Clear Roles, Shared Interfaces: How Responsibility Really Flows in Construction Claims
Construction projects are not just built, they are coordinated across a network of parties with distinct but interdependent responsibilities. Contractors, engineers, architects, and municipal inspectors each play a defined role within the framework of contracts, drawings, specifications, building codes and engineering standards.
For insurers, understanding how these roles intersect and where they are often misunderstood is critical. Construction claims rarely stem from a single failure. More often, they arise from gaps, overlaps, or incorrect assumptions about who was responsible for what. When those boundaries are unclear, liability becomes difficult to assign, defend, and resolve.
The Core Issue: Responsibility vs. Perception
A persistent challenge in construction defect claims is the disconnect between actual responsibility and perceived responsibility. Owners and insurers may assume that inspections ensure quality, contractors may rely on design completeness or past practice, and design professionals may expect controlled execution of their plans. Municipal involvement is often interpreted as a final safeguard.
In reality, none of these parties provides comprehensive oversight of the entire project. Liability depends not only on who was involved, but on who was contractually and professionally responsible for a specific function, and whether they fulfilled that obligation.
Who Does What (and What They Don’t Do)
Contractors are responsible for means, methods, sequencing, and workmanship. They control daily site activities and are expected to deliver work that aligns with the contract documents. However, they do not design the structure and often must make decisions in the field based on evolving conditions.
Engineers and architects are responsible for design adequacy and code compliance. Where mandated by the building code, they may provide the municipal building department a Commitment to General Review or similar document, which obligates them to perform a general review of the construction to determine whether the work generally aligns with the design of their specific discipline.
Code-mandated General Review:
- Is intermittent and high-level, only relates to their design and is based on their professional judgment;
- Involves assessing whether the work generally conforms with the design;
- It is not the more detailed concept of inspection, which involves a much more detailed verification of the work on site;
- It is not continuous supervision, nor does it involve verifying every installed component; and,
- It does not alter the statutory duty of the municipality to enforce the building code.
Municipal inspectors enforce building code compliance at mandated stages of the work (e.g., excavation, foundations, framing, insulation, etc.). They attend the site at specific milestones, review visible work, and confirm minimum compliance. They do not monitor construction continuously, approve design adequacy, or guarantee workmanship.
Why This Matters in Claims
Many construction claims are driven by incorrect assumptions. A passed inspection is often taken as confirmation of compliance. The presence of an engineer on site may be interpreted as approval of the work. Following drawings are sometimes assumed to transfer responsibility away from the contractor.
These assumptions do not hold under scrutiny. Inspections capture only a moment in time and only what is visible. Code-mandated General Review by an architect or engineer does not constitute approval of unauthorized field changes or execution details. Code-mandated inspections by the Municipality may not include certain aspects of the construction, for example, cladding, thus deficiencies with those aspects are unlikely to be detected. As a result, disputes often arise not only from the defect itself, but also from differing factors that impact responsibility for the work and the inspections or review of that work.
From an insurance perspective, liability most often emerges at the interfaces between roles. When contractors implement field changes without authorization and formal review, responsibility can shift toward them, even if the change appears minor. When code-mandated General Review is interpreted as full oversight, expectations exceed actual scope, creating exposure for design professionals. Gaps in inspection, either due to poor performance of the inspector(s) or because inspections for those building aspects were not mandatory or practically possible, are another common factor. Work that is concealed before it is reviewed introduces uncertainty that is difficult to resolve later.
When failures occur, the critical question becomes whether the issue represents a failure to meet code, a failure to meet design intent, or a failure in execution. Each of these points to a different responsible party.
Documentation: The Determining Factor in Liability
In many cases, documentation impacts how liability is assigned. A clear record helps establish what was built, what changed, and who reviewed or approved those changes.
Project records such as RFIs, site instructions, inspection reports, and photographic evidence provide essential context. Without them, liability may be assigned to the party with control of the work, even when responsibility may have been shared.
A More Accurate View of Risk for Insurers
Construction risk is best understood as a system of coordinated but limited scopes. No single party provides full oversight. Risk increases when roles are assumed rather than defined, when verification does not align with construction sequencing, and when documentation is incomplete.
Recognizing these limits allows insurers to better evaluate claims and understand how responsibility is distributed across the project.
Construction liability is not determined by identifying who was present on a project. It is about understanding who was responsible, within what limits, and at what point in the process.
For insurers, the key is analyzing the interaction between parties, the boundaries of their roles, and the timing of decisions and verification. When those elements are clear, liability becomes far easier to assign, defend, and resolve.
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