HOW TO MANAGE CONSTRUCTION DISPUTES TO
MINIMIZE SURETY AND CONSTRUCTION CLAIMS.
PART 6: CHANGE ORDER AND EXTRA
WORK CONSTRUCTION Claims
Introduction
Construction is a
business fraught with risk. Disputes
over even the smallest of issues can quickly escalate, with crippling
consequences to the project and the parties.
Over the years, the construction industry has developed various methods
of contractually allocating the risk of project delay and disruption. Some of these methods include liquidated damages
provisions, "no damages for delay" clauses, mutual waivers of
consequential damages, provisions that limit liability, claims notice
provisions, “waiver of damages clauses”, acceleration clauses, “time is of the
essence” clauses, change order clauses, and provisions addressing
responsibility for the adequacy of the construction plans and
specifications. Parties frequently
litigate the sufficiency of these risk-shifting efforts in conjunction with the
underlying merits of delay and disruption disputes.
Construction Claims
& Disputes
In Part I of our
series of how to manage construction disputes to minimize surety and
construction claims, we addressed the construction delay claims and the methods
typically used to analyze them.
We indicated there
that the most frequently encountered claims include:
1.
Construction
Delay Claims
2.
Disruption
and Loss of Labor Productivity Claims
3.
Design
and Construction Defect Claims
4.
Force
Majeure Claims
5.
Acceleration
or Compression of the Schedule Claims
6.
Suspension,
Termination and Default Claims
7.
Differing
Site Conditions Claims
8.
Change
Order and Extra Work Claims
9.
Cost
Overrun Claims
10.
Unacceptable
Workmanship or Substituted Material Claims
11.
Non-payment
Claims (stop notice (or Notice to Withhold) claims, mechanics’ lien (only for
private construction projects) and payment bond claims)
Part 6 of this
series discusses item 8 above: Change Order and Extra Work Construction Claims.
Change Orders
No architect or
engineer ever produced a perfect set of plans and specifications. It is not humanly possible to do so and it
would be prohibitively expensive to do so especially on a large project that
has many details. There are too many
details that need to be drafted and too many elements of the work must be
coordinated in too many ways. As a result,
the plans and specifications cannot prescribe every detail of the work. That is the reason the contract documents
specify that whenever a detail is not provided, the contractor must submit
draft details to the engineer for approval prior to installation or
construction.
Furthermore, every
construction project is different. Each
is built by a combination of contractors who bring their workers and
equipment/tools together, at a single location, for just that one job. This creates sequencing and trade stacking
issues, especially if a delay occurs in one part of the construction
phase. Work is often impacted by the
unforeseeable: inclement weather, subsurface conditions, new building codes,
unavailability of materials, and activities adjacent to, or sometimes through,
the project site. No set of plans and specifications can anticipate such
conditions or events, nor do other factors that make the owner alter the
project midstream. This is why contracts
allow owners to make changes in the work.
In most cases, some
changes to the plans and specifications or the work contemplated by the
contract will be necessary before completion of the project because of lack of
detail, errors, omissions, improvements, or aesthetic, cost, or other concerns.
Changes and extras can create disputes and careful planning in the contract
stage is vital. Accordingly, every construction contract should include a
change order clause (“Change Order Clause”), which provides the owner with a
mechanism by which it is permitted to require alterations or additions so long
as it agrees to compensate the contractor for the additional work.
There are numerous
reasons why changes may occur on a construction project, including, but not
limited to:
• Unclear bid
documents
• Owner directed changes
• Late, incomplete,
or defective drawings; specifications, and other contract documents
• Preferential
changes by the owner
• Misinterpreted
contract requirements by the parties
• Differing site
conditions
• New or revised
codes/standards
• Rework
• Impacts/changes to
the construction means and methods
• Scope additions
• Acceleration and/or
schedule changes
Frequent
sources of change orders in contract documents include:
• Defective
Specifications;
• Illegal
Restrictions;
• Improvements in
Time;
• Incomplete Design;
• Intention of the
Contract Documents;
• Lack of Design
Discipline Coordination;
• Latent Conditions;
• Owner Changes; and
• Updated Information
The pace of a
construction project may be such that subcontractors are faced with a dilemma.
