Hi,
the law says that the guarantee covers the MATERIAL damages CAUSED IN THE BUILDING because of DEFECTS or patologies which AFFECT the fundaments and the STRUCTURAL ELEMENTS, AS LONG AS the BUILDING'S ESTABILITY and mechanic resistence are endangered. This means:
1.- The insurance does not grant compensation on grounds of loss of profit or any other concept different to the material damage.
2.- The material damage which is compensated is JUST THE ONE CAUSED IN THE BUILDING. If there is furniture, etc... this would not be covered.
3.- The damage HAS TO BE CAUSED by a DEFECT. Lack of installation of the water heater might be a breach of contract, but it is not a defect and therefore it is not covered under the insurance.
4.- The defect must affect structural elements. This excludes damps and bad workmanship in general.
5.- And finally,the building's stability has to be endangered. In other words, either it is going to fall down, or in the medium term it will fall down. If not, then it is not covered.
These defects must appear within 10 years after the building is finished.
Practical examples:
1.- A purchases a two storey house and after one year ALL the rooms have small cracks. In some times, the cracks go from one corner of the window to the corner of the room, and so on. In other cases the cracks go round all the walls of the rooms, making a circle. An architect visits the place and says that the problem is in the fundaments, as it seems the soil is moving and this makes the whole building move as well. However, the architect also says that the buildings "tend not to fall."
Solution: as the stability of the building is not endangered - please see point 5 above - the insurance company refuses compensation. To claim those damages, go to court and clail liability either on grounds of the contract or other ones.
2.- The building falls down and all the furniture inside is destroyed, along with a neighbour who came to visit and got killed. Your wife gets depressed and the doctor charges 1.200 € for the treatment.
- The insurance company grants compensation for the building value to certain extent, but even though the furniture is a material damage, it is not covered because it is not "in the building" itself. To claim those damages, go to court and clail liability either on grounds of the contract or other ones.
- The neighbour killed: it is not a "material damage". His heirs and wife might claim at court as well on grounds of moral damage.
- The doctor charges are considered "moral damage" and not material.
3.- In the plans there was a gutter for the rain water and the developer has not installed it:
the insurance does not cover this because it is not a defect, it is a lack of compliance with the contrac terms; in addition ,there is no material damage, and it does not affect the estability at all. It is possible to go to court and chase the developer to have this obligation fulfilled.
I hope the above clarifies the issue further.
For further questions, please check our website fairway lawyers.