Volume: 23, Issue: 7 - 04/15/2025

 

Design specifications mandate the details of construction. The contractor is obligated to strictly conform to these directives. Consequently, the project owner extends an implied warranty to the contractor that a design specification is sufficient for the project and free from defects.

 

Performance specifications establish characteristics and capabilities required of the completed work. The contractor has the right and the obligation to devise the details that will meet these standards. At the same time, the owner’s implied warranty of the plans and specifications does not extend to performance specifications.

 

Challenges can arise because design documents are seldom labeled as design or performance. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit was recently presented with a situation in which a set of contract drawings was labeled “conceptual” and “preliminary.” Yet a note on one of the drawings stipulated a precise thickness for a foundation slab. Did the government project owner warrant the sufficiency of that dimension?

 

The second case in this issue involves the right of a sole shareholder to represent a corporation in court. The non-attorney could represent a registered sole proprietorship but not the corporation, which was a distinct legal entity. The sole proprietorship, however, was not a party to the dispute.


 

On a design-build contract, a depiction in a conceptual drawing, combined with a drawing note, was more specific than a performance standard. This was a design specification and when it proved insufficient, the government was liable for breaching its implied warranty of the specification.


 

The sole shareholder and president of a corporation could not represent the corporation in court because the individual was not a licensed attorney and the corporation was a distinct legal entity. The individual could represent herself pro se, but there was no evidence her sole proprietorship had been a party to the matter in question.


Volume: 23, Issue: 6 - 03/31/2025

 

Construction contracts are sometimes stated as fixed price, but that price is the sum of a series of unit-priced line items. Payments under the contract are based on the fixed price. The unit prices may, or may not, be useful in pricing progress payments or changes in the work. Otherwise, what is their purpose? The Rhode Island Supreme Court was recently presented with an analogous dilemma under an architectural services agreement.

 

The design contract stipulated what it called a “fixed lump sum fee.” Progress payments based on that fee were to be made at various milestones in the design process. The contract also stated compensation was calculated as 11% of the estimated construction cost, with final payment to the architect subject to adjustment based on actual construction cost. The architect performed 80% of the design work; however, the project was never constructed as designed.

 

The second case in this issue involves a bidder’s right to withdraw a mistaken bid and recover its bid security. A Virginia state statute gave public project owners the right to reject mistaken bids, but it was silent regarding the rights of the bidder. Could a low bidder alleging a transcription error during the bidding process force the project owner to release it from its bid?

 

The third case interprets the “Damage to Work” standard federal construction contract clause. Is the storm surge placement of debris on the job site “damage?” And, is the removal of that debris “repair”?


 

The fee provision in an architectural services agreement used language of both lump sum and percentage of construction cost. The provision was not ambiguous, however. A reasonable reading established it was a fixed-price fee. Language regarding adjustment of final payment based upon actual construction cost did not apply because the project was never constructed as designed.


 

While a state statute regarding a public project owner’s right to reject a mistaken bid was ambiguous, precedent from other states established a corresponding right for a bidder to withdraw its mistaken bid. And, the bidder was entitled to the return of its bid security.


 

Under the federal “Damage to Work” construction clause, debris deposited on a job site by a storm surge was not “damage,” and removal of the debris was not “repair.”


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.


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