Non-delegable duty with Vicarious Liability Forum

(Study Tips, Dealing With Stress, Maintaining a Social Life, Financial Aid, Internships, Bar Exam, Careers in Law . . . )
Post Reply
SKlei

New
Posts: 53
Joined: Mon Dec 05, 2011 1:01 pm

Non-delegable duty with Vicarious Liability

Post by SKlei » Mon Apr 30, 2012 11:39 pm

My professor explained that there is no VL for independent contractors unless the exceptions of excessive control, statute, incompetent IC, non-delegable duty, and abnormally dangerous activity. I'm just a little confused as to what a non-delegable duty is?

User avatar
joobacca

Bronze
Posts: 282
Joined: Tue Jun 17, 2008 10:49 am

Re: Non-delegable duty with Vicarious Liability

Post by joobacca » Tue May 01, 2012 12:02 am

my guess is there are certain relationships in which a duty of care between A and B that cannot be delegated away to an independent contractor.

i'm making this up here, so be careful. let's say a hospital corporation owes a duty of care to its patients. it uses independent contractors to do some procedures on patients or something. i would think that the independent contractor exception wouldn't work there. maybe a school to student relationship would work.

whatever the relationship might be, i think certain folks owe a duty of care to some other folks that cannot be delegated away through the IC exception.

User avatar
theavrock

Silver
Posts: 601
Joined: Mon Feb 23, 2009 10:52 pm

Re: Non-delegable duty with Vicarious Liability

Post by theavrock » Tue May 01, 2012 12:10 am

joobacca wrote:my guess is there are certain relationships in which a duty of care between A and B that cannot be delegated away to an independent contractor.

i'm making this up here, so be careful. let's say a hospital corporation owes a duty of care to its patients. it uses independent contractors to do some procedures on patients or something. i would think that the independent contractor exception wouldn't work there. maybe a school to student relationship would work.

whatever the relationship might be, i think certain folks owe a duty of care to some other folks that cannot be delegated away through the IC exception.
That is exactly the basic idea. Generally parties cannot be held liable for the actions of their independent contractors. This is what differentiates the employer/employee (respondeat superior) relationship from the primary/independent contractor relationship.

That being said, there are some activities so dangerous or so whatever that the primary cannot delegate it to their independent contractors and escape liability.

Post Reply

Return to “Forum for Law School Students”