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Issues
In recent years consulting engineers have been asked to enter into collateral
warranties with the financiers of construction projects which the financiers can then
transfer to subsequent purchasers.
The practice appears to have developed when the courts began to reduce
the neighbourhood on which the duty of care is based, having
for a long time continued to extend its scope and extent.
If the warranty seeks to go beyond the concept of negligence, then it is
certain to breach the provision of normal contracts for professional indemnity
insurance.
If the warranty is limited to negligence, then the danger exists that
possible ambiguities between it and the warrantors contract for
professional indemnity insurance may cause that contract to be called
into question.
Furthermore, the warrantor probably would not know the identity
of those to whom the warranty will eventually be transferred. Thus, he
is being asked to make a contract with someone unknown to him and
to replace the law of tort with the law of contract for that relationship.
Rationale
There is adequate remedy in the law for the owners of construction
projects, and it is against the interest of both consulting engineers and
society that the liability of engineers be widened under the pretext of
the collateral warranty instrument whereby engineers are drawn into
relationships under contract which should more appropriately be
governed by the law of torts. Such relationships may even threaten
the availability of professional indemnity insurance for these engineers.
Policy
FIDIC recommends that its Member Associations oppose the
concept of collateral warranties between consulting engineers and
third parties.
Approved by FIDIC Executive Committee in June 1992
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