Experienced Legal Counsel
Architects, Engineers, Surveyors, LSRPs, & Construction Professionals
About The Firm
Thompson Becker emphasizes the representation of design professionals such as architects, engineers, land surveyors, and LSRPs, as well as related construction professionals and contractors.
In addition to being educated in the law, our members are educated in civil engineering, environmental engineering, and mechanical engineering. One of our attorneys is also a licensed engineer having been a practicing structural engineer. Another attorney is a licensed patent agent.
Our firm rivals in size, if not exceeds, the number of attorneys representing design and related-professionals in larger multi-department law firms.
As a result of this combination of technical knowledge and legal experience, Thompson Becker provides its clients with first class representation whether it be litigation, dispute resolution, or contract negotiation.
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Pfenninger v. Hunterdon Central Regional High School, 338 N.J. Super. 572 (App. Div. 1999)
This case involved a wrongful death action brought the surviving spouse of an excavation contractor against the school board and the architect after the excavation contractor was crushed the death when the trench in which he was laying pipe for the school’s scoreboard collapsed. The Superior Court, Law Division, Hunterdon County, entered summary judgment for defendants for the architect finding the architect owed no duty to the excavation contractor because the architect had no job site supervision responsibility. The surviving spouse appealed the dismissal. The Superior Court, Appellate Division, held that: (1) whether school board and architect had viable comparative negligence claim was separate from the issue of whether they had duty of care to excavation contractor; (2) a genuine issues of material fact as to degree of control and supervision, role in supply of uncorrugated drainage pipe, and opportunity and capacity to take corrective measures or warn the excavation contractor to brace trench precluded summary judgment; and (3) the collapse of the trench was foreseeable. The decision of the trial court was affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded to the trial court for further discovery.
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Century Corporate Center
250 Century Pkwy Suite 400
Mt Laurel, NJ 08054
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