Searchable Construction Law Briefs®
In years past when a problem developed at the job site, someone suggested that the owner pay a third of the cost of correction, the contractor pay a third and the architect pay the other third. The three parties agreed, and shook hands and construction was continued.
Those were the “good old days.” Only the legal system suffered: court and arbitration dockets were less congested and fewer attorneys and construction experts made their livings from construction disputes.
But a new era has emerged. It has brought with it an abundance of construction claims, construction lawyers, construction consultants and construction litigation. In the mid ’60’s the new wave was fueled by the advent of professional liability (malpractice) insurance for architects and engineers. Before that innovation people rarely attempted to blame or recover their losses from design professionals-simply because judgments against them were not always collectible-except perhaps by confiscation of their drafting tables, slide rules (remember?) and ever-necessary electric erasers.
The industry has now become so sophisticated that multi-million dollar construction contracts and architect/engineer agreements are entered into without any party consulting a lawyer. This does not necessarily adversely affect the economy of the legal profession. Instead, lawyers stand to gain when too-late their clients are confronted with no-damages-for-delay, pay-when-paid, lien waiver, indemnification, written notice and other clauses in their contracts that threaten serious economic and/or legal problems.
It was in this environment back in 1979 that I was prompted to initiate an almost-weekly column published in The Daily Journal, a Denver newspaper devoted chiefly to construction, real estate and law. This work is a collection of those columns, edited and sometimes revised and updated.
It is my hope that these Briefs will serve their intended purpose of alerting readers to nuances in the law, court decisions and statutes of concern to members of the construction industry and to other miscellany I happen to think of and dictate while driving erratically.
I welcome comments from readers and suggestions of subject matters for future Briefs.
It is recommended that readers not operate motor vehicles, farm equipment or construction machinery while or after reading large segments of these materials.
The Construction Law Brief titles include the following:
- A Modest Proposal for Change
- Arbitration Awards
- Arbitration of Construction Disputes
- Architect’s Payment Certifications
- Architects as Judges
- Architects/Engineers Beware: A Change May Be Coming
- Artistic Effect
- Avoiding Attorney’s Fee Disputes
- Bid Bonds
- Bidders Rights
- Binding Bids
- Bonding Company Bad Faith: Duty to Principal and Indemnitors
- Bribery
- Builder Beware!
- Buy the Tail
- Catch-22?
- Certificate of Review Act
- Check Your Articles
- City Limits
- Colorado Mechanic’s Liens
- Colorado Residential Liens
- Competitive Bidding of City-Architect Contracts
- Completion Time
- Concealed Conditions
- Construction Failures Conference
- Construction Financing
- Construction Forms: Releases
- Construction Law ’85 – Looking Back Into the Future
- Construction Management
- Contract Administration: Insurance Certificates
- Contract Dispute Procedures
- Cost-Plus Contracts
- Cost-Plus Contracts: Watch Out For 11.1
- Courthouse Lingo
- Deadlines
- Defective construction defect case!
- Denver Contractors Beware
- Discharge of Surety
- Dispute Clauses
- Documentation
- Double Breasted Suits
- End termination?
- Enforcement of Arbitration Awards
- Estoppel
- Extras
- Fighting City Hall
- Form Letter: Subcontractor Not Performing
- Form Letter: Trust Funds
- Fourteen Ways to Avoid Litigation
- Garnishment
- General and Supplemental General Conditions
- How to Be a “Star” Witness
- Implied Warranties
- Indemnification Clauses
- Indemnification or Damnification
- Inflated Mechanic’s Liens
- Instant Arbitration
- Insurance Company Bad Faith
- Insurance Coverage: Stacking
- Interest
- Interesting Decision
- Jobsite Fencing
- Joint Checks
- Liability For Negligently Prepared Plans
- Limitation On Liability
- Limiting Liability
- Liquidated Damages
- Local Preferences
- Many Party Problems
- Mechanic’s Lien Checklist
- Mechanic’s Lien Recovery
- Mechanic’s Lien: Exaggeration
- Mechanic’s Lien: Time To Sue
- Mechanic’s Liens – a “Hotdog” Claim?
- Mechanic’s Liens – Owner’s Risk
- Mechanic’s Liens Or Public Works Claims For Construction Equipment Rental Charges
- Mechanic’s Liens: Equipment Rental Claims
- Mechanic’s Liens: Name Names
- Mechanic’s Liens: Notice of Non-Liability
- Mechanic’s Liens: Strict Conformance
- New Home Warranties
- Observations vs. Inspections
- Osha Inspections
- Payment Incentives
- Payment Merry-Go-Round: Pay-When-Paid
- Plain English
- Possible Solutions
- Prevailing Party Attorney’s Fees
- Private Arbitration
- Privity
- Providing Contract-Required Insurance Coverage
- Public Contract Bids: Low Bid But No Award
- Punitive Damages
- Recovery of Attorney’s Fees
- Remedial Work
- Remember July 1st
- Renters Rejoice
- Standard Contract Forms
- Standards of Care: Architects (Checklists)
- Statutes of Limitations: Constitutional in Colorado
- Statutes of Limitations: Starting Time
- Stick to Your Last
- Strike
- Subcontractor Defined
- Substantial Completion
- Supplier Mechanic’s Liens
- Termination
- The ABC’s of Arbitration – Part C (Enforcement of Awards)
- The ABC’s of Arbitration-Part A (Agreement to Arbitrate)
- The ABC’s of Arbitration-Part B (Arbitration Proceedings)
- The King is Vulnerable
- The Price of Doing Out-of-State Business
- Time For Celebration? Important New Developments In Colorado Condominium Construction Defect Law
- Time to Sue
- Tort Reform: Punitive Damages
- Trust Fund Crime
- Trust Monies
- When Does a Subcontractor Get Paid?
- When the Press Calls
- Who Makes the Law?
- Who’s at Fault?
- Written Change Orders
Disclaimer: These Construction Law Briefs® were written with the intent of providing general legal information intended to be accurate, although not comprehensive. These materials are published with the understanding that they do not provide legal advice or professional services. Accordingly, readers are urged to consult their attorneys for any specific legal advice that they may wish concerning the subject matter of these materials.