proper context by finding that it created a “patent-latent distinction.”
Id. at 13. PAJ suggests this construction disregards the fact that comment c is focused
not on the nature of the harm, but on the “temporality of the contractor’s knowledge–at
the time it turns over possession.” Id. at 16. Accordingly, “the question is thus whether it
was foreseeable at that time that the defective condition would likely go undiscovered? .
. . [I]t is of no moment whether the property owner eventually learns of the defective
condition after taking possession of the property from the contractor . . . .” Id. at 16
(emphasis added).
[J-66-2022] - 22
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 385. Further, comment c to Section 385 states:
A manufacturer of a chattel who puts it upon the market
knowing it to be dangerous and having no reason to expect
that those who use it will realize its actual condition is liable
for physical harm caused by its use (see § 394). As the liability
of a servant or an independent contractor who erects a
structure upon land or otherwise changes its physical
condition is determined by the same rules as those which
determine the liability of a manufacturer of a chattel, it follows
that such a servant or contractor who turns over the land with
knowledge that his work has made it dangerous in a manner
unlikely to be discovered by the possessor is subject to liability
both to the possessor, and to those who come upon the land
with the consent of the possessor or who are likely to be in its
vicinity.
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 385, cmt. c.
As we have discussed supra, the Superior Court in Gresik I held that, under
Section 385 and comment c thereto, an out-of-possession contractor has no liability to a
third person for harm resulting from a dangerous condition created by the contractor
unless it is of a type “unlikely to be discovered by the possessor or those who come upon
the land with the possessor’s consent.” Gresik I, 989 A.2d at 351. As our Court observed
in Gresik II, albeit in dicta, the Superior Court’s interpretation is “not obvious from Section
385’s plain text.” Gresik II, 33 A.3d at 600.
Moreover, the Superior Court’s interpretation of Section 385 is not obliged by the
plain text of comment c either. Indeed, as demonstrated by the reasoning of the
Commonwealth Court in Gilbert, and again by that court below, the text of comment c is
susceptible to another plausible interpretation — namely, that it serves to expand the
class of third persons to whom an out-of-possession contractor is liable to the possessor
of the property, if the dangerous condition is not likely to be discovered, i.e., if it is “latent.”
[J-66-2022] - 23
Notwithstanding, it must be emphasized that comment c does not exist in a
vacuum. That is to say, it is not a stand-alone provision; rather, like all such comments,
it serves as an explanatory and interpretative aid,15 and thus must be read consistent with
the text and underlying purposes for which Section 385 was adopted as part of our
common law. See Coyle by Coyle v. Richardson-Merrell, Inc., 584 A.2d 1383, 1385 (Pa.
1991) (“[W]here this Court has ‘adopted’ a section of the Restatement as the law of
Pennsylvania, the language is not to be considered controlling in the manner of a statute.
Such precepts, though they may govern large numbers of cases, are nothing other than
common law pronouncements by the courts; their validity depends solely on the
reasoning that supports them.”); Tincher v. Omega Flex, Inc., 104 A.3d 328, 353-54 (Pa.
2014) (“Consistent with its adjudicative rather than policy-making role, the Court has
‘adopted’ or deemed sections of a restatement a proper statement of Pennsylvania law if
the cause of action and its contours are consistent with the nature of the tort and
Pennsylvania’s traditional common law formulation.”).
Consequently, we must ascertain which of the competing interpretations of Section
385 – the Commonwealth Court’s determination that an out-of-possession contractor is
liable to third parties for all defects created by his work, whether patent or latent, or the
Superior Court’s view that the contractor may be held liable only for a latent defect – best
aligns with the language of Section 385, which we have adopted in its entirety, including
those sections that Section 385 explicitly incorporates – Sections 394-398, and 403-404.
Likewise, we must determine which interpretation is consistent with the policy
15 See American Law Institute, Anatomy of a Restatement, available at
https://www.ali.org/about-ali/story-line/.
