This is one of those interesting conundrums that puts you between a rock and a hard place
So you do an EICR or the buyer and you find some C1 issues, the question then is do you have a duty of care to inform the homeowner or do you just leave site and pass the results of the EICR to the buyer
Looking at the wider issue so another third party visits site to check something else for the buyer and receives a shock or is seriously injured as a result of the electrical issues you found but you only informed the buyer, you were the last electrician on site...... where is the finger of blame going to point and how is the law going to view your actions if it goes legal
I think I would obligated to inform the seller and depending on the remedial action needed if it is very minor fix it or agree a price if more major repairs are needed to make it safe
So you do an EICR or the buyer and you find some C1 issues, the question then is do you have a duty of care to inform the homeowner or do you just leave site and pass the results of the EICR to the buyer
Looking at the wider issue so another third party visits site to check something else for the buyer and receives a shock or is seriously injured as a result of the electrical issues you found but you only informed the buyer, you were the last electrician on site...... where is the finger of blame going to point and how is the law going to view your actions if it goes legal
I think I would obligated to inform the seller and depending on the remedial action needed if it is very minor fix it or agree a price if more major repairs are needed to make it safe