DISTRESSED
PROJECTS AND SURETY CLAIMS
https://sites.google.com/site/metropolitanforensics/distressed-projects-and-surety-claims
Construction owners and
contractors know all too well the risks involved in completing projects. Often, conflicts are inevitable – and when
they occur, they are always expensive. Vague
contracts, insufficient communication, and lack of transparency combined with
project changes, complex construction, and time constraints increase the
exposure of all parties to disputes and claims.
Corporate
sureties issue bonds to a party (Obligee) to guarantee performance (performance bond) or payment (payment bond) of an obligation by a third party (Principal).
The Surety assumes liability for non
performance or nonpayment in case the terms of the obligation or contract are
not performed and there is no defense to the claim. Often a surety will dispute liability because
its Principal is not liable or because the surety itself has a defense to the
claim of the obligee.
When a contractor defaults
and is unable to complete a construction project or cannot pay a subcontractor (i.e., does does not fulfill its bonded
obligation), the Obligee can make a
claim demanding that the surety company satisfy the obligation or pay the bond
penalty. The surety company has the
right to reimbursement from the principal in the case of a paid loss or claim. In these situations, Metropolitan can help.
Surety's performance options
under a performance bond claim
Surety's investigation
A surety's first obligation upon receiving a performance bond
claim is to commence an investigation of the claim. The surety's investigation is a fact-finding
exercise intended to promptly determine whether the bond principal is in
default of its contractual obligations and if so, whether the surety has
liability under the performance bond. Because the surety's investigation will
determine its response to the claim, it is important that the surety conduct
the investigation in an expeditious and comprehensive manner and gather as much
information as is reasonably available.
In making its investigation, the surety should gather
information from as many sources as possible including the surety's own files,
the obligee, and the bond principal. After receiving a notice of a claim from the
obligee, the surety should acknowledge the claim, request further documentation
to substantiate the claim, and reserve its rights and defenses. The surety should also send a letter to the
principal and the indemnitors under the Agreement of Indemnity, notifying them
of the claim, of the surety's exposure to potential losses under the bonds
issued on behalf of the principal, of the principal's duty to cooperate with
the surety during its investigation of the claim, and of their indemnity
obligations under the Agreement of Indemnity.
Under many performance bonds, before a surety is required to act,
the obligee must formally declare the principal in default of its contractual
obligations. Depending upon the bond
form and its interpretation by the courts, an obligee's failure to comply with
the bond provisions or the underlying contract terms incorporated by reference
under the bond for declaring a principal in default may discharge or exonerate
the surety's liability. When the bond
does not require the obligee to declare a default and the obligee has not
terminated the principal, but the surety has been advised that the principal is
in default of its bonded obligations, it may be prudent for the surety to begin
its investigation.
Surety's use of construction consultants
A construction consultant is an engineer or construction manager
who specializes in project and construction management. At the preliminary stage of the bond default
process, the construction consultant can furnish information such as the
following:
·
the percentage of completion of the principal's work;
·
the quality of the work;
·
the projected completion date;
·
estimates of the cost to complete the work, either by the principal
or another contractor; and
·
the identification and analysis of claims made by the principal,
the obligee, or subcontractors.
If the surety decides to procure bids for the completion of the
contract, the construction consultant will put together the bid package and
evaluate the bids. If the surety takes
over the completion of the work, the construction consultant will:
·
monitor the completion of the work by the completion contractor;
·
approve requisitions for payment submitted by the completion contractor;
and
·
act as a liaison between the obligee and the obligee's project representative.
Generally, a surety needs a consultant whenever the surety's own
personnel lack the skill, knowledge or expertise to perform the investigation.
The Surety's may also use legal consultants to provide services
in the following areas:
·
the identification and evaluation of defenses that may be available
to the surety;
·
the interpretation of legal documents;
·
the drafting of documents relating to the bond default, including
takeover agreements, completion agreements, tender agreements, tri-party
agreements, etc.