[J-66-2022] - 24
considerations that were the impetus for our Court’s adoption of Section 385 and its
predecessor, Section 385 of the First Restatement: specifically, to ensure that a
contractor is held accountable for any foreseeable injury that is caused by his lack of due
care in performing the work that he was entrusted to perform. See Prost, 187 A.2d at
274-75.
We begin this analysis by briefly recounting the evolution and integration of the
animating principles embodied in Section 385. It was once the rule in this Commonwealth
that a contractor’s liability for harm caused by his work was limited to those individuals
with whom the contractor was in “privity of contract” – that is, to the party or parties with
whom the contractors had entered into an agreement to perform the work. See, e.g.,
Curtain v. Somerset, 21 A. 244 (Pa. 1891) (holding that contractor who built porch for a
hotel was not liable to a third person standing on the porch who was injured when it
collapsed, because the builder had completed his work on the porch and delivered it to
the owner, but had no contractual relationship with the injured person). However, our
Court repudiated this privity requirement following Judge Cardozo’s watershed opinion in
MacPherson v. Buick Motor Company, 217 N.Y. 382 (1916). In MacPherson, Judge
Cardozo held that a manufacturer of defective chattels could be held liable for injuries
caused by a defect in the chattel, notwithstanding the lack of a contractual relationship
between the injured individual and the manufacturer. Judge Cardozo recognized that a
manufacturer of a chattel had a duty to make it carefully, so as to “safeguard life and
limb,” and that this duty was owed not just to the immediate purchaser, but to all those
whom it was reasonably foreseeable could be harmed by its use. Id. at 390.
[J-66-2022] - 25
Thereafter, relying on MacPherson, this Court in Foley v. Pittsburgh-DesMoines
Co., 68 A.2d 517 (Pa. 1949), explicitly recognized a duty of care on the part of a contractor
not only to the possessor of land who employs him to perform work thereon, but to all
other persons who will be affected by the performance of that work, even after the
contractor has completed it. We reasoned:
The principle inherent in the MacPherson . . . case and those
that have followed it is that one who manufactures and
delivers any article or structure with the knowledge that it will
be subjected to use by others, must, for the protection of
human life and property, use proper care to make it
reasonably safe for such users and for those who may come
into its vicinity; certainly the application of that principle cannot
be made to depend upon the merely technical distinction
between a chattel and a structure built upon the land.
Id. at 533. We observed that the tenets of MacPherson were embodied in Section 385 of
the First Restatement, which specifically dictated that a contractor’s liability was to be
determined by the same rules as those establishing the liability of a manufacturer of
chattels for the use of others, found in Sections 394-398 and 403-404 of the First
Restatement. Id.; accord Krisovich v. Booth, 121 A.2d 890, 892 (Pa. Super. 1956).
Under the Second Restatement, comment a to Section 385 provides that these
same rules continue to govern liability under Section 385:
The rules determining the liability as one who as manufacturer
or independent contractor makes a chattel for the use of
others, are stated in §§ 394-398, and §§ 403 and 404.
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 385, cmt. a.16 Therefore, to properly interpret Section
385, we must examine whether these rules contemplate that a possessor of land’s
16These sections are entitled: § 394, “Chattel Known to be Dangerous”; § 395, “Negligent
Manufacture of Chattel Dangerous Unless Carefully Made”; § 396, “Effect of Third
[J-66-2022] - 26
knowledge of a dangerous condition caused by a contractor is relevant in determining the
contractor’s liability to third parties.
Sections 403 and 404 of the Second Restatement referenced in Section 385
provide an overarching framework which establishes the situations under which a
contractor who repairs a chattel on behalf of another will be held liable to a third person
for a dangerous condition created by the repair, after yielding possession of the repaired
chattel back to the one who employed him. Section 403 states:
One who as an independent contractor makes, rebuilds, or
repairs a chattel for another and turns it over to the other,
knowing or having reason to know that his work has made it
dangerous for the use for which it is turned over, is subject to
the same liability as if he supplied the chattel.
