hi again, bhargav
I suspect that one of the 'culprit codes' was BS 153 Steel Girder bridges Part B: 1958, which has often been read out of context to permit a general allowance of 30% overstress for temporary conditions.
In fact what BS 153 says is this:
"Combination 'c'. The worst possible combination of forces during erection...
c. For the forces of Combination 'c' above, the allowable working stresses shall be those stresses given in Clauses 25 to 36 inclusive increased by 30 per cent. Additional material shall be added or other provision shall be made to keep stresses within that limit..."
What BS153 does NOT say is that you can accept any overstress at all for the basic combination of dead load plus construction live load.
I have little problem with BS 153 as written, but what has happened is that many engineers have (entirely incorrectly) taken it to mean that you can accept 30% overstress under static gravity loads alone, and ignoring the possible effects of impact, wind, temperature etc.
The general acceptance of overstress has, I suspect, developed from that type of provision into a culture of "everyone uses 25% overstress for temporary work"