Florida
Supreme Court Overturns
the "Economic Loss Rule"
By
FES/FICE General Counsel, Roy C. Young
Engineers lose
economic loss rule! What is it? How did engineers get it? How did
they lose it? What will be impact?
The "economic
loss" rule is a court-created doctrine which prohibits the
extension of tort recovery for cases in which a product has damaged
only itself and there is no personal injury or damage to other
property and the losses or damages are economic in nature. The
exact origin of the rule is not clear, but it is clear that it
started with product liability cases. The courts basically were
saying that a party should not be able to sue in tort for purely
economic losses to a product or object provided to another for
consideration. The remedy in these cases should be based on contract
principles the courts reasoned.
In
1987 the Supreme Court extended the economic loss rule to preclude
negligent claims arising from a breach of a service contract in
a non-professional services context. In 1992 the 2nd DCA
held that the economic loss rule barred a tort action against an
architect where the damages were purely economic and the plaintiff
had no direct relationship with the architects. However, in 1994
the 5th DCA found just the opposite in the case involving
professional engineers. The Supreme Court would have the final
say. Moransais v. Heathman, 24 Fla. L. Weekly, 5308.
FACTS:
In
June 1993 Moransais entered a contract to buy a home in Lakeland
from Heathman. The contract provided for building inspection before
closing, and Moransais contracted with Bromwell & Carrier,
Inc. (BCI) to do the inspection. The inspection and report was
performed by two engineers (Jordan & Sauls) working for Bromwell & Carrier,
Inc. Moransais later discovered undisclosed defects that allegedly
rendered the home uninhabitable. He sued all the parties, including
the two engineers for professional malpractice. The trial court
dismissed these malpractice claims, and the Second District Court
affirmed. It reasoned that professional malpractice was chiefly
meant to address injuries to person or property, and that contractual
remedies (in this case, against Bromwell) were the more appropriate
way to recover a purely economic loss. The Second District acknowledged
a contrary ruling by the Fifth District, and certified the case
to the Supreme Court.
The
Supreme Court of Florida on July 1, 1999, answered the certified
questions, as follows:
-
When
a purchaser of a home contracts with an engineering corporation,
does the purchaser have a cause of action for professional
malpractice against an employee of the engineering corporation
who performed the engineering services? YES.
-
Does
the economic loss rule bar a claim for professional malpractice
against the individual engineer who performed the inspection
of the residence where no personal injury or property damages
resulted? NO.
The
opinion is 25 pages with a concurring opinion and a 5 page dissent.
Folks will debate this case for sometime because the majority went
far afield in its discussion to reach the conclusion it wanted
to make in this case. Apparently the economic loss rule is to only
apply to products and those of us who provide professional services
may not be able to limit our liability by contract.
I
urge you to read this case. I urge you to have your attorney read
this case. If you or your attorney want the details that are not
in the opinion, give me a call.
As
a side note, in early 1998, FES/FICE asked me to look into this
case after it got to the Supreme Court. I called the attorney for
the two engineers and in essence offered to help in any way possible
up to and including filing an amicus in the Supreme Court proceeding.
He thought he had a good case factually and thought adding FES/FICE
might impact the case negatively, but he did want our help and
we critiqued the briefs and his oral argument. He did a good job
with both. He did not lose the case - if you read the opinion,
it is obvious the Court wanted to change the economic loss rule
and used this case to do it.
Only
time will tell the impact of this decision on insurance cost and
the way engineers do their work. I do suggest that your standard
contract be reviewed by your attorney. If your contract limits
the liability of the firm in any way, consider providing these
same limits for the individual engineers who do the work.
Supreme
Court of Florida
No.
92,199
PHILIPPE
H. MORANSAIS,
Petitioner,
vs.
PAUL
S. HEATHMAN, an individual,
BROMWELL & CARRIER,
INC., a Florida corporation,
LENNON
D. JORDAN, and J. LARRY SAULS,
Respondents.
[July
1, 1999]
ANSTEAD,
J.
We have for review
a decision of a district court of appeal certifying the following
question to be of great public importance:
WHEN THE
ALLEGED DAMAGES ARE PURELY ECONOMIC, CAN THE PURCHASER OF A
RESIDENCE, WHO CONTRACTS WITH AN ENGINEERING CORPORATION FOR
A PRE-PURCHASE INSPECTION, MAINTAIN A PROFESSIONAL NEGLIGENCE
ACTION AGAINST THE LICENSED ENGINEER WHO PERFORMED THE INSPECTION
AS AN EMPLOYEE OF THE ENGINEERING CORPORATION?
Moransais
v. Heathman, 702 So. 2d 601, 602 (Fla. 2d DCA 1997). We have
jurisdiction. Art. V, § 3(b)(4), Fla. Const.