Id. § 403. This section thus conditions the liability of the contractor on his awareness of
the dangerous condition of the chattel after his work had been completed, and imposes
liability when he knew, or had reason to know, that his repair efforts caused it to become
dangerous for its intended use.
Section 404 of the Second Restatement provides:
One who as an independent contractor negligently makes,
rebuilds, or repairs a chattel for another is subject to the same
liability as that imposed upon negligent manufacturers of
chattels.
Id. § 404. This section renders a contractor liable to a third person if he negligently repairs
the chattel – that is to say, failed to exercise due care in performing the repair work.
Section 403 and Section 404, in turn, incorporate other Restatement sections where the
Person’s Duty to Inspect”; § 397, “Chattel Made Under Secret Formula”; § 398, “Chattel
Made Under Dangerous Plan or Design”; § 403, “Chattel Known to be Dangerous”; and
§ 404, “Negligence in Making, Rebuilding, or Repairing Chattel.”
[J-66-2022] - 27
contractor’s liability is to be determined based, respectively, on its knowledge of a
dangerous condition it created, or its negligence in creating it.
Section 403 imposes liability on a contractor when he knows or has reason to know
of the dangerous condition of the chattel by utilizing the Second Restatement’s rules for
establishing the liability of a supplier of a chattel in Sections 388 to 390. See id. § 394(a)
(“[G]eneral liabilities which are common to all suppliers of chattels for the use of others .
. . are stated in §§ 388-390.”). Of these three sections, we find Sections 388 and 389 to
be particularly instructive.17
Section 388, entitled “Chattel Known to be Dangerous for Intended Use,” provides:
One who supplies directly or through a third person a chattel
for another to use is subject to liability to those whom the
supplier should expect to use the chattel with the consent of
the other or to be endangered by its probable use, for physical
harm caused by the use of the chattel in the manner for which
and by a person for whose use it is supplied, if the supplier
(a) knows or has reason to know that the chattel is or is
likely to be dangerous for the use for which it is supplied,
and
(b) has no reason to believe that those for whose use the
chattel is supplied will realize its dangerous condition, and
(c) fails to exercise reasonable care to inform them of its
dangerous condition or of the facts which make it likely to
be dangerous.
Id. § 388. Section 389, entitled “Chattel Unlikely to be Made Safe for Use” provides:
One who supplies directly or through a third person a chattel
for another’s use, knowing or having reason to know that the
chattel is unlikely to be made reasonably safe before being
17 Section 390 of the Second Restatement applies only when a chattel is supplied to an
individual who is incompetent “because of his youth, inexperience, or otherwise.”
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 390.
[J-66-2022] - 28
put to a use which the supplier should expect it to be put, is
subject to liability for physical harm caused by such use to
those whom the supplier should expect to use the chattel or
to be endangered by its probable use, and who are ignorant
of the dangerous character of the chattel or whose knowledge
thereof does not make them contributorily negligent, although
the supplier has informed the other for whose use the chattel
is supplied of its dangerous character.
Id. § 389.
We discern nothing in the plain text of these provisions which exempts an out-of-
possession contractor from liability when it makes a repair to a chattel that it reasonably
should foresee would render it dangerous to a third party who uses it, even when its
dangerous condition is obvious. Section 388(b) does impose a duty on a contractor to
inform a third-party user of a dangerous condition when the contractor “has no reason to
believe” the third party will realize the dangerous condition which the contractor created.
Id. § 388(b). It, thus, seemingly applies in situations where the contractor has, through
his work, created a non-obvious defect in a chattel and, in those circumstances, imposes
on the contractor a duty to inform its user of the defect. However, this language does not
purport to relieve a contractor of liability to another person if the defect in the chattel is
obvious. It simply does not address a contractor’s liability for such defects under those
circumstances.
