Thanks Anthony for the link, I may be talking to these guys, they seem to have a better understanding of the pit falls than my PI insurers.
Kurnal, you are absolutely correct in terms of this warranty producing a contract when none existed before but I’m not sure the contractual obligation would be between the assessor and the tenant.
The Type 3 assessment might be a red herring in this and the collateral warranty is designed to introduce the Fire Risk Assessor into the contractual relationship between the original architect and the developers from whom the housing association acquired the building. The Fire Risk Assessor acting for the housing association who then potentially identifies latent defects with the building, now becomes embroiled in the design & build indemnity by way of a third party collateral relationship to act as a ‘condition surveyor’ in all but name to the housing association or owner of the building.
If, as suggested in the link above provided by ‘AnthonyB’ the collateral warranty states that the original contractors design must be “fit for the purposes expressed in any specification or performance requirement” and the Fire Risk Assessor in his report opines that it is not – does the Assessor leave himself open to legal action from the original design & build team? and if so, should we all be doubling our unit prices for these fire condition surveys/assessments?