They are often asked verbally to perform work they believe was not included in
the original contract. Do they go ahead and do the work and risk not getting
paid for it? Do they delay the project and take the time to get the change in
writing signed by all parties? If they do this, they may risk being in breach
of contract for not completing the project on time if a court later determines
the work requested was contemplated by the original contract and a change order
was not required.
A Change Order as
defined in Section 7.2.1 of the A201, is a written document signed by the
owner, contractor, and architect setting forth their agreement with respect to
the change in the work, any adjustment to the contract time, and any adjustment
to the contract sum. Using a Change Order is the preferred method to request a
change in the work, because the agreement of the parties as to the change is
set forth in writing. If the owner wants the right to make changes that are not
included within the scope of work contemplated by the contract, the owner must
specifically set out the owner’s right to do so in the contract.
If there were no
changes clause in the contract, the contractor would have a right to build
exactly what was called out in the plans and specifications. The owner could order no changes without the
contractor’s consent. If the contractor
refused to consent, the change could not be made.
That
is why every competently drafted construction contract has a changes
clause. Even after a contract has been
written to the satisfaction of all parties, reviewed by an experienced attorney
if necessary, and is signed, the contract may need to be amended after the
project begins. A change in the design
plans, the materials used, a foreseeable delay in the project completion date,
whatever the cause of an alteration to the original terms of the contract,
these amendments must be put in writing as “change orders.” A proper change order lays out the specific
modification to a contract term and how said modification affects the project
budget. (See California’s Business and Professions Code Section 7159.6.) Once a change order is signed by all parties
it becomes a legally enforceable part of the contract.
The
more time spent thinking about what a particular construction project will
demand, and clarifying each aspect in writing using unambiguous language, the
less opportunity there is for misunderstanding and confusion which can lead to
long delays, bad reputations, and potential legal problems.
It is imperative that construction contracts provide a clear and
concise directive in dealing with the fluid course every project takes. Doing
so will greatly aid in avoiding the confusion and mistakes that often lead to
costly and laborious legal action between disgruntled parties. While there is no such thing as a perfect
construction contract, this guide will address the importance of keeping
control of costs by making a provision for change orders.
Much like a construction contract, there is no perfect set of
construction plans. Even the most meticulous scope of work is subject to change
due to any number of unforeseen circumstances before or during the construction
process. Should the client decide to
make alterations to the design specifications, desired materials are unavailable
or found to exceed the costs outlined in the budget, or conditions at the
worksite require amendments to the original plan and/or changes in personnel, a
provision for such changes should be made in the construction contract.
While it is impossible to predict every such event, a competently
written construction contract includes a “changes” clause that accounts for the
likelihood of a request to add to or delete from the original scope of
work. The language of these clauses does
vary depending on the contract, but most contain provisions allowing the client
unilateral powers to modify the plan and specifications, and compelling the
contractor to perform said modifications.
Other common provisions include a means for both parties to agree
on how the revisions will affect budget and schedule, and a means for both
parties to agree on how to handle any disputes that may arise concerning
same. The changes clause also addresses
the prudent legal protocol to follow when parties wish to move forward with adjustments
to the original scope of work.
For the protection of all involved and as required by the
California Contractors State License Board for residential projects, the clause
should mandate that any modifications to the contract be done in writing, in
the form of a change order, and specify the change in work. It should show any
and all adjustments to the budget and schedule as finalized in the present
contract.
Typically a change order is prepared by the architect or the
contractor based on his/her discussion with the client. The change order must
be signed by all relevant parties to ensure proper payment for the work
performed. On a more practical basis, if
the owner wishes to preserve your working relationship with his contractor,
having a written change order will prevent differences in memory and the
resulting disagreements that go along with it.