Section 389 governs situations in which a contractor has created a chattel of a
dangerous character and the extent of the danger is not readily apparent, but, thereafter,
warns the user of its true character. This section specifies that such a warning is
insufficient to relieve the contractor of liability. As with Section 388, there is nothing in the
language of Section 389 purporting to relieve a contractor of liability where the chattel’s
[J-66-2022] - 29
defect is obvious; like Section 388, it does not address a contractor’s liability for such
defects.18
Section 404 of the Second Restatement – governing the liability of a contractor for
negligently creating a defective condition in a chattel it repaired – incorporates the rules
for establishing the negligence of a manufacturer of chattels which are found in Sections
394 through 398 of the Second Restatement.
Section 394 states, “[t]he manufacturer of a chattel which he knows or has reason
to know to be, or to be likely to be, dangerous for use is subject to the liability of a supplier
of chattels with such knowledge.” Restatement of Torts (Second), § 394. As discussed
18 The dissent asserts that Section 388(b) and the excerpted language from Section 389
– i.e., discussing users “who are ignorant of the dangerous character of the chattel or
whose knowledge thereof does not make them contributorily negligent” – should be read
as making “clear that latency of the dangerous condition is a third predicate condition to
imposing liability outside of the privity relationships bypassed by the reasoning in
MacPherson.” Dissenting Opinion (Mundy, J.) at 4. Respectfully, we disagree, inasmuch
as we interpret these provisions as establishing the conditions for liability only in situations
where the defect is latent, which, as the dissent concedes, the defect at issue here was
not. Due to their narrow scope, as indicated above, these sections do not establish, nor
do they purport to restrict, the liability of a supplier in situations where the defect is patent.
Indeed, the language of Section 388(c) referring to the requirement that the supplier of a
chattel must have failed to exercise reasonable care to inform a user of the chattel’s
dangerous condition, and the language of Section 389 indicating that the act of informing
the user of a chattel of its dangerous condition does not relieve the supplier of liability,
buttresses our conclusion that these sections do not govern patent defects. A duty to
inform, or the act of informing, the user of a chattel’s dangerous condition presupposes
that such a dangerous condition is hidden and not readily discernible to the user.
Accordingly, given the facial inapplicability of these sections to patent defects, we do not
find they establish the preconditions to find a contractor liable for creating an obviously
defective condition.
Further, as Brown argues, and as the record in this matter supports, the issue of
the adequacy of warnings or other information provided to users of a defective chattel is
not at issue herein, as “there is simply no evidence at all in the present case that the
Appellants, themselves, provided any warning to the City that the stairs they installed
constituted a dangerous condition to users and that they reasonably expected the City to
provide such warnings to users of the stairs.” Appellee’s Brief at 32.
[J-66-2022] - 30
above, the rules establishing the liability of a supplier of chattels are set forth in Sections
388-390 of the Second Restatement, and, as we have established in that discussion, do
not exempt a contractor from liability to others for creating an obviously dangerous
condition.
Section 395, which, as comment a to that section details, is explicitly derived from
the holding in MacPherson, supra, plainly delineates the liability of a manufacturer of a
chattel for conducting its manufacturing activity in a negligent fashion:
A manufacturer who fails to exercise reasonable care in the
manufacture of a chattel which, unless carefully made, he
should recognize as involving an unreasonable risk of causing
physical harm to those who use it for a purpose for which the
manufacturer should expect it to be used and to those whom
he should expect to be endangered by its probable use, is
subject to liability for physical harm caused to them by its
lawful use in a manner and for a purpose for which it is
supplied.
Id. § 395. Significantly, neither this section, nor the MacPherson decision on which it is
based, limits a manufacturer’s liability to only chattels with latent defects. To the
contrary, liability for the physical harm inflicted on third persons caused by a defective
chattel is imposed on its manufacturer in all instances where the manufacturer fails to
exercise reasonable care in creating the chattel, and the chattel is used as intended.
The character of the defect in the chattel – be it latent or patent – is therefore irrelevant.
