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Sarah Lupton 
Cornes and Lupton’s Design Liability in the Construction Industry 

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Cover of Sarah Lupton: Cornes and Lupton's Design Liability in the Construction Industry (PDF)
Liability for the design of a building or structure is of
fundamental concern to construction professionals, design-build
contractors, specialist sub-contractors, and lawyers. Although
other texts cover a wide range of aspects of liability, only
Cornes and Lupton’s Design Liability in Construction
draws together all those matters that relate specifically to
design.

A number of factors have come together recently and are
addressed in this significant update and rewrite of the 4th
edition, including:

* popularity of design & build procurement

* partnering arrangements and early contractor involvement

* new standard forms of construction contract and appointment,
and revisions to older forms

* technical innovations in construction

* collaborative working and BIM systems

* many well-publicised cases regarding design failures

* significant developments in the law of tort and professional
liability

* the development of the single European market and increased
provision of services overseas

Together these factors create a new range of design liability
issues which the construction professional has to face. Written for
lawyers, architects, engineers, and contractors, the fifth edition
of Design Liability in Construction will also serve as a
useful text for masters level courses in engineering, surveying and
construction law.
€100.99
payment methods

Table of Content

Acknowledgments

Preface

1 The Industry Context

1.1 What is design?

1.2 Procurement routes

1.3 Who are the designers

2 Liability under Contract

2.1 Formation of contract

2.2 Problems with contract formation

2.3 The terms of a contract

2.4 Exemption clauses

2.5 Privity of contract

2.6 Assignment

3 Law of Tort – Part 1

3.1 Definition of a tort

3.2 Vicarious liability

3.3 Negligence

3.4 1932-1964 historical perspective

3.5 1972-1978 historical perspective

3.6 Anns v London Borough Council

3.7 1983 Junior Books

3.8 1988 D&F estates

3.9 Murphy v Brentwood District Council

4 Law of Tort – Part 2

4.1 Liability for injury and damage to property

4.2 Liability for economic loss

4.3 The complex structure theory after Murphy

4.4 Summary of the position 2011

5 Liability under Statute

5.1 Defective Premises Act 1974

5.2 Building Act 1984

5.3 Health and Safety at Work Act 1974

6 Nature of Liability for Professional Negligence

6.1 Reasonable skill and care

6.2 Application of the test to designers

6.3 Examples of failure to take care – general

6.4 Special skills

6.5 State of the art defence

7 Fitness for Purpose Liability

7.1 Contractor’s design obligation

7.2 Reliance and partial reliance

7.3 Consultants and strict liability

8 Duty to Warn

8.1 Contractors duty to warn

9 Duties in Detail

9.1 General designer duties

9.2 Delegation of duties

9.3 Site investigation

9.4 Appraisal and client knowledge

9.5 Design details and technical information

9.6 Innovative and risky design

9.7 Commenting on others design

9.8 Inspection

9.9 Duty to review the design

10 Liability to Third Parties: ‘Novation’ and Collateral Warranties

10.1 Contract/tort liability

10.2 Architect-contractor liability

10.3 Sub-contractor/employer liability

10.4 Novation

10.5 Warranties

11 Damages

11.1 Compensatory

11.2 Causation

11.3 Contract: remoteness

11.4 Tort: remoteness

11.5 Measure of damages

11.6 Mitigation/reasonable cost

11.7 Damages and designers

11.8 Injunction or damages?

11.9 Diminution in value or cost of remedial work?

11.10 Consequential loss

11.11 Distress

11.12 Betterment and elaborate repair

11.13 Contributory negligence and contribution

12 Limitation

12.1 Statutory periods

12.2 Limitation and contract

12.3 Fraud and concealment – contract

12.4 Limitation and tort

12.5 History of development of the law prior to Pirelli

12.6 Limitation in negligence – the Pirelli decision

12.7 Developments since Pirelli

13 Measures for Limiting Liability

13.1 Using financial caps

13.2 Limiting liability for consequential losses

13.3 Net contribution clauses

14 Standard Forms of Contract

14.1 JCT

14.2 GC Works

14.3 FIDIC

15 Standard Forms of Appointment

15.1 RIBA

15.2 ACA

15.3 ACE

15.4 PPS3

15.5 RICS

16 Professional Indemnity Insurance

16.1 Principles of professional indemnity insurance

16.2 Changing insurers

16.3 Dealing with the claim

16.4 Avoiding disputes with insurers

16.5 PII for design build contracts

16.6 Other types of insurance

17 Design Liability in the EU

18 Design Liability in Other Jurisdictions

Bibliography

Case List

Index

About the author

Sarah Lupton has degrees in architecture and law, and has
over 30 years’ experience as a partner in the London-based
architects’ practice of Lupton Stellakis. She combines practice
with an academic post at the Welsh School of Architecture, as
Professor and director of the MA in Professional Studies. She
lectures widely on subjects related to construction law, and is an
arbitrator, adjudicator and expert witness. Sarah is a member of
many industry and professional committees, and is chair of the CIC
Liability Panel, and past chair of the RIBA Presidents Advisory
Committee on Dispute Resolution. As well as this publication,
she is the author of many books, including a series on standard
form construction contracts.
Language English ● Format PDF ● Pages 440 ● ISBN 9781444361131 ● File size 3.0 MB ● Publisher John Wiley & Sons ● Published 2013 ● Edition 5 ● Downloadable 24 months ● Currency EUR ● ID 2794092 ● Copy protection Adobe DRM
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