CNST 2341 Final
For any contract to be enforceable in a court of law it must have the following 4 elements of legally enforceable contracts:
Capacity to contract Legal subject matter Mutual consent Consideration
Written requirement
Changes and extras must be pre-authorized therefore be in writing = ENFORCEABILITY!!! Owner may waive by act-gives oral instructions & grant them = Will be considered only if owner suffers economic harm or prejudice
Termination for Default
It is a contractual right given to the owner to end the contract because of contractor's breach (violation) of contract terms.
DESCRIPTIVE SPECs
Provide details: material, properties, inst. Example: Concrete mix 4:2:1:0,5 (3000 psi). Specifier assumes performance liability Being used less Sometimes the only choice
Termination for convenience
contractual right given to the owner but contractor is paid for work in place to end the contract at no fault of the contractor.
3 methods of payment common in the construction industry
- Lump sum - Unit price - Cost plus Most common
CSI 16-DIVISION FORMAT
50 different sections Broken down for different scopes of work
PROPIETARY SPECs
Contents: Manufacturer's name Brand name Model #/ catalogue # Type & other designations Types: Closed Open proprietary
Warranties
Guarantee of performance during a set period of time.
Design-Bid-Build
Project Owner -> Architect/Engineer and Construction Lender and Prime/General Contractor -> Prime/General Contractor -> Bonding Company (Surety) and Subcontractor Subcontractor -> Supplier and Lower tier subcontractor
Lump sum
a single payment made at a particular time
Non-collusion affidavit
a written document stating that the bidder did not collaborate/cooperate/share any specifics of its bid with other bidders.
Occupational Safety and Health Act
is a federal law that establishes and promotes workplace safety standards for businesses.
Obligee
party benefiting from bond (owner)
Liquidated Damages
Unique to construction contracts. They compensate the owner for losses due to late completion of the project caused by contractor. $/day for every day past the contract completion date
AIA
American Institute of Architects
Float
Amount of time a task can be delayed without delaying another task
Plaintiff
Brings Case
CSP
Competitive Sealed Proposal
Bid shopping
The exercise in which a GC is unfairly pitting bidders against one another to get each to lower its price. During the bidding time no subcontracts are executed. Subcontracts are executed later only after the contractor is awarded the contract This can create problems because it corrupts the bidding process and fair action on a low bid.
picketing
The gathering of striking workers at a business site as a sign of protest. The purpose may be to interfere with the normal operation of the business establishment or to inform others about the nature of the labor dispute.
Substantial Completion
The point at which all punch list work has been completed and the owner can occupy or take possession of the new facility.
UCC
Uniform Commercial Code
Performance bond
a guarantee ensuring the obligee that the principal will perform all work in accordance with the terms of the agreement
right-to-work law
a state law that prohibits prehire agreements. States that enacted such laws are known as right-to-work states. These laws are found only in states in which union strength has been diminished (Texas is one of the states)
Lien statutes (mechanics & materials liens)
allow parties providing labor or material to obtain security interest in the owner's property. Labor and material has improved the value of owner's property, and therefore the providers should look to the property as the security for their eventual payments. A fully perfected lien (a lien that satisfied all the required steps by the Statute) is like a mortgage on a property. It must be paid before a clear title to ownership is provided to the project owner.
Payment bond
also known as "labor and material bonds," guarantees the obligee that the principal will pay their bills for labor and materials provided on the project.
Delays
can be devastating for some contractors and subcontractors. This issue is often addressed in subcontracts.
Surety
party guaranteeing principal's performance (bonding comp)
Principal
party under obligation (contractor)
Unit Price
the cost per unit. Mostly used between contractor and subcontractor
Overhead
• OH&P - overhead and profit • Home office overhead
Agreement Forms
Standard forms by professional societies, government agencies, institutes, trades Standardization: save effort, assure completeness; acceptability; familiarity Modification must be coordinated with GC AIA (A101, A201) & EJCDC (#1910-8-A-1): Standard statements + blanks to be filled for specifics of a contract
The notice requirement
When C receives instructions/orders if constitute a change, must promptly give written notice to owner If worked without notice cannot claim $$$$$ Not given owner a chance to stop change
merit shop
A business whose labor relations are not governed by a labor agreement. The employer, rather than a negotiated labor agreement, dictates how labor relations decisions are made
Contract
A contract is an agreement to do or not to do certain thing
Allowances
Allowances shall cover the cost to the Contractor of materials and equipment delivered.