Consequently, as a contractor who repairs a chattel on land is treated identically to such
a manufacturer for purposes of Section 385, Section 395 supports the conclusion that a
[J-66-2022] - 31
contractor’s liability is likewise not dependent on the latent or patent nature of the
defective condition.19
19 The dissent posits that the principles set forth in Section 395 and MacPherson are
inapplicable because “[n]owhere in the case below did any party rely on the inherent
dangerousness of the type of construction at issue,” and, in the dissent’s view, Section
395 and MacPherson “did not impose foreseeability of injury where the dangerous
condition was readily apparent, and any efforts or obligations of mitigation or avoidance
of that danger was in the hands of others.” Dissenting Opinion (Mundy, J.) at 6-7. In the
dissent’s view, “it is the latency of the dangerous condition that contributes to the
foreseeability of harm to third parties.” Id. at 8. Respectfully, we must disagree.
Section 395 establishes that it is the builder’s breach of his duty of care in
manufacturing or constructing a defective chattel and the foreseeability of harm to others
which results from the dangers created by the breach of that duty, alone, which results in
the imposition of liability. See Restatement (Second) of Torts § 395, cmt. a (explaining
that MacPherson has gained universal acceptance by American courts, and is now
understood to involve “merely the ordinary duty of reasonable care imposed upon the
manufacturer, as to any product which he can reasonably expect to be dangerous if he is
negligent in its manufacture or sale.”); cmt. b (explaining that the justification for the rule
in Section 395 rests, in part, “upon the foreseeability of harm if proper care is not used”);
cmt. d (“In order that the manufacturer shall be subject to liability under the rule stated in
this Section, it is not necessary that the chattel be ‘inherently dangerous,’ in the sense of
involving any degree of risk of harm to those who use it even if it is properly made. It is
enough that the chattel, if not carefully made, will involve such a risk of harm. It is not
necessary that the risk be a great one, or that it be a risk of death or serious bodily harm.”).
Contrary to the dissent, we consider these principles to be implicated by the case at bar
given that Brown specifically alleged in his complaint that Contractors “breached their
duty to exercise reasonable care in the performance [of] their contractual obligations so
as to not injure third parties, such as Kathryn Brown,” by, inter alia “[f]ailing to properly
reconstruct the front steps of the [library] in a safe and reasonable manner,” and “[f]ailing
to reconstruct the steps in a reasonable manner such that they would not unreasonably
degrade.” Brown’s Amended Complaint, 5/25/17, at ¶¶ 52, 59; see supra pages 9-10.
Further, as our Court has emphasized, the MacPherson rule, as applied to
independent contractors who build a chattel for the use of others, embodies the maxim
that “for any injury resulting from any person’s lack of elementary forethought, the law
holds that person accountable. A normal human being is held to foresee those injuries
which are the consequence of his acts or omission or commission which he, as a
reasonable human being, should have foreseen.” Bisson v. John B. Kelly, 170 A. 139,
143 (Pa. 1934). Under these tenets, it does not matter whether a builder negligently
creates a chattel whose defects are hidden, or are plainly visible: in either circumstance
the builder has breached his duty of care and is liable to all users who he could reasonably
foresee would be injured by the existence of the defects. A builder’s liability arising from
his negligent construction of a defective chattel is not excused merely because of the
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Section 396 provides support for this conclusion as well. This section provides:
A manufacturer of a chattel is subject to liability under the
rules stated in §§ 394 and 395 although the dangerous
character or condition of the chattel is discoverable by an
inspection which the seller or any other person is under a duty
to the person injured to make.
Id. § 396. Under this section, a manufacturer of a dangerous chattel is liable for harm
caused to a third person, even when another person has a duty to inspect the chattel.
Hence, as pertinent to a contractor’s liability under Section 385, even in situations where
a possessor of land has a duty to inspect a contractor’s repair work, once the work is
completed and returned to the possessor, and a dangerous condition created by the
work is apparent, i.e., discoverable, the contractor is not relieved of liability for creating
that condition.
