jlightonjr
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 1, 2007
- Messages
- 351
- Hatteras Model
- Not Currently A Hatteras Owner
Congrats, she is AWESOME!
Sounds to me like Trident shot themselves in the foot when they allowed a customer to dictate how they built his boat. No offense to you or your boat Byron, but I would have to question the credibility of a company who would make structural changes based on the whim of an uneducated customer. Sounds like they were more into dollars than sense.
Looks like they would have insisted on an architect signing off on the changes. If nothing else, they should have had the customer sign a release of liability. Even with that, they would most likely have lost in court as they were the professionals in this dispute. Sort of like telling your doctor how to do brain surgery on your kid.
I'm obviously not in the boat building business, but I would choose to have a binding contract and require the client have enough money in the project at the beginning as to cover myself in the event he didn't see it through to the end. What happens if a client up and dies on you before a custom boat is completed?That's easy to say when your not involved. I've been in that situation were your half way through a build and the owner gets a brain storm that either won't work or is to late in construction to do. The owner simply refuses to continue to fund the project. So the builder is looking at fighting it in court. Which means he's going to tell 100 or so people not to come to work tomorrow. Then tells the owner of the next boat in line he'll be refunding his deposit because the space he was supossed to have to build his boat is no longer available. So he'll start one lawsuite get ready to defend against another from the next boat and probably go out of bussiness before any of this is litigated. Or he'll try to work something out with the owner. Which would you choose?
Brian
I'm obviously not in the boat building business, but I would choose to have a binding contract and require the client have enough money in the project at the beginning as to cover myself in the event he didn't see it through to the end. What happens if a client up and dies on you before a custom boat is completed?
Brian, I drew my conclusions based on the information Byron provided. If there was more (or less) to it than that, then who knows?
Obviously nobody is going to front the entire purchase price, but if I'm a builder who sees a client is making unsound/unsafe decisions on a boat that I'm going to be stuck with, I'm going to have myself covered in the event I get stuck with the thing. Again, I'm making these observations as someone who has no experience in building or buying a custom boat, but it just seems like common business sense to me.
they documented everything and the owner signed off on the change order but it cost them quite a bit in time and legal fees.