No - you were the one who started this argument, and you are the one who is repeatedly coming here claiming that I am wrong to regard criminal behaviour as something that should not be promoted and advised, and that I was wrong to say that anyone who is carrying out work which might fall within the scope of a particular piece of legislation should find out if it does apply and if so what it requires.You are trolling. I'm just waiting for the "you're despicable, beneath contempt etc etc" emotive posting a la death sentence thread way back when.
If that is what the law requires you to do then that is what you must do. There are no exemptions in the law for people who happen not to like it, and if you deliberately choose to make illegal acts part of your business processes then you no longer have any claim to be a professional, you are a cowboy, pure and simple.Did you know that, technically, every time I do a site investigation within 6m of a property involving augered boreholes that will cut the imaginary 45 degree line, that I should be serving one month's notice on the neighbour?
No, but I don't have to, as I was not involved in drafting it and will not be involved in drafting any future amendments.Do you understand the - apparent - reasoning behind this pants Act?
I do know though that it does not have any human rights abuse facets.
You have no choice, not if you wish to consider yourself a professional, because a professional does not deliberately incorporate lawbreaking into his business activities. That's what cowboys do.If so, you will understand why I and most sane people will, in circumstances where the structural stability or integrity of a neighbouring property will not be affected in any way by the works, not be that bothered about satisfying the requirements of PWeA.
If you're a member of a professional body why don't you write to them and ask if their official position is that they advise their members to ignore laws governing their behaviour in professional capacities if they don't happen to agree with them.
If you did, what do you think they would say?
I'm capable of questioning a great deal, but I think you'll find that your belief that a law is ill-conceived and poorly thought out, no matter how justified, does not grant you exemption from it.If you don't, then clearly you are incapable of questioning anything and will merely follow slavishly, as "dem's da rools". There are such things as ill-conceived, poorly thought-out laws - and this Act is one such example.
I'm sure that is true, but there are no exemptions in the Act, and no withdrawal of any third party's rights, which apply if someone knows what they are doing.Now I think I, as a structural engineer, am somewhat better placed than most PW surveyors - who, by virtue of the Act, do not actually have to have any professional or relevant qualifications whatsoever - to determine the impact of my structural design on a neighbouring property.
Totally unacceptable and incompatible with the status of a professional.So smack my a*se, I'm apparently breaking a law, woopee doo. And, more than that, I'm suggesting to other people that they could give thought to ignoring said bawlix too.
Which is, of course, unfortunate, but many unfortunate and costly things can happen to people when disputes arise. Who advised your client to have a different PWS from the other person anyway? Won't that just result in a third one being appointed by the other two?I have a project on the go at the mo, where a dissent has arisen due to the neighbour refusing to sign the notice within the 14 day period. And their "reason"? Because the extension will "spoil their view". Obviously, this reasoning will have no bearing on the Award, but it doesn't stop the need for two PW surveyors being appointed, the total costs for which will fall to my client.
There are no exemptions in the law, or withdrawals of rights of third parties, which are based on the fact that complying with the law will cause needless expense and delay for one of the parties.I had another one only yesterday where the neighbour said he had taken advice from a builder, who'd said that he would not do the foundation in the way that I had designed, as it would put extra load on his (correct, but only of a low order and balanced by the increased bearing width, thus pressure will actually be less than currently exists) and will cause damage to his walls (incorrect). So, he's refusing to sign the notice and wants his own PWS, who won't be an engineer, won't have a clue about the technicalities, won't be qualified to understand the calculations and design rationale. Cue more needless expense and delay for my client.
The fact that you have no time for it is utterly irrelevant. Your personal dislike for it does not mean that it doesn't apply to your clients, and it is wrong for you to advise your clients to break the law because of your dislike of it.These kinds of idiotic use/abuse of the Act are precisely why I have no time for it.
So are there no limits to what criminality you are prepared to associate yourself with?You asked earlier about whether I would refuse to work with a client who didn't want to toe the Party Wall line. I think you know the answer to that, really: I've done my statutory duty and advised them of the requirement to comply; it's no skin off my nose if they do or don't and I don't design things that will cause structural damage to shared/adjacent structures, so the PWeA is an irrelevance to me from that pov.
I think the fact that you are so contemptuous of people who believe that they should act lawfully speaks volumes about you.Not only that, clearly the clients are not narrow-minded prescriptive knobs incapable of thinking for themselves and, funnily enough, I prefer such more free-thinking kinds of people, not those who suck on their teeth and make tutting noises and wear blinkers.
Please write to your professional body, ask them if they are happy for you to advise people to break the law, and let us know if they agree with you or not.