·
the handling of litigation that arises from the bond default,
such as claims against performance bonds and payment bonds, and recovery
actions against the principal and indemnitors;
·
participation in meetings and negotiations related to the bond default;
·
miscellaneous services.
The Surety may also need accounting consultants to provide
services related to ascertaining the principal's financial condition to enable
the surety to determine its exposure to loss from the bond default and to
enable the surety to assess which option it should choose to respond to the default. Technical consultants to advise the surety on
specialized issues of engineering that may arise in connection with a bond
default. For example:
·
If there was a structural failure on the project, the surety may
need to retain a structural engineer to analyze the adequacy of the design.
·
A surety may need to retain an architect or engineer to review
the competency with which the plans and specifications for the project were
prepared.
Surety's performance options
Once the surety completes its investigation, it must decide the
most appropriate means of responding to the performance bond claim. Generally the surety has six options:
·
take over and complete the project;
·
tender a new contractor;
·
finance the bond principal's completion of the work;
·
indemnify the obligee;
·
buy out the bond obligation; or
·
deny the claim.
Defenses to performance bond claims
The surety can assert all of the defenses of its principal
including:
·
the obligee's failure to provide plans and specifications that are
free from defects;
·
the obligee's failure to act - Unreasonable delays by the obligee,
as well as the obligee's failure to act, may constitute a breach that will
relieve the principal, and ultimately the surety, from liability;
·
impossibility of performance – A determination that work which the
principal was to have performed has become impossible to perform can be a
defense available to the surety;
·
the obligee's wrongful termination of the principal's contract;
·
the obligee's failure to provide notice to the principal and an opportunity
for the principal to cure incomplete or inadequate performance;
·
setoffs or counterclaims – A surety is entitled to assert any setoffs
available to its principal against the obligee.
The surety must be given notice of default and the opportunity
to perform. When notice of default is
required under the bond, the declaration of default must be stated in clear,
direct, and unambiguous terms; and a failure by the obligee to provide the
principal and the surety with an opportunity to perform (i.e. cure incomplete
or inadequate performance by the principal) can discharge the surety from
liability under the performance bond.
Another defense available to a surety is a material alteration
of the underlying contract. A material
alteration is a nonconsensual increase of the surety's risk by some act of the
obligee that changes the bonded contract.
A material alteration is a
fact-dependent inquiry often to be decided by a jury. Relatively minor changes do not amount to
material alterations. The alteration
must be a material, substantial departure from the original risk so that a
reasonable person would either have not undertaken the risk at all, or would have
charged a greater premium;
Other
defenses of the surety include:
·
Overpayment by oblige;
·
Termination for convenience;
·
Release of principal;
·
Failure to mitigate
Surety's performance options
under a payment bond claim
A payment bond is also known as
a labor and material bond. It is a
contractual guarantee to the owner-obligee that the surety-obligor will pay
labor and material suppliers and subcontractors should the contractor-principal
fail to pay. In the event the principal
or its subcontractors fail to pay persons or entities who supplied labor and/or
materials to them, the surety is obligated to step in and pay the entities the
amount owed to them, up to the penal sum of the bond. A payment bond limits claimants on the bond
to those having a direct contract with the principal or with a subcontractor of
the principal. Generally, an
owner-obligee cannot make a claim against a payment bond.
Investigation
of payment bond claim by surety
When a surety is presented with
a claim under a payment bond, it should contact its principal and request that
the principal acknowledge the amount of the claim or explain why the claim
should not be paid. The surety should
also acknowledge receipt of the claim and inform the claimant that it has begun
its investigation by contacting its principal. This acknowledgment should include a
reservation of rights. The
acknowledgment to the claimant should also request a description of the claim,
the basis for the claim and supporting documentation for the claim. If the surety determines that the claim is
covered under the bond, its payment to the claimant should be in consideration
for a release of the surety from the claim and the assignment of the claim
against the principal to the surety. If
the surety concludes that the claim is improper, the surety should advise the
claimant of its decision to deny the claim. However, if any portion of the claim is determined
to be undisputed, the surety should tender payment of the undisputed portion
and obtain a partial Release and Assignment from the claimant. As part of the investigation process, the
surety should consider hiring a construction consultant as under the performance
bond procedure.
