Surveyor’s negligence: what damages?
Is the correct measure of damages the diminution in value or the cost of the cure?
Is the correct measure of damages the diminution in value or the cost of the cure?
TCC permitted to stop insolvent firms from commencing Construction Act adjudications
Stuart Pemble explains why he thinks that our highest court reached the incorrect decision on the enforcement of clauses prohibiting oral variation of contracts
It is a (perhaps sad) fact of life that, in addition to the awful human and environmental cost of a tragedy like the one that occurred at the Macondo Prospect in the Gulf of Mexico in April 2010, there always seems to be plenty of work for lawyers in trying to sort out the legal and financial consequences of what went wrong.
One of the key legal principles which limits the damages for negligent advice has yet again made its way to the appellate courts. Stuart Pemble explains how and why
It can often be very difficult to prove the terms of an oral contract, which can persuade a TCC judge not to enforce an adjudicator’s award. Stuart Pemble doubts whether this is the correct approach
In one of his final judgments before joining the Court of Appeal, Coulson J has arguably sounded the death knell for “smash and grab adjudications”. Stuart Pemble is delighted
Stuart Pemble looks at a Court of Appeal decision on service under the Party Wall etc Act, which turned on the correct legal meaning of the word “may”
Mark Holyoake’s dispute with the Candy brothers dominated the headlines just before Christmas. Stuart Pemble considers what legal lessons can be learned from the judgment
In November, the UK’s highest court gave a welcome early Christmas present to surveyors defending claims for negligent valuation.