This is an excellent book: clearly written and comprehensive. I enjoyed it all, but certain chapters were particularly impressive. The introductory chapter, which gives a masterly overview of the changing face of defects claims in the last 50 years, should be recommended reading for anyone thinking of practicing in this area of law. Chapter 4 on Warranties highlights the unsung importance of warranties in the construction context, while Chapter 7 on Claims Under the Building Safety Act will be of enormous assistance to everyone as they learn to navigate their way round this long and complex piece of legislation. And then, in Chapter 9 on Insurance Claims, there is an invaluable dissection of the different insurance arrangements that can come into play when defects are discovered. Every construction lawyer without exception will need to buy a copy. Lord Justice Coulson
Darryl Royces book on building defects is an original and authoritative commentary on what is, sadly, the perennial problem of the UK construction industry, as most recently expressed in the report on the Grenfell Tower Inquiry. The book guides the reader through the increasingly dense and complex field of legal remedies extending to insurance and includes coverage of cases from other common law jurisdictions. Building Defects Law is to be welcomed as providing an unusual and impressive level of detailed commentary on the authorities which make up the body of construction law. Professor John Uff KC, founding director, Centre of Construction Law & Dispute Resolution, Kings College London
Labelling a problem with a building (or with another work of construction) as a defect is usually a step towards a hoped-for form of redress against a person or entity responsible for that defect, whether that is the builder, designer, seller, landlord, warranty provider or insurer. Doing so and then identifying the possible next steps towards an effective remedy and the legal and other obstacles that may lie in the way (including adequate expert evidence to support a claim) is not straightforward. Darryl Royces excellent new book explores in depth the routes (contract, tort, statute and more) that may lead to an answer in English law and the procedural aspects of each, generously supported by references to standard form contracts, case law and statutory material, including the new possibilities under the Building Safety Act 2022. Philip Britton LLB BCL, co-author of Residential Construction Law (Hart Publishing, 2025)