Defenses
to payment bond claims
A payment bond surety has a
number of defenses that it can assert to payment bond claims including the
following:
·
the principal's defenses;
·
the principal's setoffs/counterclaims;
·
the claimant's material breach of contract;
·
the failure of the claimant to give proper notice;
·
the failure of the claimant to commence suit within the time
prescribed by the bond or by statute;
·
the failure of the claimant to bring suit in the proper court;
·
the penal sum of the bond as a limitation of liability;
·
the claimant's failure to mitigate its damages; and
·
defenses based on particular subcontract provisions, including
the pay-when-paid and pay-if-paid defenses.
.
METROPOLITAN’S CONSTRUCTION
SURETY SERVICES
Metropolitan
offers Surety Construction Claims analysis and Distressed Project Completion
services. We clearly understand the
urgency of performing risk evaluations during construction default situations for
sureties. Our team assists Prime
Contractors, Subcontractors, Owners, Attorneys, Sureties and Insurance
companies in construction disputes and surety bond claims involving contract
performance issues on building, industrial and civil projects. Our breadth of experience in the construction
industry provides us with the well-rounded skill set to offer the array of
services necessary to efficiently and effectively resolve surety claims and assist
the owner to complete construction on distressed projects.
To that end, we specialize
in the investigation, independent evaluation and resolution of all types of
surety claims regardless of the stage of the claim. We have been assisting and/or managing technical and
construction issues related to performance, payment, and non-contract surety
bond disputes and claims. This includes analysis and oversight of the
completion of medium to large construction projects with the goal of resolving
claims and disputes. Our involvement can begin
anytime from the initial filing of a claim to the oversight of the completion
of defaulted work. Regardless of the
stage of the claim, our basic approach remains the same:
·
we
start with in-depth research of project documentation and data collection;
·
sort
out information relevant to the dispute issues;
·
interview
project team members;
·
analyze
evidence gathered; and
·
generate
an objective evaluation of the claim issue based upon the contract terms, including:
·
Delay
·
Disruption
·
Acceleration
·
Design
defects
·
Termination
·
Differing
site conditions
·
Change
order impacts
·
Suspension
·
Consequential
damages
·
Analysis
of filed liens
As
part of our investigations and analysis, we provide many, if not all of the
following services:
·
Bid
review and analysis
·
Bonding
score
·
Assess
the work completed to date and inventory the project site
·
Perform
investigative cost audits and forensic review
·
WIP
report review
·
Generate
benchmark and “cost to complete” construction estimates
·
Prepare
default reports
·
Analysis
of filed liens
·
Provide
on-site project management from our staff of professionals
·
Analyze
project schedules and generate alternative recovery schedules (delay analysis)
·
Generate
a financial impact analysis and recovery plan
·
Perform
performance bond, and payment bond claim review and analysis
·
Perform
Fidelity Bond claim analysis and evaluate claims presented
·
Make
recommendations to Surety Counsel as to choice of remedies (default, cure,
takeover or relet) and participate in establishing loss and expenses reserves
·
Perform
project re-lets/Ratification of subcontractors and vendors
·
Completion
strategy and protocol analysis
·
Project
Completion Management
·
Perform
change order review/claim preparation and negotiation
·
Discovery
assistance and deposition package preparation
·
Forensic
investigation of architectural and engineering issues
·
Project
Monitoring
·
Assist in
negotiating and settling, tender, takeover, completion, joint escrow,
sub-contract and other contractual agreements necessary to discharge surety's
obligations, working with Surety Counsel.
Our experience in both the
technical application and practical aspects of surety claim investigations
results in thorough, prompt, and cost-effective analysis and resolution of each
unique case that comes our way. Our experience includes claims
analysis, delay analysis, surety completion services, construction management
and administration, preparation and review of contract documents, partnering
facilitation for major construction projects, and litigation support.
