Volume: 23, Issue: 5 - 03/14/2025

 

A project owner’s issuance of a “notice to proceed” is a crucial step in a construction project. The contractor’s scheduling and sequencing of the work is dependent on a known start date. The contractual performance period starts to run upon notice to proceed.

 

A Virginia court recently addressed a situation in which the contract documents did not stipulate a deadline for issuing a notice to proceed. It appeared the owner could award the contract and then leave the contractor hanging regarding a commencement date. The project architect had stated, at a pre-bid conference, that he anticipated a notice to proceed in mid-May. But was that enforceable?

 

The other case in this issue also involved timely commencement of the work. In this case, the contract stipulated a deadline for authorizing a start. The project owner did not have the site ready in time and issued change orders granting the contractor certain extended site costs. Did the change orders waive the no-damages-for-delay clause in the contract?


 

The minutes to a pre-bid conference were not effectively incorporated into the contract documents. A statement by the project architect regarding the timing of issuance of notice to proceed was therefore not contractually binding on the project owner.


 

Change orders granting one element of delay damages were issued under a contractual exception to the no-damages-for-delay clause. The change orders did not waive the project owner’s right to enforce the clause.


Volume: 23, Issue: 4 - 02/28/2025

 

When a subcontractor breaches its agreement, the contractor is forced to expend considerable time and effort dealing with the problem. The contractor is clearly entitled to recover the cost of corrective or replacement work as direct damages for breach of contract. Can the contractor also recover compensation for the time its employees devoted to the problem as a consequence of the breach?

 

An Indiana appellate court recently answered that question in the affirmative. A fabrication subcontractor shipped nonconforming materials to the job site. The contractor’s administrative staff spent hours obtaining replacement materials from another fabricator. The contractor was allowed to recover the in-house cost of those efforts, although the method of proof was surprising.

 

The second case in this issue addresses the mandatory use of project labor agreements on large federal construction projects. A Biden-era executive order appears to restrict the “full and open competition” required by the Competition in Contracting Act.

 

The third case involves a contractor’s sponsorship of a subcontractor delay claim against a public project owner. The sub was hindered by a no-damages-for-delay clause. Did the contractor owe a duty to the subcontractor to effectively argue that well-recognized exceptions to enforceability of the clause might apply?


 

When a fabrication subcontractor delivered noncompliant materials, the contractor could recover consequential damages for the time its employees spent dealing with the problem. Those damages were supported by a chart of “typical” hourly rates drafted in preparation for the litigation.


 

An executive order mandating the use of project labor agreements on large federal construction projects without any evaluation of benefit versus cost risk violated the Competition in Contracting Act and was unenforceable.


 

A subcontractor alleged facts that, if proven, would invoke one of the four exceptions to enforceability of no-damages-for-delay clauses under New York law.


Volume: 23, Issue: 3 - 02/18/2025

 

State mechanic’s lien statutes have one thing in common: a filing period that starts to run on the date the lien claimant last furnished labor or materials to the project. To benefit from this statutory payment remedy, the claimant must strictly adhere to the requirement. No additional entitlement may be asserted after the deadline. But what if the claimant wants to reduce the amount of its lien to make it comport with the proof the claimant is able to offer in support of its payment claim?

 

A Colorado court recently allowed untimely reductive lien amendments. The reductions did not prove the initial timely lien filing had been “excessive” and therefore invalid. Nor did the late amendments taint the timeliness of the original filing. The reductions simply corrected honest mistakes in the initial payment calculation based upon information the claimant did not discover until after the filing deadline.

 

The second case in this issue involved the services of a licensed professional at the job site of a public project. Was the professional required by state statute to be registered as a public works contractor? Were the services considered public work?


 

Reductive amendments to a mechanic’s lien statement did not invalidate a timely lien despite being filed outside the statutory lien period. The amendments were based on information unknown to the claimant at the time of the initial filing. They were not for the purpose of curing an excessive lien.


 

A licensed professional providing on-site service on a public construction project was not required to be registered under a state contractor registration statute. The professional was not performing “public work” as defined in the prevailing wage statute.


<< PREVIOUS PAGE   Page: 1 of 290   NEXT PAGE >>

 

 

 


WPL
PUBLISHING CO, INC.
WPL Publishing - 5750 Bou Avenue #1712 - Rockville, MD 20852

Phone: (301)765-9525  -  Fax: (301)983-4367

All Content and Design Copyright © 2025 WPL Publishing
About Us

Contact Us

Privacy Policy

My Account