For purposes
of analysis, we rephrase the certified question into two questions:
(1) WHERE
A PURCHASER OF A HOME CONTRACTS WITH AN ENGINEERING CORPORATION,
DOES THE PURCHASER HAVE A CAUSE OF ACTION FOR PROFESSIONAL
MALPRACTICE AGAINST AN EMPLOYEE OF THE ENGINEERING CORPORATION
WHO PERFORMED THE ENGINEERING SERVICES?
(2) DOES
THE ECONOMIC LOSS RULE BAR A CLAIM FOR PROFESSIONAL MALPRACTICE
AGAINST THE INDIVIDUAL ENGINEER WHO PERFORMED THE INSPECTION
OF THE RESIDENCE WHERE NO PERSONAL INJURY OR PROPERTY DAMAGE
RESULTED?
As rephrased,
we answer the first question in the affirmative and the second
question in the negative. In doing so, we quash the decision below.
PROCEEDINGS TO
DATE
In June 1993,
petitioner Philippe Moransais contracted to purchase a home in
Lakeland, Florida, from Paul S. Heathman. Moransais also contracted
with Bromwell & Carrier, Inc. (BCI), a professional engineering
corporation, to perform a detailed inspection of the home and to
advise him of the condition of the home. The contract was signed
for the corporation by one of the respondents, Lennon D. Jordan,
as chief of the civil engineering division. Although the contract
was signed by Jordan, it did not name as parties the respondents,
Jordan and Larry Sauls, who actually performed the inspection in
June of 1993. Moransais alleges that he relied on the engineers'
inspection and advice to purchase the home and that after the purchase
he discovered defects in the home that should have been, but were
not, discovered in the engineering inspection, and that such defects
rendered the home uninhabitable.
Moransais filed
an action against BCI for breach of contract and against Jordan
and Sauls for professional negligence as engineers licensed pursuant
to chapter 471, Florida Statutes (1993). The complaint alleged
no bodily injury or property damage other than the undisclosed
and undetected defects in the home. On the motion of Jordan and
Sauls, the trial court dismissed the tort actions against the two
engineers with prejudice. The trial court relied on Sandarac
Ass'n, Inc. v. W.R. Frizzell Architects, Inc., 609 So. 2d 1349
(Fla. 2d DCA 1992), which held that the economic loss rule barred
a tort action against an architect by a condominium association
where the damages alleged were purely economic and the plaintiff
had no direct relationship with the architects. However, in its
order the trial court questioned the wisdom of Sandarac and
whether the provisions of chapter 471 should require a different
result. The trial court also indicated that it would have preferred
to follow the Fifth District's holding in Southland Construction,
Inc. v. Richeson Corp., 642 So. 2d 5 (Fla. 5th DCA 1994), that
section 471.023, Florida Statutes (1993), creates a private cause
of action for negligence against an individual professional engineer
and that such a claim is not barred by the economic loss rule.
On appeal, the
Second District affirmed the dismissal under the rationale of its
earlier holding in Sandarac. The court held that Moransais
had no cause of action against the individual engineers who actually
provided the professional engineering services to him. The court
explained its reasoning:
To allow
a negligence claim against the individual engineers who performed
the contract work and with whom Moransais has no traditional
professional/client relationship runs afoul of the economic
loss rule by allowing Moransais to pursue in tort what amounts
to a breach of contract claim and, thereby, expand his remedy
for breach of contract beyond that which he agreed to.
We recognize
that licensed engineers are not automatically shielded from
liability for professional malpractice by virtue of practicing
through a corporation or partnership. However, on the facts
of the case before us, we do not read chapter 471 to create
a separate cause of action against the individual engineers
with whom Moransais had no contract and no traditional professional/client
relationship. Such a reading would create a duty in negligence
that would, in turn, provide a remedy for which no consideration
was given.
Moransais,
702 So. 2d at 603. However, in light of the Fifth District's contrary
holding in Southland Construction and "the continuing
uncertainty surrounding the economic loss rule," the court
below certified the above question as one of great public importance. Moransais,
702 So. 2d at 602.
Liability
of Professionals
Under Florida's
common law a person who is injured by another's negligence may
maintain an action against the other person based on that other
person's violation of a duty of due care to the injured person.
Further, where the negligent party is a professional, the law imposes
a duty to perform the requested services in accordance with the
standard of care used by similar professionals in the community
under similar circumstances. See Lochrane Engineering,
Inc. v. Willingham Realgrowth Inv. Fund, Ltd., 552 So. 2d 228,
232 (Fla. 5th DCA 1989); see also Fain, supra note
4, at 35 ("Generally, individuals 'performing architectural
and engineering services are performing professional services,
and the law imposes upon such persons the duty to exercise a reasonable
degree of skill and care, as determined by the degree of skill
and care ordinarily employed by their respective professions under
similar conditions and like surrounding circumstances.'").