Metropolitan has directed
and performed virtually all types of claim analyses including delay and
inefficiency (typically using measured mile for inefficiency); assessed
responsibility for contract changes, and calculated various types of delay
damages. Metropolitan has analyzed claims on commercial, healthcare,
educational, high‐rise, highway, government,
residential, prison, environmental remediation, and transit projects. Metropolitan has provided these analyses
during the project to help the project team resolve disagreements and avoid
disputes; and after the project has completed to help the parties resolve their
differences without resorting to costly litigation.
Extensive
Experience helping Sureties
Metropolitan also has
extensive experience helping sureties fulfill their bond obligations resolve
disputes after a contractor has defaulted.
This work includes the evaluation of contractor bid pricing, evaluation
of the contractor’s ability to perform work, risk assessment, evaluation of
termination, construction completion services, claim and litigation support
services, loss recovery services, evaluation of payment bond claims, negotiation
and settlement of payment bond claims, and construction defects investigation
services. Metropolitan has provided
these services for commercial, development, educational, and assisted living
projects.
Where
after contractor default and demand upon the surety is made, and the remaining balance
of contract funds are insufficient to cover the costs needed to complete the
contractor’s scope of work, the surety may look to third parties to recover
some or all of the losses it is about to incur. This section of the materials will discuss the
viability of such claims, and some of the defenses that may be asserted against
them.
Underlying
the surety’s claim against third parties is that their errors or omissions
impaired the surety’s rights, diminished the contract balance, or increased the
surety’s risk of loss. Most often the
acts of the architect will come under scrutiny.
Other potential targets include accountants, lenders, construction
managers, inspectors, engineers and other design professionals. The most common assertions by the surety against
the design professional are: (1) failure
to properly inspect work in place, (2) failure to properly supervise the
contractor, (3) failure to timely respond to RFIs or submittals, (4) premature
release of retainage, and (5) failure to properly certify contractor pay
applications resulting in over payment of the contractor.
- Credit relationship investigations
- Prior surety experience investigations
- Banking relationship investigations
- Management investigations
- Principal accounting and financial reviews
- Indemnitor accounting and financial reviews
- Bid evaluation and assistance
- Cost estimate reviews
- Budget reviews
- Cash-flow analysis
- Contractual commitment investigations
- On-site job inspections
- Direct application of project funds
- Itemized project accounting
- Specialized surety requirements
Metropolitan distinguished itself decades ago for our ability to respond to problems quickly and decisively, demonstrating our ability to reduce surety losses. Often, it isn’t enough to determine what went wrong. You need a partner who helps make things right, compensating for any lost time and money. The key to our successful track record rests in the depth of analysis and expert execution only Metropolitan can provide. Our surety consulting services to you may include:
- Default and termination investigations
- Cost-to-complete reviews and estimates
- Bid procurement
- Project relet
- Principal or relet contractor monitoring
- Settlement negotiations
- Specialized surety requirements
- Principal affirmative claim and defensive claim analysis and preparation
- SBA audit coordination and support
- Errors and omissions reviews
- Accounting and financial reviews
- Financial and operations monitoring
- Project management monitoring
- Project completion
CONSTRUCTION
DEFECTS SERVICES
Metropolitan specializes in
addressing and resolving disputes involving public work projects,
business/commercial disputes, complex construction defect, environmental health
and safety issues, construction delay and contractual matters, partnerships,
homeowners association, retail centers, and real estate issues. Our three decades of forensic experience
includes advanced research and analysis of code, materials and building
practices, as well as the development of comprehensive repair methodologies for
maximization of repair and restoration efficiency. We have financial and legal education,
expertise and experience that we used to better focus our engineering arguments
and presentations to the various parties.
We have successfully participated in dispute resolution mediation,
arbitration, and settlement procedures on numerous occasions.
Metropolitan’s design experience includes civil site
improvements for single family housing, multi-family housing, commercial and
industrial land development, roadways, public works construction, pipelines,
reservoirs, pump stations, hydraulics and hydrology, and environmental impacts
of construction defects. We are also
proficient in all aspects of claims handling and management, including damage,
liability and coverage issues, reserving, risk transfer, auditing, litigation
management and expense control measures.
