Donald Keating
Donald Norman Keating was a construction lawyer and legal writer. John Uff, writing in The Independent, describes him as "one of the pioneers" in the construction law field.
Keating was born on 24 June 1924. He served with the Royal Air Force during the Second World War.
Career
He was called to the Bar, Lincoln's Inn 1950, appointed a Bencher in 1979 and a QC in 1972. He served as a Recorder from 1972 to 1987 and again from 1993 to 1995, and was Head of Chambers at Keating Chambers during the years from 1976 to 1992. His book Law and Practice of Building Contracts including Architects and Surveyors, an authoritative work on this subject, is now in its seventh edition. It is now known as Keating on Building Contracts. His advice that parties to construction contracts "should either use an unamended standard form of contract, or their own homemade contract conditions", but never a combination, has been quoted in case law, where it is noted that "attempt a mixture of both usually a recipe for disaster".During 1988-89 he was a member of a Department of Trade and Industry study team on professional liability in the construction industry, one of three parallel study teams established with a brief to look at this issue in various professional contexts, in the light of what had been described as "current concern about the cost and availability of professional indemnity insurance and the extent of professional civil liability for negligence".
Lord Dyson, Master of the Rolls, delivering the "Keating Lecture" in 2015, commented that he had served under Keating in many cases, and at times appeared against him. Dyson regretted not asking Keating what had led to his interest in construction law: he noted that both had "started at the bar doing a bit of this and a bit of that".