The court in Lochrane
Engineering also explained the difference between a general
contractual duty, such as that imposed under an ordinary contract
for goods or services, and the distinct duty imposed upon a professional:
The duty
of a professional who renders services, such as a doctor, lawyer,
or engineer, is different from the duty of one who renders
manual services or delivers a product. The contractual duty
of one who delivers a product or manual services, is to conform
to the quality or quantity specified in the express contract,
if any, or in the absence of such specification, or when the
duty and level of performance is implied by law, to deliver
a product reasonably suited for the purposes for which the
product was intended . . . or to deliver services performed
in a good and workmanlike manner. However, the duty imposed
by law upon professionals rendering professional services is
to perform such services in accordance with the standard of
care used by similar professionals in the community under similar
circumstances.
552 So. 2d at
232. That Florida recognizes an action for professional malpractice
is also evidenced by the statutory scheme for limitations of actions.
Section 95.11, Florida Statutes (1997), reads in pertinent part:
Actions other
than for recovery of real property shall be commenced as follows:
. . . .
(4) WITHIN
TWO YEARS.--
(a) An action
for professional malpractice, other than medical malpractice,
whether founded on contract or tort . . . . However, the limitation
of actions herein for professional malpractice shall be limited
to persons in privity with the professional.
§ 95.11(4)(a),
Fla. Stat. (1997). A profession, within the meaning of section
95.11, is "any vocation requiring at a minimum a four-year
college degree before licensing is possible in Florida." See Garden
v. Frier, 602 So. 2d 1273, 1275 (Fla. 1992). Under this definition,
an engineer is considered a professional, see id. at
1276 n.5 and, accordingly, has been held liable as such for failure
to exercise due care in rendering professional services. See Luciani
v. High, 372 So. 2d 530 (Fla. 4th DCA 1979) (involving suit
against engineer based on negligently performed tests resulting
in economic loss to plaintiff's property); Audlane Lumber & Builders
Supply, Inc. v. D.E. Britt Assocs., Inc., 168 So. 2d 333 (Fla.
2d DCA 1964) (involving suit against design engineer based on alleged
negligent design and preparation of wooden trusses); cf. Ahimsa
Technic, Inc. v. Lighthouse Shores Town Homes Dev. Co., 543
So. 2d 422 (Fla. 5th DCA 1989) (reversing judgment for breach of
contract against engineer where engineer performed services within
standard of care required of professional engineers).
The question
remains, however, under the Second District's analysis, as to whether
Florida recognizes a cause of action based on professional negligence
against an individual professional who did not personally contract
with the aggrieved party, but who is an employee of the professional
services corporation that did contract with the aggrieved party.
In other words, is the employeeprofessional who actually
renders the professional services personally liable for the negligent
performance of the services? The Second District held that there
was no obligation or duty owed by the individual professional to
the company's client for the client's economic damages. We disagree.
In this regard,
we find our decision in In re The Florida Bar, 133 So. 2d
554 (Fla. 1961), as well as the statutory scheme regulating professionals
in general, and engineers in particular, to be controlling and
instructive. In 1961, the Florida Bar requested our approval of
certain amendments to the Integration Rule and Code of Ethics which
would allow lawyers to incorporate under the Professional Service
Corporation Act. We explained the basic purpose behind the enactment
of what is now chapter 621, Florida Statutes (1997):
Chapter 61-64
is similar to statutes recently enacted by the Legislatures
of a number of other states. The basic purpose of these enactments
is to enable those engaged in various professions to form corporations
or associations for the practice of their professions. The
statutes apply particularly to numerous professional and other
self-employed groups which previously were not permitted to
incorporate. Traditionally, the so-called learned professions
have not been permitted to practice as corporate entities.
The principal reason for this change in attitude regarding
these professional groups appears to arise out of the provisions
of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, which permit an employer
to establish a pension fund for the benefit of his employees.
133 So. 2d at
555 (citations omitted). After consideration, this Court agreed
to permit lawyers to form professional associations in accordance
with the legislative enactment. In this regard, we stated:
Traditionally,
prohibition against the practice of a profession through the
corporate entity has been grounded of the essentially personal
relationship existing between the lawyer and his client, or
the doctor and his patient. This necessary personal relationship
imposes upon the lawyer a standard of duty and responsibility
which does not apply in the ordinary commercial relationship.
