The duties of a contractor carrying out ‘design’ are defined by the scope of work, as well as express and implied contract terms, statute and professional obligations.
However, this is a changing area of law and it can be difficult to identify the scope of the design obligations given that the relevant standard does not always depend solely on how the contract terms are drafted.
When reviewing design obligations and potential risk, it is important to distinguish between the different duties in respect of goods and materials; and services and design.
Generally speaking, the starting point is that a contractor supplying goods or materials is obliged to supply items that are reasonably fit for their intended purpose. Details will be set out in the contract terms or may be implied by statute. Employers often introduce further wording regarding unacceptable or hazardous materials.
The contract will usually specify the standard of workmanship but if not, the works are to be carried out with proper skill and care. This is expressed in JCT contracts as carrying out the works in a “proper and workmanlike manner”.
The two most common duties of a designer are:
For a party carrying out design, unless the scope of their obligation is expressly confirmed to be exercising the duties of a designer exercising the appropriate degree of skill and care – which is sometimes expressed as the same standard as an ‘architect’ or ‘professional’ – they could be held to the higher fitness for purpose standard. This is because English law imposes a fitness for purpose obligation where a non-professional is undertaking a professional activity.
Even where the obligation is to use reasonable skill and care, it can be necessary to specifically disclaim specialist expertise and to tell a client if they need to seek specialist advice elsewhere. In the fire safety context, the case of LDC v George Downing European confirmed that a strict obligation to comply with statutory requirements, including building regulations, is not superseded by a reasonable skill and care obligation.
Employers can sometimes favour fitness for purpose obligations. These can be achieved not just through express terms, but also through performance requirements. Case law confirms that even where there is ‘reasonable skill and care’ wording in a contract, a competing provision can impose a ‘fitness for purpose’ responsibility. That happened in the MT Højgaard case. There, the contractor found itself responsible for design defects due to wording ‘tucked away’ in a technical document, even though it had met its obligations around reasonable skill and care and complied with relevant industry codes.
NEC contracts impose a fitness for purpose obligation unless the “reasonable skill and care” Option X15 is selected. In any event, the works information/scope should still be checked to see if fitness for purpose obligations are imposed in respect of any aspects of design.
Clauses or requirements introduced at contract negotiation stage which can carry additional risks for contractors carrying out design include:
It is possible to manage design risk if contracts and accompanying documentation are carefully reviewed to understand the liabilities to which the parties are signing up and if the design process is monitored through to completion.
Practical tips for managing common pitfalls include: