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In my last job at a small firm, I was paid in billable hours. I was not a contractor; the firm provided an office, computers, software, books and customers. They also took taxes out of my check. If I bid 30 hours on a job, the company would bill the customer for 30 hours at their rate and I would get paid for the same amount of time at my hourly rate. If I 'finished' a project, but it had an error, I would make my repair at no charge to the client, which means that I did not get paid for that time repairing the error. Problems like this were typically simple but I occasionally dealt with a gun shot wound to the foot.

Now then -- some time ago a client came to have software written for his business. We worked out a deal, I wrote the application for him, delivered it and supported it. The last update I applied to this software was approximately five months ago. I left this job about four weeks ago to pursue a research project, and the customer found an error two days ago. My ex-boss emailed me and told me to contact the customer so the problem can be resolved, and to let him know how it goes.

I have no contractual agreements with this employer or the customer. Am I obligated to fix this error? I've talked to my former employer about it, and he believes I am. What would you do?

Edit:

Some of you need to read more carefully. As stated above, I have no contractual agreement with the employer or client. Some others made some very compelling arguments. Thanks to all of you for your input.

My opinion -- I submit to you that the employer is responsible for supporting their customers. I am not obligated to fix the error, though it may be in my best interest to fix it because of my previous personal interaction with the client.

Why? Do former Microsoft employees get called when an error they introduced is discovered? I do not know for sure, but I would bet the farm that the answer is a resounding 'no'. The position I held was an internship. I was well known as "the intern" at this office and treated as a remedial employee. I do not own any rights to the software and I have no contractual agreement with my former employer or the client. I do not know the details of the error, but the short description I was given makes me believe it is a misunderstanding of the requirements, but it could very well be a stupid mistake on my part. This employer has another programmer on staff that could fix the problem and I made it clear when I left that I was going to pursue another project that would consume a lot of time.

I'm considering fixing the problem because I am sympathetic to the client who paid money for an error. I am not sympathetic to my former employer who is obviously unprepared to handle an issue related to a software error. If I were unscrupulous, I would fix it myself without the intervention or supervision of my former employer.

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I think you're old boss is attempting to take advantage of you, consult a lawyer and find out what your "RESPONSIBLE" for. If there are nothing you signed explicitly says that, the only thing you're going to hurt is the relationship. Don't get suckered by smooth talkers. – Chris Mar 4 at 16:39
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Chris is right. Doesn't even sound like your old boss asked nicely... so unless a relationship is at stake .. don't even bother.. except let the old boss know the bug is his problem nor, OR he can pay you to fix it... – torial Mar 11 at 1:46
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38 Answers

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Unless it is going to be more than a couple hours, I would just fix it. This would also be a good time to let them know that any future work is billable. In the future you may want to specify a "warranty" period when taking a job.

I would NEVER get a lawyer involved unless you were talking about a huge dispute or hundreds of hours. That will not only cost you a lot of money it will also ruin any relationship you had with your former client.

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-1 "go do the work for free even though you're no longer an employee" is utterly terrible advice. – nailitdown Mar 5 at 2:18
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IMHO, since nobody has anything in writing, they have no legal standing. I think the question of whether you should support this customer comes down to personal ethics.

If you made it clear when you left that you would no longer support past clients, then they should not expect you to do so. If that was not made explicitly clear verbally or in writing, I think it's on your conscience to decide whether to make one last exception and then have a meeting with everyone to lay out exactly how things will work going forward.

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vote up 18 vote down

I say no - if you start going down that path, what if someone pops up that takes you 100's of hours to fix?

Your previous boss was making a profit off of your work - his profit should go to supporting the customer, not you. The customers contract presumably was with your previous company - not you.

I'd tell your boss you will fix it, but you expect to get paid for it, alternatively, if this is a simple fix that you are willing to do, then perhaps tel him you will fix it this time because of a misunderstanding, but be clear it will be the last freebie.

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I would not go down the road of doing it "this time" for free. That establishes a pattern that you will be pressured into maintaining later. ie: "You did it last time, why not this time??" – KarstenF Mar 10 at 20:16
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I don't know about the word 'obligated' but in view of the economy today, and the need to maintain good relations with former employers, I would fix it.

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The real question is matter of reputation, if you choose to go back to that sort of work in the future but you have a rep for not fixing your errors, it may come back bad for you later on.

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I'm somewhat surprised that this was not part of the initial contract with either employer or customer, since the discovery of bugs in a program after the initial "shipping period" is not really unheard of. I would think that the contract would provide details on whether fixing is mandatory, and how fixing would be billed.

That being said, even if you are not obligated to fix, if the fix might not be major, you might want to do it voluntarily (and clarify that point), as in the current economic situations happy customers (and references) are never a bad thing. For all you know, your next employmer may contact the previous employer or the customer to ask of their impression.

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IANAL but I don't think you are legally obligated to fix it. It sounds like your former employer was taking advantage of you. i think it's between you and your conscience.

I'm from the US and thinking about this from an american-centric viewpoint. I don't know how any of this would work in other countries (typical, i know).

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vote up 82 vote down

I would consult a lawyer, not a web site full of geeks.

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I think common sense applies here - don't waste money on a lawyer when you don't need it. Assuming this is the US, its absurd to think that an employee, after leaving a company, is in any way liable to support a product sold by the company - can I get some ex-Ford employee to fix my truck for free? – EJB Mar 4 at 16:19
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Perhaps Daniel is looking for an answer from a developer who has experienced this issue before, and not legal advice from a web site file of geeks... – Dscoduc Mar 4 at 16:38
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