Debarment
Can't work for said entity anymore
Statute of Repose
From that date going forward if the contractor has any error in the job they have to come back to fix them.
General Contractor
GCs usually self perform 0-20% of the total scope of work; the rest is performed by the subcontractors.
No damage for delay
Given time extension, but not monetary damages for the extension
SDI vs. Bonds
In general SDI is lower cost, more flexible and have claims processed faster when compared to a surety bond.
Design/Bid/Build
Most common w/lump sum Government does this a lot Example: Building a McDonald's where the owner has the plans already
"3-PART" FORMAT
Part 1: General Part 2: Products Part 3: Execution
Design-Build
Project Owner-> E/C Firm and Construction Lender E/C Firm -> Subcontractor and Supplier and Bonding Company (Surety) Subcontractor -> Lower tier subcontractor and Supplier
Promissory Estoppel
Protects contractors from the harm of key subs backing out If a party relies to its detriment on the promise of another party, the other party must be held responsible to its promise to avoid harm to the first party. A sub will be forced to honor its price or pay the resulting extra cost if it backs out of an offer. This is not based on breach of contract, since there was no contract formed at the time of the offer (price quotations).
Critical Path
Shortest overall duration to get a job done
Change order
Written instructions to contractor signed by owner and A/E authorizing: Addition, deletion, or revision of work, or adjustment of contract sum/time after execution of the contract
Termination for Default entitles the owner to:
o withholding all money due to contractor o seizing contractor's materials and equipment on site o holding contractor liable for increased costs.
lower tiers of subs and suppliers:
subcontractors may subcontract parts of their scope to other subs and suppliers
Change clauses
1. The notice requirement 2. Written requirement
When is termination for convenience exercised?
1. owner faces financial problems 2. the need for the project is eliminated.
minority business enterprise (MBE)
A business that is at least 50% owned and managed by minority group members
open shop
A business whose labor relations are not governed by a labor agreement. Employees are not required to be or become union members as a condition of employment
Joint
A contract in which a number of individuals are represented as one party and forgiveness of any individual by the plaintiff implies forgiveness of the rest of the individuals making that party.
Several
A contract in which a number of individuals are represented as one party but forgiveness of any individual by the plaintiff does not imply forgiveness of the rest of the individuals making that party...plaintiff can select and choose.
Cost Plus
A contract where payment is for material and labor, with a profit factor added. Used when you are uncertain what the price will be. Renovation
Buy America Act of 1933
A law that requires the use of U.S. produced or U.S. mined goods unless a local shortage exists
Who determines Substantial Completion?
Architect determines Substantial Completion
CHANGES TO CONSTRUCTION DOCUMENTS
Bid documents: Addenda Contract documents: Change order
Construction Management
Collaborative At risk means there is a maximum price to the owner Owner wants the contractor and architect to work to together Fast track work. Begin construction before the design is complete Owner is involved Example: Building a McDonald's for the first time.
Difference between collusion and bid-shopping
Collusion is illegal Bid shopping is legal, but unethical
Types of damages:
Compensatory damages Liquidated damages Actual damages
Indemnification
Contractor shall indemnify and hold harmless the Owner, Architect, Architect's consultants, and agents and employees of any of them from and against claims, damages, losses, and expenses... arising out of or resulting from performance of the Work, provided that such claim, damage, loss, or expense is attributable to bodily injuries, etc.
Owner-Subcontractor Relationship
Contractually, the subcontractor will enter into an agreement with the general contractor. In the subcontract, the GC will establish a relationship with the subcontractor so that the subcontractor is an independent contractor. This contractual association does not include the owner. Therefore, the subcontractor has a direct responsibility to the GC but not the owner.
What method would a contractor be paid to work premium/over time?
Cost-plus
Pay when paid
Courts have interpreted this as payment required of GC and when is only a question of timing.
EMR
Experience modifier rating. Below 1 good
Methods of Invitation
Open Invitation Closed Invitation
Turn Key
Owner is turning over the design and construction to a company to design and build
Pay if Paid
Owner must pay for GC to have the obligation to pay subs. This makes subs and the GC both liable for owner insolvency. With such legal verbiage a sub may not get paid due to issues other than its own performance.