The non-corporate status of the lawyer was deemed necessary
in order to preserve to the client the benefits of a highly
confidential relationship, based upon personal confidence,
ability, and integrity. If a means can be devised which
preserves to the client and the public generally, all of the
traditional obligations and responsibilities of the lawyer
and at the same time enables the legal profession to obtain
a benefit not otherwise available to it, we can find no objection
to the proposal.
Id. at
556 (emphasis supplied). In other words, we approved the practice
of law in a corporate form subject to the express recognition that
under the common law, a lawyer who renders professional services
owes a duty of care regardless of the fact that the lawyer is an
associate or partner in a business entity that contracts to provide
professional services to the injured party.
That Florida
recognizes the responsibility of individual professionals for their
negligent acts is also evidenced by the express provisions of two
legislative enactments that are relevant heresection 471.023,
Florida Statutes (1993), pertaining to engineers, and section 621.07,
Florida Statutes (1993), pertaining to professional associations.
Both of these statutory provisions permit professionals to practice
in the form of a corporation or partnership for the purpose of
rendering professional services. However, both sections indicate
an intent to hold professionals personally liable for their negligent
acts by expressly stating that the formation of a corporation or
partnership shall not relieve the individual members of their personal
professional liability.
Section 621.07
of the Professional Service Corporation Act ("Act"),
states in pertinent part:
Nothing contained
in this act shall be interpreted to abolish, repeal, modify,
restrict, or limit the law now in effect in this state applicable
to the professional relationship and liabilities between the
person furnishing the professional services and the person
receiving such professional service and to the standards for
professional conduct; provided, however, that any officer,
agent, member, manager, or employee of a corporation or limited
liability company organized under this act shall be personally
liable and accountable only for negligent or wrongful acts
or misconduct committed by that person, or by any person under
that person's direct supervision and control, while rendering
professional service on behalf of the corporation or limited
liability company to the person for whom such professional
services were being rendered . . . .
§ 621.07, Fla.
Stat. (1997). Similarly, section 471.023(3) expressly applies to
engineers and states in pertinent part:
(3) The fact
that a registered engineer practices through a corporation
or partnership shall not relieve the registrant from personal
liability for negligence, misconduct, or wrongful acts committed
by him. . . . Any officer, agent, or employee of a corporation
shall be personally liable and accountable only for negligent
acts, wrongful acts, or misconduct committed by him or committed
by any person under his direct supervision and control, while
rendering professional services on behalf of the corporation.
§ 471.023(3),
Fla. Stat. (1993). These statutes expressly recognize the common
law duty of a professional.
An illustration
of the application of section 621.07 is provided in Gershuny
v. Martin McFall Messenger Anesthesia Professional Ass'n, 539
So. 2d 1131 (Fla. 1989). Gershuny sued the professional association
for malpractice due to injuries caused by a nurse anesthetist.
In our review, we noted:
[U]nder section
621.07, the group of physicians comprising the Association
could be held personally liable in their capacity as physicians
only if the negligence or wrongful act was committed by them
or by someone under their direct supervision and control. Otherwise,
the liability of the physicians is no greater than that of
a shareholder-employee of any domestic business corporation.
Id. at
1132. Because the record indicated that the nurse anesthetist was
not supervised by any physician-shareholder, no physician-shareholder
was accountable for the nurse's negligence, and therefore only
the association could be held liable under the circumstances. Id. at
1132-33. Obviously, the implication of our ruling was that had
the circumstances been different, i.e., had a physician-shareholder
supervised the nurse anesthetist, then the physician-shareholder,
as well as the association, would be liable under section 621.07.
We believe the
same principles apply in this case. Like lawyers in a law firm
who render legal services for the firm's client, respondents Jordan
and Sauls were designated by their employer to perform engineering
services for Moransais. It is alleged that in performing these
professional services they negligently failed to detect and disclose
certain defects in the condition of the home ultimately purchased
by Moransais. The fact that neither man signed the contract between
Moransais and the engineering firm is of no moment where, as here,
both Jordan and Sauls were responsible for performing professional
services to a client of their company whom they reasonably knew
or should have known would be injured if they were negligent in
the performance of those services. Obviously some professional
engineer would actually have to perform the professional services
that BCI agreed to provide, and Jordan and Sauls were being compensated
for such services to Moransais and other clients of BCI.
Further, the
fact that both engineers were employees of a corporation does not
shield them from liability in this case since both section 471.023
and section 621.07 make clear that professionals shall be individually
liable for any negligence committed while rendering professional
services. It is apparent that the legislature, in enacting these
provisions, clearly intended to affirm the common law pertaining
to professional services and the common law liabilities flowing
from the negligent performance of such services. See § 621.07,
Fla. Stat. (1997). Under the circumstances in this case, therefore,
we find that Moransais may assert a cause of action against the
individual engineers based on a common law theory of negligence
in the rendition of professional services despite the lack of a
direct agreement between Moransais and Jordan and Sauls. Accordingly,
we disagree with the Second District's resolution of this issue.
