I paid for my survey, I own it. Of course, if the broker wants a copy, he can ask me. If the sale falls through and the next in line wants a copy, I will be happy to sell him a copy of the survey for 1/2 what I paid for it. It will save him time and money.
I guess that makes me a bit strange. SHRUG
If breaching contracts (not honoring agreements) is how you roll, more power to you. Not my thing.
Doesn't that become a pretty difficult argument when he/she shows that you paid him/her for that work...and the work is pretty much self explanatory?Simply pointing out it can be done. But a survey is not a contract no matter what contractual language a surveyor puts in a report. There must be an offer and an acceptance for a contract to exist and you must agree to the terms.
Putting terms and conditions in a report does not turn it into a contract. You own the survey and can do what you want with it.
...but terms, agreement and acceptance of payment seems to be a contract where i come from.
As long as terms are agreed to ahead of time, then yes, it's a contract. But if a bunch of boilerplate just shows up in a report, then it's not a contract.
Simply pointing out it can be done. But a survey is not a contract no matter what contractual language a surveyor puts in a report. There must be an offer and an acceptance for a contract to exist and you must agree to the terms.
Putting terms and conditions in a report does not turn it into a contract. You own the survey and can do what you want with it.
I'm not a lawyer nor did I sleep at a Holiday Inn Express last night...But I just looked at the 2016 survey of my last boat. It is indeed copyrighted. I never noticed. I gave the 2016 surver to the new owner when he had the boat surveyed by the same person so he could do a comparative analysis. The surveyor had no issue with that.
"Acceptance and use of this report for any purpose constitutes agreement to the terms and condition contained herein."
"Acceptance and use of this report for any purpose constitutes agreement to the terms and condition contained herein."
Simply pointing out it can be done. But a survey is not a contract no matter what contractual language a surveyor puts in a report. There must be an offer and an acceptance for a contract to exist and you must agree to the terms.
Putting terms and conditions in a report does not turn it into a contract. You own the survey and can do what you want with it.