Monday 17 October 2016 04:08 PM
Fletcher Construction asks judge to dismiss CCDHB claim for leaky hospital pipes
By Sophie Boot
Oct. 17 (BusinessDesk) - Capital & Coast District Health Board has no chance of winning its claims against Fletcher Construction for its work on
Wellington Hospital, and the case should not go to trial, Fletcher's lawyer has told the High Court.
Fletcher's lawyer, Kerry Fulton, has sought a summary judgment from associate judge Warwick Smith, saying CCDHB has no
case. Fletcher was contracted by CCDHB to build the majority of Wellington's $346 million central hospital, a task it
substantially completed in December 2008, Fulton said. The health board says there are defects in the copper pipes used
in the hot and cold water system and in the system's design.
The pipes have developed pinhole leaks and the system needs to be replaced. When the health board launched the court
action in May this year it said it wasn't appropriate to speculate how much a solution would cost.
The system was designed by Beca, which the district health board had its own contract with, Fulton said, while Fletcher
subcontracted out the installation of the systems to specialists who have since been liquidated.
"The design was not a responsibility resting on FCC, and it can have no liability for that," Fulton said. "CCDHB
witnesses don't dispute that the defects are primarily design defects, for which FCC can't be responsible."
Fulton rejected the health board's allegations that Fletcher couldn't delegate its duty to ensure the building materials
were fit for purpose.
"These pipes all came stamped compliant with the standard. What were we supposed to do? That's it. If a duty like this
was said to be owed, the construction industry would come to a standstill because every contractor would think, we have
to get everything audited now, and that's just plain nonsense."
The health board has also alleged the pipe manufacturer, Crane Group, breached its duty of care as it says it supplied
faulty pipes, Fulton said.
"CCDHB agreed its protection post-construction against material failures was through the two-year guarantee they agreed
to accept from the specialist sub-contractor. In any event, the alleged defects are not defects, and there's no prospect
of that being established, and there's no prospect of establishing breach."
The hearing continues this afternoon with the health board's lawyers presenting their case.
(BusinessDesk)
ends