Under Section 397, entitled “Chattel Made Under Secret Formula,” which is
applicable in situations where the creation of a chattel is done under a secret process,
or one that is not likely to be understood by the user of the chattel, the manufacturer is
liable for all physical harm caused both to the user and, more broadly, to all persons
whom the manufacturer “should expect to be endangered by its probable use by his
failure to exercise reasonable care to adopt such a formula and to bring to the knowledge
of those who are to use the chattel such directions as will make it reasonably safe for the
use for which it [is] supplied.” Id. § 397. Notably, it does not matter for purposes of this
section whether the danger posed by the manufactured chattel is patent or latent in
nature.
happenstance that a user may notice the defect and attempt to avoid injury to his person,
as it is the builder who bears the ultimate responsibility to construct a chattel in a manner
which is not likely to inflict harm on its users.
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Finally, Section 398, entitled “Chattel Made Under Dangerous Plan or Design,”
also supports the conclusion that an out-of-possession contractor’s liability to third
parties does not depend on the obviousness of the defective condition. This section
provides:
A manufacturer of a chattel made under a plan or design
which makes it dangerous for the uses for which it is
manufactured is subject to liability to others whom he should
expect to use the chattel or to be endangered by its probable
use for physical harm caused by his failure to exercise
reasonable care in the adoption of a safe plan or design.
Id. § 398. Again, this section makes no distinction, for purposes of the imposition of
liability, between a defective condition that is obvious or hidden. In either case, the
manufacturer is liable if its plans or designs resulted in the creation of a dangerous
condition. Thus, Section 398 likewise supports the conclusion that Section 385 does not
condition an out-of-possession contractor’s liability on the character of the defect – latent
or patent – it has brought into being through his work.
In sum, then, the foregoing analysis of these cited provisions of the Second
Restatement compels us to conclude that a contractor’s liability under Section 385 does
not hinge on whether the defective condition it caused is latent or patent. Rather, like the
Commonwealth Court did below, and previously in Gilbert, we interpret Section 385 and
comment c thereto as imposing potential liability on contractors to third persons for all
defective conditions of structures on land which they are responsible for creating through
their repair work. Similarly, we conclude that comment c serves only to clarify that the
persons to whom a contractor is liable under Section 385 includes the possessor of land,
when the dangerous condition is not readily discoverable by the possessor. Accordingly,
we reject the contention that a contractor’s liability to third persons is limited to only those
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situations in which he has created a dangerous condition that is not readily apparent or
obvious.
Indeed, we find that a contrary conclusion would disregard and undermine the
bedrock legal principle and policy on which Section 385 rests: that a contractor has a
social duty “to take thought and have a care lest his action result in injuries to others.”
Prost, 187 A.2d at 276 (quoting Bisson, 170 A. at 143). This social duty “the law
recognizes and enforces, and for any injury resulting from any person’s lack of elementary
forethought, the law holds that person accountable.” Id. Thus, as eloquently explained
by Justice Musmanno in Prost:
Where a builder creates a hazard which, without the need of
a prophetic telescope, proclaims potential injury to the public,
he may not plead immunity from liability for resulting damage
on the basis that his responsibility ceased with the insertion of
the last bolt and the driving of the final nail.
Id. at 277.
Finally, we reject Contractors’ complaint that such a conclusion “rewards property
owners for failing to inspect [their] property” and “shift[s] that burden upon contractors not
in possession of the property.” Contractors’ Brief at 40. Our determination regarding a
contractor’s liability under Section 385 does not displace a possessor of land’s
responsibility to protect the public. A possessor of land, like a contractor, also has a social
duty to invitees onto his or her land to “keep the premises in a reasonably safe condition.”
Watkins v. Sharon Aerie No. 327 Fraternal Order of Eagles, 223 A.2d 742, 743 (Pa. 1966).