We are
effective negotiators and work hard to resolve cases in a manner that avoids
the additional time and expense of a trial.
We help both insurers and insureds with water damage claims regarding:
- Stucco: When a builder improperly installs stucco or the building paper behind it, water can seep in and cause damage to the building's framing and sheathing.
- Siding: When a builder improperly installs vinyl or steel siding or the housewrap behind it, water can seep in and cause damage to the building's framing and sheathing. Additionally, poor installation may cause the vinyl or steel siding to warp or buckle.
- Leaky roofs: Roof leaks are often caused by faulty construction, including poor shingle installation, failure to install kickout flashing and the use of defective shingles.
- Foggy, leaky, or improperly installed windows: Improperly installed flashing can allow water to seep around and through the windows and into a property. This can damage the windows, causing them to rot. It can also cause damage to the building's framing and sheathing.
Water
leaks can quickly damage and ruin property. And, left uncorrected, water leaks
can lead to pervasive mold growth. We
assist our clients in addressing these construction defect and property damage
claims against their builders to repair these problems. From our offices in several
Northeast and Midwest states, we assist clients facing construction defect
issues across a ten state coverage area.
We understand
the different needs faced by individual and commercial policyholders, as well
as community associations and farm and ranch policyholders. As an
individual policyholder, you may be concerned about where you will sleep and
live, as well as additional living expenses. As a commercial policyholder, you
may be most concerned with recovering for your business interruption and lost
profits. Either way, we can work hard to secure the results you need.
Metropolitan has extensive
experience in the fields of moisture/water infiltration/intrusion, roof system
failures, lath, plaster, mortar, stucco, drywall, dimensional stone, handset
applications, prefab installations, light-gauge metal stud, fireproofing,
architectural pre-cast concrete, and EIFS for all types of facilities. Our skills and experience include design,
construction estimating, material take-offs, site inspection, corrective
construction detail, scheduling, subcontractor and field crew coordination,
contract drafting and execution, worker and environmental health and safety.
We
have handled thousands of factual issues dealing with:
·
Delay, disruption, extra work and impact claims;
·
contractual change orders;
·
standard of care;
·
cost of repair;
·
scope of work disputes;
·
mechanic’s liens;
·
stop notices;
·
bid protests;
·
errors and omissions;
·
environmental matters, including mold;
·
construction defects, as well as contract drafting and
review;
·
green technology defects, including vegetative roof systems
and wind turbines;
We are including our web address below, should you wish to find
out more about us and our services. We
are very competitive. We will beat every
competitor’s prices and quality of work.
We provide discounts for multiple assignments.
·
Serve as an integral part of the business management team as an
outsourced risk manager
·
Overview current loss prevention and loss mitigation processes
·
Provide project management services to ensure critical processes are
completed in a timely manner and consistent with overall needs
·
Provide an objective and independent expert evaluation of the current
risk program, including a written report containing specific findings and
recommendations
·
Identify and assess your current and potential risk of loss
·
Develop alternate (non-insurance) methods of risk financing
·
Assist in strategic planning to achieve long range risk management
objectives
·
Develop risk management education coursework for specific needs
·
Provide guidance during merger, acquisition and divestiture activities
·
Provide expert witness and litigation support
Metropolitan Engineering, Consulting & Forensics (MECF)
Providing
Competent, Expert and Objective Investigative Engineering and Consulting
Services
P.O. Box 520
Tenafly, NJ 07670-0520
Tel.: (973) 897-8162
Fax: (973) 810-0440
E-mail:
metroforensics@gmail.com
Web pages:
https://sites.google.com/site/metropolitanforensics/
https://sites.google.com/site/metropolitanenvironmental/
https://sites.google.com/site/metroforensics3/
We are happy to announce the launch of our twitter account. Please make
sure to follow us at @MetropForensics or @metroforensics1
Metropolitan
appreciates your business.
Feel free to
recommend our services to your friends and colleagues.