Economic Loss
Rule
Having recognized
that a cause of action for professional negligence exists against
the individual engineers, the question remains whether the economic
loss rule bars such claims where there are no personal injuries
or property damage other than the defects in the home inspected.
We hold that it does not.
The exact origin
of the economic loss rule is subject to some debate and its application
and parameters are somewhat ill-defined. However, in its simplest
form, we note that the rule appeared initially in both the state
and federal courts in product liability type cases. In Southland
Construction, Inc., the Fifth District fairly assessed the
rule:
The "economic
loss" rule is a court-created doctrine which prohibits
the extension of tort recovery for cases in which a product
has damaged only itself and there is no personal injury or
damage to "other property," and the losses or damage
are economic in nature. The debate joined in by Prosser and
other tort experts was whether or not to expand a manufacturer's
tort liability to encompass economic losses. They argued that
the only remedy in such cases should be for breach of contract
or breach of warranty. The Florida Supreme Court adopted this
doctrine for this state in Casa Clara Condominium Ass'n.,
Inc. v. Charley Toppino and Sons, Inc., 620 So. 2d 1244
(Fla. 1993) and AFM Corp. v. Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph
Co., 515 So. 2d 180 (Fla. 1987).
642 So. 2d at
7 (footnotes omitted). The essence of the early holdings discussing
the rule is to prohibit a party from suing in tort for purely economic
losses to a product or object provided to another for consideration,
the rationale being that in those cases "contract principles
[are] more appropriate than tort principles for resolving economic
loss without an accompanying physical injury or property damage." Florida
Power & Light Co. v. Westinghouse Elec. Corp., 510 So.
2d 899, 902 (Fla. 1987); see also Airport Rent-A-Car,
Inc. v. Prevost Car, Inc., 660 So. 2d 628 (Fla. 1995); Casa
Clara Condominium Ass'n v. Charley Toppino & Sons, Inc.,
620 So. 2d 1244 (Fla. 1993); AFM Corp. v. Southern Bell Tel. & Tel.
Co., 515 So. 2d 180 (Fla. 1987).
We must acknowledge
that our pronouncements on the rule have not always been clear
and, accordingly, have been the subject of legitimate criticism
and commentary. In Florida Power & Light, the seminal
case on the applicability of the economic loss rule, Florida Power & Light
(FPL) sued Westinghouse for breach of express warranties in the
contract and for negligence, all arising from leaks discovered
in six steam generators manufactured by Westinghouse for sale to
FPL. In its analysis and conclusion that the negligence claim was
barred, this Court relied on the reasoning in two cases, both of
which involved damages to defective products. See East
River Steamship Corp. v. Transamerica Delaval, Inc., 476 U.S.
858, 871 (1986) (holding that a manufacturer of a defective steam
turbine is not liable under a theory of negligence or strict liability
where the only injury is to the product itself); Seely v. White
Motor Co., 403 P.2d 145, 151 (Cal. 1965) (holding that a manufacturer
of a defective product is not subject to strict liability where
the damages are purely economic). We agreed with the economic loss
rule discussed in those cases and held that the rule barred FPL's
negligence claim where there was no physical injury or property
damage other than to the generators themselves, and that contract
principles rather than tort principles would be adequate and fair
to resolve any claims for the purely economic losses to the products
provided by Westinghouse. 510 So. 2d at 902. We reasoned that the
contracting parties were in the best position to have anticipated
potential problems with the items provided and could have adequately
protected their respective interests through measures such as the
applicable warranty law, "negotiation and contractual bargaining," or
insurance. Id. Our holding in Florida Power & Light remains
sound in its adherence to the fundamental principles of the precedents
we relied upon in applying the so-called economic loss rule.
Unfortunately,
however, our subsequent holdings have appeared to expand the application
of the rule beyond its principled origins and have contributed
to applications of the rule by trial and appellate courts to situations
well beyond our original intent. For example, in AFM Corp.,
we extended the economic loss rule to preclude a negligence claim
arising from breach of a service contract in a nonprofessional
services context. In that case, AFM contracted with Southern Bell
for a referral service for AFM's customers. However, Southern Bell
mistakenly listed the wrong telephone number in its yellow pages
and inadvertently disconnected the referral system by giving a
different customer AFM's old telephone number. Because AFM's damages
resulted from a breach of the underlying contract and not any independent
tort, we held that AFM was limited to contractual remedies only.