Although the
language in changes clauses varies from contract to contract – and those
variations may have significance – most changes clauses cover the following
points:
1. The right of the
owner to unilaterally modify the plans and specifications, and the duty of the
contractor to perform the work as changed.
2. Mechanisms for the
owner and contractor to agree on the cost and time implications of the change.
3. Mechanisms for
resolving disputes over costs and time. Typically, these mechanisms (a)
require the contractor to maintain detailed daily records of the labor,
services, equipment and material used for the changed work, and (b) specify
markups that can be added to those costs to cover overhead and profit.
Elements
for Recovery
Even if a CO is executed, recovery for extra work may
be barred unless the contractor can show that he in fact performed work over
and above what was required under the original contract. The contractor must establish the following
points to obtain additional compensation for extra work:
1) the work was
outside the scope of the original contract,
2) the extra items or
changes were ordered at the direction of the owner,
3) the owner either
expressly or impliedly agreed to pay extra,
4) the extra items
were not furnished voluntarily by the contractor, and
5) the extra items
were not required or made necessary through any fault or omission of the
contractor. Duncan v. Cannon, 561
N.E.2d 1147 (Ill. App. Ct. 1st Dist. 1990) (labor and materials that are
incidental and necessary to the execution of the contract cannot be regarded as
extra work). The issue of whether extra
compensation can be successfully claimed is a fact-intensive question which
turns on the extent of the added burden on the contractor's performance and the
language in the contract. Any situation involving a disputed constructive
change should be carefully documented by the parties, highlighting their
communications and the actual impact on performance. In order to recover compensation,
a contractor must be able to demonstrate the exact nature of the change and the
owner's agreement to the change. Wilmette Partners v. Hamel, 230 Ill.
App. 3d 248, 264, 594 N.E.2d 1177, 1189 (1st Dist. 1992); Curran Contracting
Co. v. Woodland Hills Dev. Co., 235 Ill. App. 3d 406, 415-18, 602 N.E.2d
497, 504-05 (2d Dist. 1992).
Minor Changes in the Work
Section 7.4 of the A201 permits the architect to order minor
changes in the work not involving an adjustment to the contract sum or the
contract time. This could be problematic for the owner because the architect
specifically has the power to bind the owner to such minor changes.
Accordingly, depending on the degree of control an owner desires to exercise
over the project, the owner may desire to modify the contract to provide that
the order for minor changes should be signed by the owner and architect.
Additional
Work vs. Extra Work
Disputes about
changes in the work become important when there is a disagreement as to whether
work conducted by the contractor or subcontractor is “extra” work or
“additional” work. Extra work is work which is outside the scope of the
contract contemplated between the owner and contractor and, accordingly, will
support a claim by the contractor for additional compensation or additional
time to complete the project, or both. North Shore Sewer & Water, Inc.
v. Corbetta Construction Co., 395 F.2d 145 (7th Cir. 1968). Additional
work, on the other hand, is work which is within the original scope of the
contract and stems from the tasks which were originally contracted for.
Additional work will not be subject to additional compensation by the owner,
but may permit an extension of time to complete the project. Id.
As noted above, Change Orders under the A101 and
A201 require the parties, by their terms, to reach agreement upon the
appropriate adjustment to the time for the contractor’s performance and the
contractor’s compensation for the modifications described in the Change Order.
