Construction Contracts: Ch. 8 - Surety Bonds
Avoiding Double Bonding
CM should only cover their fees; the subcontractors will then provide 100% performance and payment bonds for their own work
What party/parties are given the most protection by a performance bond?
The owner/obligee is given the most projection against a contractor that does not perform and build the project to the specified drawings in the set timeline.
Obligee
owner to whom the promise of the principal's [general contractor's] performance is made; the beneficiary on the bond
$2 million
A contractor with a bonding capacity of $4 million will be given bonds for projects up to what dollar amount?
Advantages to Payment Bonds
Allows the ability to get lower subcontractor and supplier bids because they will lower their pricing if they know they are going receive payment
Performance Bond
Assures that a financially-responsible party will stand behind the general contractor if they do not perform properly; if one party cannot complete their obligations, the bond is paid out the other party to compensate for damages or cost
What does the bid bond promise to the owner?
Assures that the contractor will enter into a binding construction contract and will provide the required bonds if they are awarded the contract. If the contractor defaults, the surety will pay the owner and may sue the contractor. Helps to prevent inappropriately low bids just to win a contract.
Payment Bond
Gives protection to the owner if the subcontractors and suppliers are not paid by the general contractor; prevents liens
What is the limit of liability of a surety if the contractor defaults?
If a contractor defaults, the surety will force the contractor to fulfill the terms of the contract despite bids being in excess. AKA performance is promised to the owner.
Give an example in which a surety may NOT be forced to honor the bond in the event of a contractor default.
If there was a major change to the project that greatly impacts the price and amount of work required, because the surety was not able to look at the new work and make a better decision on whether or not to keep the bond.
Double Bonding
In a CM at Risk Contracting Method, the owner could require the CM to provide 100% performance bond; the CM could also require 100% performance and payment bonds from the subcontractors
Stop Notice
Informs the owner that the subcontractors and suppliers have not been paid and that further payments are to be withheld from the contractor; happens in public works projects without a bond
Miller Act
States that surety bonds are required of construction contracts on all federal and federally-assisted projects
10%
The government adopted a rule that a surety cannot assume a single obligation that exceeds __% of the surety's equity/surplus; sureties will need to join together to issue bonds for large projects
What party/parties are given the most protection by a payment bond?
The owner/obligee is given the most protection if the subcontractors and suppliers are not paid by the contractor. Payment bonds prevent liens and the change for needing to pay twice for the same work.
How is it determined that a contracting firm has exceeded its bonding capacity?
The surety looks at the contractor's character, capacity, and capital. A general rule of thumb is 10-15 times the net working capital of the firm.
Subcontractors
To minimize the risk of the general contractor, they may require each major ______ to provide a surety bond; making the general contractor the obligee on the bond
Comparison of Surety to Credit
When a minor must have an elder sign a contract to purchase an item on credit s that the merchant is assured the debt will be paid --> if the minor fails to make the payment, the elder cosigner is responsible for the debt
In what ways are surety bonds NOT like insurance policies?
[1] An insurance policy involves two parties that makes certain the insured is protected against loss, where in a surety the contractor is not providing a guarantee for their loss, but for the owner's. A surety agreement is one-sided. [2] Insurance policies cover specified loss, surety bonds cover all loss. [3] insurance premiums are based on going rates, surety premiums are fixed fees.
what rights does a surety have in the event of a contractor default?
[1] The surety can recover debt from the contractor [2] The surety can sue the owner from claims that the contractor could have made [3] Surety can try to get the retainage held by the owner
In times of economic uncertainty
[1] When sureties are cautious about issuing surety bonds to construction firms because failure in the industry is high [2] When general contractors are more likely to require surety bonds from the subcontractors
Bonding Limits for Contractors
[1] assessment based on contractor's character, capital, and capacity general rule of thumb: $10 of uncompleted work for each $1 of capital
Stipulations of a Bid Bond
[1] if the contractor defaults, the surety will pay the damages [2] damages may consist of the forfeiture of the face value of the bond [3] OR may be limited to the difference between the amounts of the low bidder and the next lowest bidder up to the face value of the bond
Differences between surety bonds and insurance policies
[1] in a surety agreement, the contractor is NOT providing the guarantee for themselves, but to the owner [2] insurance covers a specific loss, but surety bonds cover losses of any kind [3] insurance transfers risk, while a surety agreement does not
Surety Bond
a guarantee provided by a firm that states the contractor will fulfill the terms of the conttrac
Bid Bond
issued to give assurances that the contractor will enter into a binding construction contract and will provide the required payment and performance bonds if the contract is awarded to them; prevents contractors from submitting inappropriately low bids to win a contract
Subrogation
the act of one person/party standing in the place of another person/party ex. after insurance pays you for a claim, it sometimes has the right to seek reimbursement of those payments from the at-fault party --> the surety can seek redress from the principal
Surety
the bond company that is obligated to perform or pay a specified amount of money if the principal/contractor does not perform; the guarantor on the bond
Principal
the debtor [the general contractor] whose performance is promised/guaranteed
Equitable Subrogation
the surety does NOT seek reimbursement from the principal, but will seek compensation from other offending parties [owners, subcontractors, suppliers] in simpler terms --> the surety essentially steps into the shoes of the principal/contractor and can file suits that the contractor would have been able to file
Performance Bond Duration
time limit will be spelled out in the contract; most last for 12-36 months and can be renewable or non-renewable
100%
to guarantee the contractor's performance, a performance bond of ___% of the contract amount is required; payment bonds are often the same as or more than the amount of the performance bond
Indemnification
to secure against or compensate in the event of injury, loss, or damage; a means by which the principal/debtor is obligated to the surety for any debts in incurs as a result of default by the principal
Face-Value Penalty
usually between 5-20% of the contract amount; for federal projects this is mandated at 20% of the project cost ex. if the project cost = 500k, the sum is 50k