515 So. 2d at 181. In other words, we held that a purchaser of
services could not recover purely economic loss due to negligence
arising from a breach of contract where the purchaser has not shown
the commission of a tort independent of the breach itself. Id. While
we continue to believe the outcome of that case is sound, we may
have been unnecessarily over-expansive in our reliance on the economic
loss rule as opposed to fundamental contractual principles.
In Airport
Rent-A-Car and Casa Clara, we again considered the
application of the rule in product liability type cases. In Casa
Clara, we held that the economic loss rule barred a cause
of action in tort for providing defective concrete where there
was no personal injury or damage to property other than to the
product itself. 620 So. 2d at 1246. Our opinion, however, was
not unanimous, especially as to our characterization of "other
property." We stated that tort law was designed to protect
the interest of society as a whole by imposing a duty of reasonable
care to prevent property damage or physical harm to others, whereas
contract law operates to protect the economic expectations of
the contracting parties when a "product" is the object
of the contract. Id. at 1236. We also stated expansively
in Casa Clara that "[w]hen only economic harm is
involved, the question becomes 'whether the consuming public
as a whole should bear the cost of economic losses sustained
by those who failed to bargain for adequate contract remedies.'" Id. at
1247. In Airport Rent-A-Car, we followed the reasoning
in Casa Clara in holding the economic loss rule barred
a cause of action for negligence against the manufacturer of
defective buses where the only damage alleged was to the buses
themselves. 660 So. 2d at 630-31.
More recently
this Court has recognized the danger in an unprincipled extension
of the rule, and we have declined to extend the economic loss rule
to actions based on fraudulent inducement and negligent misrepresentation. See PK
Ventures, Inc. v. Raymond James & Assocs., 690 So. 2d 1296
(Fla. 1997) (negligent misrepresentation); HTP, Ltd. v. Lineas
Aereas Costarricenses, S.A., 685 So. 2d 1238 (Fla. 1996) (fraudulent
inducement). In HTP, Ltd., we held that a claim for fraudulent
inducement constituted a tort independent from the underlying contract
and, therefore, was not barred by the economic loss rule. We also
noted:
The economic
loss rule has not eliminated causes of action based upon torts
independent of the contractual breach even though there exists
a beach of contract action. Where a contract exists, a tort
action will lie for either intentional or negligent acts considered
to be independent from acts that breached the contract.
685 So. 2d at
1239; see also Woodson v. Martin, 685 So. 2d 1240
(Fla. 1996). We relied on this reasoning in PK Ventures,
wherein we held that the economic loss rule did not preclude a
cause of action by the buyer of commercial property against the
seller's broker for negligent misrepresentation. 690 So. 2d at
1297. Both HTP, Ltd. and PK Ventures demonstrate
our recent determination to limit the application and reach of
the economic loss rule.
It is also important
to note that we have been faced with other situations where the
economic loss rule was not applied to bar actions in tort for purely
economic losses including cases involving a special relationship
between a professional and third parties who might be affected
by the professional's negligent acts. In First Florida Bank,
N.A. v. Max Mitchell & Co., 558 So. 2d 9 (Fla. 1990), we
recognized a cause of action for negligent misrepresentation. There,
First Florida Bank sued Mitchell, an accountant, who had prepared
a financial statement which misstated the assets of Mitchell's
client, C.M. Systems, and which failed to disclose C.M. Systems'
significant debt. Relying on the financial statement, the bank
lent sums to C. M. Systems, which it never repaid. Accordingly,
the bank sued Mitchell in negligence based on his misrepresentations
in the financial statement. On appeal, we addressed whether the
lack of contractual privity between the bank and Mitchell precluded
a cause of action against the accountant for the inaccurate financial
statements. After recognizing an erosion in the privity requirement
in cases involving negligently manufactured products, negligently
constructed building projects, negligently performed legal services,
and negligently prepared land abstracts, we held that the absence
of privity should not bar a cause of action against an accountant
who negligently prepares a financial statement by those persons
whom the accountant knows will rely on the statement. 558 So. 2d
at 13-15. In so holding, we adopted the rationale of section 522
of the Restatement (Second) of Torts (1976), which set forth the
circumstances for negligent misrepresentation.
Similarly, in First
American Title Insurance Co., we held that where a land abstractor
prepares an abstract and should reasonably expect that his client
will "provide it to third persons for purposes of inducing
those persons to rely on the abstract . . . the abstractor's
contractual duty to perform the service skillfully and diligently
runs to the benefit of such known third parties." 457 So.
2d at 472. Like Max Mitchell, liability in this case hinged
on the supplying of misinformation to those whom the abstractor
could reasonably foresee as being affected by his statements
in the abstract. Although the decisions in Max Mitchell and First
American Title Insurance Co. do not specifically address
the economic loss rule, the reasoning and outcomes are clearly
inconsistent with the doctrine's applicability to such circumstances.
