Electic
Electrical
- Sep 9, 2003
- 175
Is it generally ethical to ask the design engineer to pay for an omission from his design?
I can understand the idea that a customer needs to be made whole if the design left out some cost, that was not planned for; however, this also would seem to open up controversy, including
1) that the engineer is no longer teamed with the project owner. Such liability will cancel transparency to find solutions.
2) would seem to imply incentive based consulting, that would similarly include compensation for the engineer if the design saves money.
3) could make problem solving or trouble shooting projects not worth the risk involved, if the problems were not all identified.
4) such mechanism could be used by an unscrupulous developer to recover project costs.
Can such liability be reduced by proposing work be completed "under the supervision" of a customer?
I can understand the idea that a customer needs to be made whole if the design left out some cost, that was not planned for; however, this also would seem to open up controversy, including
1) that the engineer is no longer teamed with the project owner. Such liability will cancel transparency to find solutions.
2) would seem to imply incentive based consulting, that would similarly include compensation for the engineer if the design saves money.
3) could make problem solving or trouble shooting projects not worth the risk involved, if the problems were not all identified.
4) such mechanism could be used by an unscrupulous developer to recover project costs.
Can such liability be reduced by proposing work be completed "under the supervision" of a customer?