As a result, disputes regarding whether work required by an owner under the
contract constitutes additional work or extra work generally result from
Construction Change Directives and minor changes in the work ordered by the
owner or its representatives. The types of modifications owners and their representatives
have sought to implement by Construction Change Directives and minor changes
has proved to be legion. Some of the more common ones follow: (a) the owner
directs the contractor to alter the sequence or timing of its work; (b) the
owner seeks to “clarify” contract requirements that are vague or ambiguous with
regard to performance standards; (c) the owner’s architect or engineer imposes
excessive standards at the time of inspecting completed work; and (d) the
owner’s architect or engineer seeks to make revisions to correct or revise
arguably defective drawings or specifications. Changes of these types
frequently can increase the cost of a contractor’s performance or the time it
will take the contractor to complete the project. Most contracts will require
the issuance by the contractor of a notice of claim for the extra work
associated with a Construction Change Directive or a minor change in order for
the contractor to preserve its rights to additional compensation or time.
Accordingly, careful documentation and notice to the owner of the
contractor's claim are imperative. Wherever possible, the contractor should
carefully detail the ways that the revised work is inconsistent with the
original requirements, the impact to the schedule, and the other added costs.
Illinois courts clarified the elements of what constitutes
additional work and what constitutes extra work in the 1967 case of Watson
Lumber Co. v. Guennewig, 79 Ill. App. 2d 377 (1967). See e.g.: Stark
Excavating, Inc. v. Carter Constr. Servs., 967 N.E.2d 465 (Ill. App. Ct.
4th. 2012). In Watson, a contractor built a home with a contract price
of $28,206, but full payment was withheld by the owner due to disputes over the
construction. The contractor sued to recover the full contract price, and made
additional claims for extras which were furnished by the contractor. The court
in Watson held that a contractor seeking to recover for extras must
establish all of the following elements:
• The work was outside the scope of the contract
promises;
• The extra items were ordered by the owner;
• The owner agreed to pay extra, either by words
or conduct;
• The extras were not furnished by the contractor
as his voluntary act; and
• The extras were not rendered necessary by any
fault of the contractor. (Watson at 390).
The specific type of change encountered affects both the
enforceability of the requested change as well as the amount that will be paid
for such change. As a general rule, an owner may only request changes which are
within the general scope of the work described in the contract documents. Under
Illinois law, a request falling outside the general scope of the parties'
agreement will not be enforceable under the existing contract, but instead will
constitute a new contract. Compare Bulley & Andrews, Inc. v. Symons
Corp., 25 Ill. App. 3d 696, 701, 323 N.E.2d 806, 810 (1st Dist. 1975) with
Kell v. Kosary, 93 Ill. App. 2d 400, 403, 236 N.E.2d 349, 351 (1st Dist.
1968).
In Kell, the contractor initially agreed to construct new
living quarters and garage for the owner. The parties subsequently agreed that
the contractor would renovate an old garage at the same location. The Court
determined that the agreement to renovate the old garage could not be enforced
as part of the initial construction contract, because the subject matter was so
different, but instead constituted part of a separate oral construction
contract. Kell, 93 Ill. App. 2d at 403, 236 N.E.2d at 351. By contrast,
in Bulley, the owner modified the type of “rustification strip” used by
the contractor, who was held to have consented to an enforceable modification
of the contract, rather than to a new contract, because the modification was
consistent with the scope of the existing contract. As a result, the contractor
was prohibited from seeking additional compensation for the expanded (but consistent)
scope of work in the modified contract. Bulley, 25 Ill. App. 3d at 701,
323 N.E.2d at 810.
The courts have provided little guidance for the
determination of whether a proposed change falls within the general scope of an
agreement or is beyond the scope. One court has defined such changes as those
which fairly and reasonably fall within the contemplation of the parties when
the contract was executed. Freund v. United States, 260 U.S. 60, 62
(1922).
Another court has suggested that the determination of whether a
change is beyond the scope of the contract is a matter of degree and the
ultimate determination can be reached only “by considering the totality of the
change” both as to its “magnitude” and “quality.” Saddler v. United States,
152 Ct. Cl. 557, 561, 287 F.2d 411, 413 (Ct. Cl. 1961). The United States Court
of Claims focused on whether the changes were such that the end product was
substantially different from the work the parties originally agreed to provide.
