Large leak from an upstairs sunken bath into downstairs open-plan kitchen. No visible damage. The bath is extensively (and expensively) tiled in with no access to the plumbing. It was installed by a previous owner, so the current owner cannot be blamed, though he has inherited responsibility. The only investigation has been to insert a camera through a light fitting downstairs which revealed nothing except insulation and the underside of a chipboard floor. No-one knows how extensive the damage is, and how long it will take to fix.
The insurance company has accepted the claim under the block policy. They say the cheapest way to tackle it is from below, removing the ceiling and (if necessary) the floor from under the bath, so that's what they are prepared to do. If they are denied access they will walk away. Doubtless their logic is that they insure the whole building and if it was a single house, the insured would have to accept it.
The upstairs flat owner is very happy with this. Hopefully no-one will even need to enter his flat.
The downstairs flat-owner accepts that his lease permits access to his flat to repair damage to another flat, but only if it cannot be done reasonably in any other way. He contends that to render his flat possibly unuseable for an unspecified amount of time, when he has no responsibility for the leak, and no damage, is not remotely reasonable, when the only reason for involving him is cost. The insurer has said they will put him and his wife up in a local hotel (not much use - nothing wrong with his bedroom) or give them £15 a day each for the inconvenience, which isn't even going to cover the cost of eating out if he can't use his kitchen.
The management company / freeholder is stuck in the middle.
Any opinions gratefully received, though it will take something fairly definitive to shift anyone's position. I suppose it comes down to whether the downstairs flat-owner is within his rights to refuse access, and if he is, is the insurer entitled to refuse the claim? If they are, it puts the downstairs flat-owner in a very difficult position. Sticking to his rights means his neighbour has to pay for what should be recoverable from the insurance.
The insurance company has accepted the claim under the block policy. They say the cheapest way to tackle it is from below, removing the ceiling and (if necessary) the floor from under the bath, so that's what they are prepared to do. If they are denied access they will walk away. Doubtless their logic is that they insure the whole building and if it was a single house, the insured would have to accept it.
The upstairs flat owner is very happy with this. Hopefully no-one will even need to enter his flat.
The downstairs flat-owner accepts that his lease permits access to his flat to repair damage to another flat, but only if it cannot be done reasonably in any other way. He contends that to render his flat possibly unuseable for an unspecified amount of time, when he has no responsibility for the leak, and no damage, is not remotely reasonable, when the only reason for involving him is cost. The insurer has said they will put him and his wife up in a local hotel (not much use - nothing wrong with his bedroom) or give them £15 a day each for the inconvenience, which isn't even going to cover the cost of eating out if he can't use his kitchen.
The management company / freeholder is stuck in the middle.
Any opinions gratefully received, though it will take something fairly definitive to shift anyone's position. I suppose it comes down to whether the downstairs flat-owner is within his rights to refuse access, and if he is, is the insurer entitled to refuse the claim? If they are, it puts the downstairs flat-owner in a very difficult position. Sticking to his rights means his neighbour has to pay for what should be recoverable from the insurance.
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