What are the facts?
Plaintiff Cheney purchased a residence in "Village 2 at New Hope," a large, planned residential development in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, from the developer, Village 2 at New Hope, Inc., a builder-vendor in the business of constructing and selling dwelling units. After taking possession, Cheney alleged that latent defects in the planning, design, and/or construction of the dwelling and its appurtenances rendered the home unreasonably dangerous and caused injury and damage. Rather than proceed solely on negligence or contract-based theories, Cheney asserted strict products liability under Restatement (Second) of Torts §402A, contending that the developer had sold a "product" (the dwelling) in a defective condition unreasonably dangerous to its intended users. The trial court sustained preliminary objections/demurrer to the §402A count on the ground that a residence is not a "product" within the meaning of §402A. Cheney appealed, asking the Pennsylvania Supreme Court to extend strict products liability to builder-vendors of new homes.
What is the legal issue?
Does Restatement (Second) of Torts §402A impose strict products liability on a builder-vendor for design or construction defects in a newly sold dwelling by treating the home as a "product"?
What rule applies?
Under Restatement (Second) of Torts §402A, one who sells any product in a defective condition unreasonably dangerous to the user or consumer is subject to strict liability for resulting physical harm if (a) the seller is engaged in the business of selling such a product and (b) it is expected to and does reach the user or consumer without substantial change in the condition in which it is sold. In Pennsylvania, §402A applies to products (i.e., movable goods) placed in the stream of commerce, but it does not extend to the sale of real property or dwellings treated as products; claims arising from alleged defects in homes must proceed, if at all, under negligence or appropriate warranty theories rather than strict products liability.
What did the court hold?
No. A dwelling is not a "product" for purposes of §402A, and strict products liability does not apply to a builder-vendor's sale of a residence.
What is the reasoning?
The court emphasized that §402A is directed at sellers of products—traditionally chattels—distributed through commercial channels, and its policy rests on enterprise liability for mass-produced goods and the difficulty consumers face in inspecting and proving negligence for hidden manufacturing defects. A dwelling, by contrast, is a complex amalgam of land, design, and construction services, historically governed by principles distinct from product sales, such as caveat emptor (subject to exceptions) and negligence for faulty workmanship. The court reasoned that to classify an entire house as a "product" would effectively convert home construction and sale into a strict liability regime—an extension not contemplated by §402A and better left to legislative action or tailored common-law warranty development. The court distinguished between an entire dwelling and component items within it: while manufacturers or sellers of defective component goods incorporated into a home may face §402A liability, the builder-vendor of the dwelling as a whole is not strictly liable under §402A for alleged design or construction defects. Finally, the court noted that buyers retain traditional remedies—such as negligence against the builder, express warranty claims, and contract remedies—without conflating real property transactions with product liability doctrine.
Why is this case significant?
Cheney is a foundational Pennsylvania case delineating the scope of §402A and the boundary between products liability and real property/construction disputes. It confirms that, in Pennsylvania, homes are not treated as "products" for strict liability, steering construction-defect litigation toward negligence and warranty frameworks. The case also sets the doctrinal stage for Elderkin v. Gaster (1972), where the court recognized an implied warranty of habitability for new homes sold by builder-vendors—addressing buyer protection needs without expanding §402A to real property. For students, Cheney is critical to understanding policy limits of strict liability, the chattel/realty distinction, and how courts calibrate remedies across overlapping tort and contract domains.
Did the court's decision in Cheney eliminate all remedies for purchasers of defective new homes?
No. Cheney foreclosed only §402A strict products liability against the builder-vendor for the home as a whole. Purchasers could still pursue negligence claims for faulty construction, sue on express warranties, and—after Elderkin v. Gaster (1972)—assert an implied warranty of habitability/workmanlike construction against builder-vendors of new homes. Additionally, §402A may still apply against manufacturers or sellers of defective component products installed in the home (e.g., a defective water heater).
Why did the court refuse to treat a house as a "product" under §402A?
The court underscored that §402A was crafted for mass-distributed chattels and rests on policy rationales specific to consumer goods (risk distribution, difficulty of inspection, and enterprise responsibility). A house involves land, design, and construction services—traditionally governed by different legal frameworks. Treating the entire dwelling as a product would vastly expand strict liability beyond its intended scope and risk supplanting negligence and contract principles that more appropriately regulate homebuilding.
How does Cheney compare with New Jersey's approach in Schipper v. Levitt & Sons, Inc.?
New Jersey in Schipper took a more expansive view, effectively recognizing strict or warranty-based liability for builder-vendors of mass-produced homes. Pennsylvania in Cheney declined to follow that route for §402A, choosing instead to maintain a products/realty distinction. Pennsylvania addressed homeowner protection through later recognition of an implied warranty of habitability in Elderkin, not by extending §402A to homes.
Can a homeowner still use §402A for injuries caused by items in the home?
Yes, but typically only against the manufacturer or seller of the defective chattel (component product). For example, if a defective furnace or appliance causes injury, §402A may apply to the manufacturer of that product. Cheney's bar is directed at treating the entire dwelling—i.e., the real property and construction services—as a §402A "product" sold by the builder-vendor.
What doctrinal development did Cheney help precipitate in Pennsylvania?
Cheney's limitation on §402A for homes highlighted the need for purchaser protection in new-home sales, contributing to the court's subsequent recognition of an implied warranty of habitability in Elderkin v. Gaster (1972). That warranty supplies tailored, contract-rooted protection for buyers of new residences without transforming real property transactions into products liability cases.
Does Cheney have implications for the economic loss doctrine?
Indirectly, yes. By channeling construction-defect claims away from §402A and toward negligence and warranty, Cheney aligns with principles that economic losses in construction contexts are typically addressed through contract and warranty remedies rather than tort. While not an economic-loss case, its separation of tort strict liability from real property sales complements later jurisprudence limiting tort recovery for purely economic loss in construction disputes.