J.D. Hedin Constr. Co. v. United States, 347 F.2d 235, 258 (Ct. Cl.
1965).
Cardinal Change
Other methods, outside the contract, can
produce recovery for the contractor for extra work. The "cardinal change" doctrine is
available when the quantum of changes or the magnitude of a change creates a
fundamental alteration of the scope of the contract so that it essentially
breaches the contract. Air-A-Plane
Corp. v. U.S., 408 F.2d 1030 (Ct. Cl. 1969). The “cardinal change falls
beyond the general scope of the contract.
Allied Materials & Equipment Co., Inc. v. United States, 214
Ct. Cl. 406, 409 (Ct. Cl. 1978). Cardinal changes are unenforceable and may
constitute a breach of contract. In such
a situation, the contractor may terminate performance and sue for damages. Id.
There is no exact formula for determining
when a change, or series of changes, alters the scope of the contract, and
thereby breaches the contract. Wunderlich
Contracting Co. v.
U.S. , 351 F.2d 956, 966 (Ct. Cl. 1965). Neither the number
of changes, nor the character of the modifications is the determining factor. J.D. Hedin Constr. Co. v. U.S., 347 F.2d 235, 258 (Ct.
Cl. 1965); Air-A-Plane Corp
., 408 F.2d at 1033.
Constructive Changes
The A201 defines a construction change directive (“Construction
Change Directive”) as a written order prepared by the architect and signed by
the owner and architect directing a change in the work prior to an agreement on
the adjustment to the contract time or contract sum. See Section 7.3.1 of
the A201. This method is useful when the parties need to expedite the work and
do not have time to gather the necessary information on price. Nonetheless, at
the earliest possible time thereafter, the parties should finalize the changes
to the contract price and time by way of a written Change Order.
The
standard “Changes” clauses specify that a change can only be made to the
contract by a written order. Contract provisions requiring changes to be
approved in writing are common and enforceable. See Central Penn Indus., Inc.
v. Department of Transp., 25 Pa. Commw. 25, 358 A.2d 445 (1976); Linneman
Constr., Inc. v. Montana-Dakota Utils. Co., 504 F.2d 1365 (8th Cir. 1974). See also American Institute of Architects Form
A201, General Conditions for the Contract for Construction (1997 ed.). This
contract requirement will generally be upheld by the Pennsylvania courts. One
Pennsylvania decision has noted:
It is a well-established rule of law
that where, by the terms of a contract with a governmental body, written orders
for additional work are required, the contractor cannot recover for extra work
without compliance with the contractual provisions.
Dick
Corp. v. State Public School Bldg. Authority, 27 Pa. Commw. 498, 500, 365 A.2d
663, 664 (1976).
A common issue is whether a directive from an
owner or the owner's representative constitutes a change at all. An owner may
request a change to the procedure or timing of performance as a project
progresses. Such situations may result in an increase to the contractor's cost
of performance. In these situations, a contractor will want a written change
order to document the change so that it can collect additional costs resulting
from the directive.
Conversely, the
owner's agent will resist issuing a change order in those instances where it is
simply altering the timing or procedure for performing an agreed task. See
Duncan v. Cannon, 204 Ill. App. 3d 160, 166, 561 N.E.2d 1147, 1151 (1st
Dist. 1990) (labor and materials that are incidental and necessary to the
execution of the contract cannot be regarded as extra work). The issue of
whether extra compensation can be successfully claimed is a fact-intensive
question which turns on the extent of the added burden on the contractor's
performance and the language in the contract. Any situation involving a
disputed constructive change should be carefully documented by the parties,
highlighting their communications and the actual impact on performance. In
order to recover compensation, a contractor must be able to demonstrate the exact
nature of the change and the owner's agreement to the change. Wilmette
Partners v. Hamel, 230 Ill. App. 3d 248, 264, 594 N.E.2d 1177, 1189 (1st
Dist. 1992); Curran Contracting Co. v. Woodland Hills Dev. Co., 235 Ill.