The situations
in HTP, Ltd., PK Ventures, A. R. Moyer, Max
Mitchell, and First American Title Insurance Co. serve
as reminders of the distinct limitations of the economic loss rule.
Today, we again emphasize that by recognizing that the economic
loss rule may have some genuine, but limited, value in our damages
law, we never intended to bar well-established common law causes
of action, such as those for neglect in providing professional
services. Rather, the rule was primarily intended to limit actions
in the product liability context, and its application should generally
be limited to those contexts or situations where the policy considerations
are substantially identical to those underlying the product liability-type
analysis. We hesitate to speculate further on situations not actually
before us. The rule, in any case, should not be invoked to bar
well-established causes of actions in tort, such as professional
malpractice.
We agree with
the observations of those who have noted that because actions against
professionals often involve purely economic loss without any accompanying
personal injury or property damage, extending the economic loss
rule to these cases would effectively extinguish such causes of
action. See Schwiep, supra note 6, at 40 ("[I]f
the doctrine were genuinely applied to bar 'all tort claims for
economic losses without accompanying personal injury or property
damage,' the rule would wreak havoc on the common law of torts.");
Blanche M. Manning, Legal Malpractice: Is it Tort or Contract?,
21 Loy. U. Chi. L.J. 741, 742 (1990) ("Because attorney malpractice
rarely results in personal injury or property damage, the damages
plaintiffs seek most often in malpractice claims against attorneys
are for economic or pecuniary losses allegedly caused by the attorney's
failure to exercise adequate care."). This is not what this
Court had in mind many years ago when it applied the economic loss
rule in Florida Power & Light.
While provisions
of a contract may impact a legal dispute, including an action for
professional services, the mere existence of such a contract should
not serve per se to bar an action for professional malpractice.
Further, the mere existence of a contract between the professional
services corporation and a consumer does not eliminate the professional
obligation of the professional who actually renders the service
to the consumer or the common law action that a consumer may have
against the professional provider. While the parties to a contract
to provide a product may be able to protect themselves through
contractual remedies, we do not believe the same may be necessarily
true when professional services are sought and provided. Indeed,
it is questionable whether a professional, such as a lawyer, could
legally or ethically limit a client's remedies by contract in the
same way that a manufacturer could do with a purchaser in a purely
commercial setting. In any case, we conclude that the principles
underlying the economic loss rule are insufficient to preclude
an action for professional malpractice under the circumstances
presented here.
CONCLUSION
Accordingly,
we hold that the economic loss rule does not bar a cause of action
against a professional for his or her negligence even though the
damages are purely economic in nature and the aggrieved party has
entered into a contract with the professional's employer. We also
hold that Florida recognizes a common law cause of action against
professionals based on their acts of negligence despite the lack
of a direct contract between the professional and the aggrieved
party. Accordingly, we quash the decision below and approve Southland.
It is so ordered.
HARDING, C.J.,
and SHAW and PARIENTE, JJ., concur.
WELLS, J., concurs
with an opinion, in which PARIENTE, J., concurs.
OVERTON, Senior
Justice, dissents with an opinion.
NOT FINAL UNTIL
TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING MOTION, AND IF FILED, DETERMINED.
WELLS, J., concurring.
I concur with
the well-reasoned majority opinion. I write, however, to state
directly that it is my view that the economic loss rule should
be limited to cases involving a product which damages itself by
reason of a defect in the product. I would recede from AFM Corp.
v. Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Co., 515 So. 2d
180 (Fla. 1987), because that opinion erroneously applies the economic
loss rule and has given rise to confusion as to the rule's applicability.
PARIENTE, J.,
concurs.
OVERTON, Senior
Justice, dissenting.
I dissent and
find that this case is controlled by our recent decision in Casa
Clara Condominium Ass'n v. Charley Toppino & Sons, Inc.,
620 So.2d 1244 (Fla. 1993). In Casa Clara, this Court explained
the distinction between tort and contract actions and the resulting
application of the economic loss rule to maintain that distinction.
The Court stated:
Thus, the "basic
function of tort law is to shift the burden of loss from the injured
plaintiff to one who is at fault . . . or to one who is better
able to bear the loss and prevent its occurrence." Barrett, supra at
935. The purpose of a duty in tort is to protect society's interest
in being free from harm, Spring Motors Distributors, Inc. v.
Ford Motor Co., 98 N.J. 555, 489 A.2d 660 (1985), and the cost
of protecting society from harm is borne by society in general.
