Forensic construction is the application of science to decide questions arising from legal disputes over the way in which structures have been built; especially with regard to the type and quality of the structure, materials, and workmanship.
Wednesday, 14 December 2011
Wednesday, 23 November 2011
THE DUTY TO REVIEW DESIGN
There is case law
which suggests an architect or engineer has an ongoing duty to review their design.
The architect is under a
continuing duty to check that his design will work in practice and to correct
any errors which may emerge. It savours
of the ridiculous for the architect to be able to say: ‘True, my design was
faulty but of course, I saw to it that the contractors followed it faithfully’
and to be enabled on that ground to succeed in the action.[1]
There is authority that duration of the duty
continues beyond practical completion until the works are truly complete.[2]
PERSONAL AND COMPANY LIABILITY
Individuals who
are members of companies may, through their actions, create liabilities – both
on the companies and on themselves. This
is true also of individuals who work for partnerships.
Insurance
policies will generally be taken out by companies or partnerships rather than
by individuals. These policies, which
protect the companies or partnerships, will not necessarily automatically
provide the same protection to the members of the companies and partnerships –
whether they be principals, employees or owners.
For this reason,
some professional organisations advise and/or require their members to be
expressly covered by the insurances taken out by the organisations for whom
they work. Even where this is in place,
the insurance cover is unlikely to extend to protect individuals when acting in
their own capacity rather than on behalf of their company, etc.
Therefore, professionals who give advice not in
pursuit of a commission given to the organisation with which they work may
expose themselves to liabilities for which the insurance taken out by the
company or partnership offers no protection.
Tuesday, 22 November 2011
Insurance Cover for Construction?
It is sometimes
not enough merely to see that insurance is in place, it is important also to
know what is covered by that insurance.
An example of inappropriate insurance came to
light when a major building-products manufacturer undertook the role of main
contractor in remedial works to a refurbishment project. Their building system and materials had been
used for the refurbishment work, but performance when finished was flawed. Believing the faults lay in the site work,
not in their products, they undertook to confirm this to the building owner by
implementing repairs.
They ably set about correcting the
installation. This done, the work
failed. They had created an excellent
test bed for a relatively new product.
By minimising workmanship error and having full control over design and
materials, they had ensured there was a full-sized example of their building
system, which was correctly set up and exposed as intended to the
elements. This was a much more robust
way of evaluating the system than the laboratory tests and computer modelling
upon which all had hitherto relied. The
failures were limited and allowed specific flaws in the computer modelling to
be identified, with benefits for the future development and use of the system.
Sunday, 13 November 2011
Building over the boundary
A development in Worcester was hemmed in by surrounding
properties. For maximum return, the
development was taken to the very edge of the legal boundaries. To prevent dispute, the foundations were
designed not to cross the boundaries into the land of those neighbouring owners
who were opposed to the development.
This created difficulties in construction.
The site team did not appreciate the significance of this aspect of the design, particularly as the legal boundaries were to them nought but invisible concepts passing though muddy excavations. In constructing a basement, the builder ran the bottom layer of concrete wide of the site boundaries.
The site team did not appreciate the significance of this aspect of the design, particularly as the legal boundaries were to them nought but invisible concepts passing though muddy excavations. In constructing a basement, the builder ran the bottom layer of concrete wide of the site boundaries.
Tuesday, 8 November 2011
Exclusion Clauses
The doctrine of
privity poses particular problems for exclusion clauses in contracts.
Exclusion or
limitation clauses may exclude or limit the liability, for a specific breach or
negligent act, of a contracting party to those it contracts with.
It is sometimes
desirable to extend an exclusion clause to parties outside the contract. For
example, a company may wish to protect contractors that it employs. On the whole, however, privity of contract
acts to restrict the effect of such clauses on third parties.
A manufacturer of cladding and roofing
materials sells its products through builders’ merchants, under a contract of
sale which excludes liability for consequential loss and limits liability in
any event to the amount paid to them for their materials.
Part of their cladding cracked after it had
been installed on a building. The
building owner, the employer under the building contract, sued the contractor
who, in turn, sued the cladding subcontractor, and so on down the contractual
chain until the action reached the manufacturer.
At the same time, the owner brought an action
against the engineer who designed the building.
Monday, 7 November 2011
Insurance Policies Must Comply with the Governing Law
Under English
law, the principle that a contract must not contain agreements which are
contrary to law applies equally to a contract of insurance. This can cause insurers to have to pay out
very much larger sums than they anticipated:
A factory building was substantially damaged
by fire, causing extensive collapse. The local authority required the
reconstruction of the fire-damaged factory to comply fully with current
Building Regulations. The factory had been partially demolished by the fire to
ground level but parts of the structure were still largely intact. The building could – but for the Building
Regulations – have been rebuilt, retaining the parts of the factory which were
still intact, to the original standard of construction. This would have complied with the regulations
current at the time the building was built but not those current at the time of
the fire damage.
The local authority pointed out that, where a
building was to be reconstructed from within eight metres of the ground, the
Building Regulations would apply to the whole of the fabric including the
retained part and that the retained part would have to be brought up to current
Building Regulation standards. The result was, to all intents and purposes,
that the factory had to be rebuilt as a brand new building.
This increased the claim on the insurance by
about £1m. The insurers, an American company, were not familiar with this
peculiarity of English Building Regulations and had not foreseen, in setting
the premium for the insurance, their exposure to this risk. They nevertheless could not insist that they
had a right to limit cover to the cost of reconstruction to a standard below
that required by statute and so accepted that they would have to pay for a new
building which complied fully with the Building Regulations but which was
otherwise the same as that which had been fire damaged.
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