Our holding today does not alter a possessor of land’s potential liability to third parties for
injuries caused by a dangerous condition existing on the land, and, therefore, does not
preclude the prospect of a possessor being found jointly liable with a contractor for the
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harm a dangerous condition caused to third parties. See Builders Supply Co. v. McCabe,
77 A.2d 368, 371 (Pa. 1951) (“The universal rule is that when two or more contribute by
their wrongdoing to the injury of another, the injured party may recover from all of them in
a joint action or he may pursue any one of them and recover from him.”). Rather, we
agree with the New Jersey Supreme Court that inaction by the owner of property upon
becoming aware of a dangerous condition created by a contractor’s work arguably “adds
him as another possible tortfeasor.” Totten, 245 A.2d at 6. Indeed, as Brown highlights,
the facts of the instant matter demonstrate this, given that Oil City was separately sued
by Brown for its own negligence in, for example, failing to maintain or repair the stairs, or
taking other actions such as warning users such as Kathryn Brown of their dangerous
condition, see Brown’s Amended Complaint, 5/25/17, at ¶¶ 40-45, and it settled that claim
through its payment of $500,000.20
20 The dissent notes that, in Carrender v. Fitterer, 469 A.2d 120 (Pa. 1983), we endorsed
the principles set forth in Section 343A of the Restatement (Second) of Torts which limit
the liability of possessors of land “for physical harm caused to [his invitees] by any activity
or condition on the land whose danger is known or obvious to them, unless the possessor
should anticipate the harm despite such knowledge or obviousness.” Id. at 123 (quoting
Section 343A). We further explained therein that “[a] danger is deemed to be ‘obvious’
when ‘both the condition and the risk are apparent to and would be recognized by a
reasonable man, in the position of the visitor, exercising normal perception, intelligence,
and judgment. For a danger to be ‘known,’ it must ‘not only be known to exist, but … also
be recognized that it is dangerous and the probability and gravity of the threatened harm
must be appreciated.’” Id. at 123-24 (quoting Section 343A) (alterations original and
citations omitted). The dissent contends that our holding is “antithetical” to these
principles of liability. Dissenting Opinion (Mundy, J.) at 8. We must respectfully disagree.
While, as we have established, Section 385 of the Restatement (Second) of Torts
imposes liability on a builder of a chattel for a possessor of land to third parties for obvious
defects, the principles of Carrender remain relevant factors to be considered by the finder
of fact in its ultimate apportionment of liability. That is, evidence of whether the defective
condition of the chattel and the risk of harm it creates are “apparent to and would be
recognized by a reasonable man, in the position of a visitor, exercising normal perception,
intelligence, and judgment,” as well as the visitor’s appreciation of the existence of the
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IV. Conclusion
Based on the foregoing discussion, we hold that a contractor who has created a
dangerous condition through work performed for a possessor of land may be liable under
Section 385 to all persons suffering injuries caused by the dangerous condition, even if
that condition is obvious or apparent in nature.21 As the Commonwealth Court came to
the same conclusion, we affirm.
Order affirmed.
Justices Donohue, Dougherty and Wecht join the opinion.
Justice Mundy files a dissenting opinion.
Justice Brobson did not participate in the consideration or decision of this matter.
defect and the “probability and gravity” of its threatened harm, see Carrender, 469 A.2d
at 123-24, are relevant for the finder of fact to ascertain the degree of fault, if any, to be
apportioned to the visitor for harm inflicted by an obvious defect.
21 In reaching this holding, we answer only the question presented to us: whether an
out-of-possession contractor may, as a matter of law, be held liable under Section 385
for patent defects that cause injury to third persons. Thus, we express no opinion as to
whether Contractors are, in fact, liable under the factual circumstances of this case. We
likewise express no opinion regarding whether Contractors have any other legal defenses
against liability, as the facts surrounding the nature of the defect in the stairs, its
dangerousness, and its perceptibility remain contested by the parties. Such matters may
be explored in the proceedings on remand ordered by the Commonwealth Court.
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