Contractual duties, on the other hand, come from society's interest
in the performance of promises. Id. When only economic harm
is involved, the question becomes "whether the consuming public
as a whole should bear the cost of economic losses sustained by
those who failed to bargain for adequate contract remedies."
Id. at
1246-47 (quoting Sidney R. Barrett, Jr., Recovery of Economic
Loss in Tort for Construction Defects: A Critical Analysis,
40 S.C. L. Rev. 891, 933 (1989)).
In Casa Clara,
the defendant had contracted to supply concrete for the construction
of condominiums. That concrete contained a high salt content that
caused reinforcing rods to rust and the concrete to break off.
The plaintiff Casa Clara Condominium Association brought tort actions
against the supplier of that concrete. The trial court, district
court of appeal, and, finally, this Court applied the economic
loss rule in dismissing those causes of action. This Court held:
Therefore, we
again "hold contract principles more appropriate than tort
principles for recovering economic loss without an accompanying
physical injury or property damage." Florida Power & Light,
510 So.2d at 902. If we held otherwise, "contract law would
drown in a sea of tort." East River, 476 U.S. at 866,
106 S.Ct. at 2300. We refuse to hold that homeowners are not subject
to the economic loss rule. [Footnote 8]
[Footnote 8:]
Numerous other jurisdictions have also refused to give greater
tort remedies to homeowners. E.g., Danforth v. Acorn
Structures, Inc., 608 A.2d 1194 (Del.Super.Ct. 1992); Redarowicz
v. Ohlendorf, 92 Ill.2d 171, 65 Ill.Dec. 411, 441 N.E.2d 324
(1982); Sensenbrenner v. Rust, Orling & Neale, Architects,
Inc., 236 Va. 419, 374 S.E.2d 55 (1988); Stuart v. Coldwell
Banker Commercial Group, Inc., 109 Wash.2d 406, 745 P.2d 1284
(1987).
Id. at
1247.
In this case,
the plaintiffs contracted with an engineering corporation to perform
an inspection before purchasing the property for residential occupancy.
The report allegedly was defective in that it contained no disclosure
concerning the condition of the air conditioning, the electrical
system, or the roof. The plaintiffs purchased the property and
then found that the defects made the house uninhabitable. They
brought suit for breach of contract against the engineering firm
and also brought individual suits in tort against the firm's engineering
employees who did the inspection, asserting that they were guilty
of professional malpractice. The plaintiffs' complaint alleges
no bodily injury or property damage. While the suit for breach
of contract against the firm was proper, the district court of
appeal applied Casa Clara and found no cause of action in
tort, applying the Casa Clara principles. I emphasize the
plaintiffs still have causes of action against both the engineering
firm and the seller for the problems that they discovered.
In my view, there
is absolutely no logical basis to justify a recovery in tort to
the property owners in this case when no tort recovery was allowed
to the property owners against the concrete supplier for defective
concrete in Casa Clara.
It appears to
me that the majority has substantially obliterated the distinction
between contract and tort causes of action, and, in addition, has
effectively overruled our rather recent decision in Casa Clara without
saying so.
If I understand
the majority opinion correctly, it means that if there is an express
written contract for legal services with a law firm then the aggrieved
client may bring causes of action upon the same facts on the basis
of (1) a breach of contract and (2) multiple tort claims for malpractice
individually against each lawyer who had anything to do with the
case.
Justice Parker
Lee McDonald, in Casa Clara, explained the economic loss
rule and made clear that it helped make the demarcation between
contract and tort. After this decision, for all practical purposes,
there will be no real distinction except that tort will be the
preferred basis for a cause of action with a contract action being
just a collateral proceeding.
In all probability,
the immediate effect of this majority opinion will be an increase
in malpractice insurance rates and the resulting increased costs
of all types of professional services to the consumers. By its
holding, the majority is spreading the cost of the losses among
the public as a whole instead of requiring contracting parties
to protect themselves in their contracts. There is no public need
or necessity for this result because all parties have a basis for
a claim under the contract they bargained for. It appears that
this Court wants to give them more and spread the cost to the public.
Finally, I disagree
with Justice Wells' concurring opinion, but I do believe that for
the purposes of stability of the law this Court should make clear
when a contract limits the parties to an action based upon contract
law.
I would affirm
the district court of appeal in its application of Casa Clara to
this case.
Application
for Review of the Decision of the District Court of Appeal - Certified
Great Public Importance
Second
District - Case No. 96-03552
(Polk
County)
Alan
S. Becker, Steven B. Lesser, and Gary C. Rosen of Becker & Poliakoff,
P.A., Fort Lauderdale, Florida,
for
Petitioner
C.
Geoffrey Vining, Lakeland, Florida,
for
Respondents