The two conditions for ending a contract are:
Performance of the contract Termination of the contract
collective bargaining
Process by which a union representing a group of workers negotiates with management for a contract
GC's Functions
Serves as one point of responsibility to the owner Facilitates Interpretation of documents for subs Coordinating the work and the schedule to ensure timely completion of the project Responsible for the jobsite safety
Design/Build
Something the owner can easily describe Owner is turning over the design and construction to a company to design and build
Subcontractors
Subcontractors are mainly the specialty trades: Mechanical, Electrical, Fire, Glazing, Painters
Davis Bacon Act of 1931
This law requires the payment of "prevailing wages" to employees of contractors and subcontractors working on government construction projects valued above $2,000. Workers are paid on a weekly basis. Primary purpose is to protect the local wage rates and economy of each community.
Compensatory damages
To compensate for losses incurred by the non-breaching party and place it back in the same economical position prior to the breach.
Indemnify Law and Legal Definition
To indemnify means to reimburse another for a loss suffered because of a third party's or one's own act or default. It can also refer to a promise to reimburse another for such a loss or to give another security against such a loss. For e.g., insurance companies indemnify their policyholders against damage caused by such things which are specified by the terms of the contract between the company and the insured. The right to indemnity and the duty to indemnify commonly comes from a contractual agreement, which generally protects against liability, loss, or damage.
Insurance
WC insurance - Workman's comp BR - Builder's risk insurance EMR. Experience modifier rating. Below 1 good CGL Insurance. Contractor's general liability insurance
Subcontractor Default Insurance (SDI), commonly referred to by Zurich Insurance Group's trade name "Subguard"
an alternative to bonding. Purchased by the prime contractor, to protect themselves from subcontractor default. Unlike with a bond which is a three party agreement, SDI is a two party agreement between the prime contractor and the insurance company.
patent defect
an obvious flaw in a product or a document (such as leaving out the property description in a deed)
Indemnity agreement
between principal & surety where principal pledges assets that the surety can obtain to offset any expense or loss on the bond.
Privity
contract with someone; you can sue them, they owe you duties.
Miller Act of 1935
requires contractors who do over $200,000 of work on public buildings to protect the government with performance bonds and to protect those who directly supply labor and materials with payment bonds
4 corners rule
the meaning of a document is to be gathered from the entire (all four corners) document. Applies to any agreement including contracts, subcontracts, insurance policies, bonds, lending consent agreements, etc.
Bid bond
used to ensure that the principal will honor their bid and enter into a contract with the obligee for the bid amount after the bid opening. Usually covers the difference between the low bid and the second lowest bid typically up to 10% of the bid price.
Bonds
used to protect the owner in cases where the contractor fails to perform in accordance with the contract. Bonds are three party agreements between an obligee (owner), a principal (contractor), and the surety (bonding company).
Contractor's warranty
usually last for one year and begins at Substantial Completion or project final acceptance The best a contractor can do is not to acknowledge the supplier's terms and to create uncertainty regarding what terms really govern the sale to have a chance to recover.
Open Invitation
v. Open to all responsible bidders vi. Responsible means having financial ability, experience, and required resources vii. In the private sector, both prequalification (i.e., before bidding) and post-qualification (i.e., after bidding) are common. viii. In the public sector, only pre-qualification is acceptable to avoid possible disputes with the apparent lowest bidder that is missing other requirements. ix. The invitation is usually posted as an advertisement in newspapers, national journals (e.g., ENR, Dodge report, AGC Daily News, etc), regional journals (e.g., construction news). x. State laws dictate: where, how many times, how long each ad should run
Surety bond
written document given by principal & surety to oblige guaranteeing a specific obligation
Methods to deliver a project in the construction industry
• Design/Bid/Build • Design/Build • Turn Key • Construction Management
PERFORMANCE SPECs
• Detail the results required • State verification methods • Relatively new & expanding Needs: Flexible design concepts Reduced construction time & cost Alteration overnight Translation to specs: Structural system spanning 2 rooms HVAC system compatible with changes Ceiling & lighting systems Movable interior partition system Clear expression of requirements Clear definition of satisfactory performance Clear definition of verification tests
Time
• NTP - Notice to Proceed • Schedule • Critical path • Float • Compensable damages • Non-compensable damages
Scheduling
• No damage for delay • Act of god • C of O - certificate of occupancy - code officials issue this • Substantial Completion _ architect issued