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Brett M. Wilbur CSI, CCS, AIA Senior Member Username: brett
Post Number: 186 Registered: 12-2004
| Posted on Thursday, November 12, 2009 - 09:32 am: | |
This question is not specifically about specifications; however, it is about the legal aspects of shop drawing review, specifically about consultant engineer review, which I tend to think falls under the watchful third eye of the specifier for the most part. I’ve searched through Google for some legal case studies or articles but have found very few, so thought I would share here to get some real experience from the front lines. Here it is in 2 parts: 1. What liability does the Architect have or take on if he were to mark up engineering submittals and return to the contractor without forwarding to his consulting engineer? Say it is for a light fixture and the schedule was tight and there wasn’t time to forward for a proper review. Say the Architect erroneously approved the wrong ballast or the wrong voltage assuming that the subcontractor/contractor knew what they were doing. 2. What if the Architect had sent it to the engineer who reviewed and stamped it approved or rejected, but then the Architect made changes to the engineer’s comments without telling the engineer? Say he overruled the engineer and approved a submittal that the engineer rejected. Any thoughts would be appreciated. |
Ralph Liebing, RA, CSI, CDT Senior Member Username: rliebing
Post Number: 1100 Registered: 02-2003
| Posted on Thursday, November 12, 2009 - 09:51 am: | |
I think the architect is wrong in both cases, and will come by unnecessary liability exposure. Schedules have taken on a life of their own and everyone has come to both fear them and bend over backwards to meet them. BUT in the end, doing our work correctly should still be our primary issue-- and that may need to be explained to the contractor and your client [to whom the contractor will complain]. Sounds Pollyannish, but no project is worth your reputation, putting yourself in jeopardy by assuming unnecessary liability or bending to unreasonable expectations. |
Russ Hinkle, AIA, CDT, LEED AP Senior Member Username: rhinkle
Post Number: 69 Registered: 02-2006
| Posted on Thursday, November 12, 2009 - 10:17 am: | |
Ralph, I grew up with a mother who was always Pollyannish. Life is so much better when you approach it that way. Just my take, but the older I get the more I agree with your take on schedules. With age comes wisdom. Russ Hinkle |
Robert W. Johnson Senior Member Username: robert_w_johnson
Post Number: 43 Registered: 03-2009
| Posted on Thursday, November 12, 2009 - 10:33 am: | |
Brett I think the answers to your questions are pretty simple - the Architect is responsible for his or her actions. If the Architect overrules or ignores the Engineer in the review of submittals related to the Engineer's design responsibility, than the Architect assumes the liability that might result from those actions and the Engineer is relieved of any liability for the Architect's actions. Scheduling concerns will not offset that - the judge or mediator will not shed any tears for you. |
Mark Gilligan SE, CSI Senior Member Username: mark_gilligan
Post Number: 237 Registered: 10-2007
| Posted on Thursday, November 12, 2009 - 05:19 pm: | |
The architect that does not consults with his consultants accepts the liability and cannot pass the consequences along to the consultant. I think you need to differentiate between active actions where one marks up the submittial as opposed to those situations where you did not catch a mistake. I believe that most general conditions take the position that the contractor is still responsible for mistakes that were not caught. |
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