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International Construction Law Review

CONSTRUCTION CLAIMS—THE ENABLING ENVIRONMENT

DR PETER J MASON

BSc, MPhil, PhDCeng, FICE Divisional Director, Binnie Black & Veatch, Redhill, UK

Construction and contract law is not just for lawyers and contracts engineers. All engineers involved in site construction will also be involved in decisions, discussions and correspondence which are governed by the terms of the contract they are working under. Even decisions that seem largely technical will have contractual implications.
The education and training of engineers tends to focus on the technical. Contract law comes later and, even then, will be taught in terms of clause and interpretation. This will not necessarily prepare an engineer for the plethora of surprisingly imaginative approaches and interpretations to claims sometimes used by a skilled contractor. The only way to bring these into focus is to stand back, to try and understand the background pattern often employed in order to prepare an “enabling environment” for claims. It can be akin to gamesmanship and, as far as the present writer is aware, is not taught formally and yet it is one of the most perennial aspects of contract administration.
This brief article is one engineer’s attempt to draw a pattern out of what might often seem random numbers of creative, and often bizarre, issues. It is based on over 30 years of international experience, mainly on large dam and hydro schemes. The technique used was to reduce what might seem to have been random and unconnected matters back to common themes.
There is a well known quotation from the engineer James Mansergh when writing to Birmingham Corporation about the construction of the Elan Valley Waterworks scheme and recommending the use of direct labour rather than a contractor:
“The work should be done in an absolutely sound and faultless manner—and I believe that the chances of getting it done so are greater without than with a contractor—none about the job having any inducement to hurry or scamp. It will be practically impossible to draw up a specification for these almost unique works in which there will be no weak places upon which a contractor could find claims for extras. Nowadays, with big contractors likely to tender for such jobs, extra claiming has become a fine art. I believe that they employ experts who, from the moment a contract is commenced, are engaged exclusively in devising and formulation of such claims.”
Mansergh wrote these words in a report to the Corporation in 1892, over 100 years ago. Many will argue that things have not changed much in the intervening century.
[2002
The International Construction Law Review

522

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