Originally posted by boredsenseless
It matters not who is named as performing the work in the conract. It is the bod that actually turns up that is the deciding factor.
So, (ignoring here all the quite reasonable steps that you can take not to be found guilty), if you *are* "professionally negligent" then you are "professionally" negligent and are personally liable for the mistake that you made. Contractual clauses are there for "contractual mistake" they count for SFA in a PN case, quite apart from the fact that if your mistake killed or injured someone [1] they are automatically void and can be voided by the courts in other situations (as in ICL v St Albans Council).
As to the quantum, if the court finds you liable to pay X. Then X is what you must pay. The court doesn't care tuppence if to get the money you have to sell your house, it's not their problem, it's yours. If you have insurance this will pay out first, but if the claim is more than the insured value you get to pay the rest. If you can't pay you can become bankrupt, but you lose the house first if you do this. Finally, there is case law that takes the value from some types of pension to pay, so this isn't always safe either.
[1] Yes I know that the average IT bod is not in a position to kill someone, but working in Process Control, Automotive and Avionics, they are.
tim

Comment