App. 3d 406, 415-18, 602 N.E.2d 497, 504-05 (2d Dist. 1992).
Procedure for Implementation of Change Orders.
Virtually all construction contracts have provisions requiring a
written order signed by the owner for additional work. Nevertheless, Illinois,
like most jurisdictions, has carved out an exception to the requirement for a
written order where the party has waived it and knew of the change or accepted
the work with knowledge of the change. See, e.g., Mendelson v. Ben A.
Bornstein & Co., 240 Ill. App. 3d 605, 616-17, 608 N.E.2d 187, 194-95
(1st Dist. 1992) (owner who knew of the change waived written order requirement
by not strictly enforcing requirement); Berg and Assoc., Inc. v. Nelsen
Signal & Wire Co., 221 Ill. App. 3d 526, 535-36, 580 N.E.2d 1198, 1204
(1st Dist. 1991) (actions or words of parties can waive requirement that
written order be required for extra work); Bulley & Andrews, Inc. v.
Symons Corp., 25 Ill. App. 3d 696, 703-04, 323 N.E.2d 806, 811-12 (1st
Dist. 1976) (owner ordered extra work, was aware that it was extra, and
permitted it to proceed without an order, thereby waiving need for written
authorization).
A contractor also must guard against following the directive of an
owner's representative who does not have the authority to make changes on
behalf of the owner. Typically, construction contracts designate the
individuals having authority to make changes which are binding upon the owner.
Under Illinois law, a contractor working on a
public project acts at its own peril if it follows the directive of an owner's
representative who lacks the authority to issue change orders.
NOTICE PROVISIONS.
The parties to the construction contract should pay close
attention to the notice provisions of the contract. Notice provisions (i)
facilitate requests by the parties for possible modifications and revisions to
construction contracts including change orders, and (ii) are necessary to
facilitate the discussion between owners and contractors with respect to
possible delays in the performance of the work and similar issues arising during
the construction process. A typical notice provision will provide for the
timing of the notice, the person to whom the notice must be given, the manner
in which the notice must be served, and the subsequent documentation to be
provided by the party giving the notice. Each contract is different, and the
specific times and conditions under which notices are required by owners and
contractors vary widely. Nevertheless, courts will generally enforce these
provisions, which can impose unanticipated adverse consequences on a party that
fails to comply with the notice requirements. See generally Sarnoff v. De
Graf Bros., Inc., 196 Ill. App. 3d 535 (1st Dist. 1990).
When notice provisions are clear and unambiguous
in a contract, courts will normally construe notice requirements in strict
accord with their meaning in the contract. Dean Mgmt., Inc. v. TBS Const.
Inc., 790 N.E.2d 934 (Ill. App. 3d 2003). Actual or constructive notice has
been deemed adequate by courts in regard to contractors seeking additional compensation
for work performed under the agreement when the notice provisions of the terms
of the agreement were ambiguous. Id. Additionally, courts have not
deemed a failure to strictly comply with the notice provisions of an agreement
fatal to a claim. Suburban Auto Rebuilders, Inc. v. Associated Tile Dealers
Warehouse, Inc., 902 N.E.2d 1178 (Ill. App. 3d 2009). Written notice
requirements of change orders have been waived by courts when the conduct of
the parties indicates their intent to waive such stipulations. See e.g.:
Lempera v. Karner, 79 Ill. App. 3d 221 (Ill. App. Ct. 1979).
Regardless of whether or not a court may impose strict notice
requirements on a claimant under a construction contract, careful attention
should be given to the notice provisions in a construction contract to assure
that the notice requirements are reasonable under the circumstances, and will
provide adequate notice to all parties involved without causing unnecessary
burden to either party.
The A101 and A201 provide good examples of the
importance of notice provisions in construction contracts. As noted earlier,
the time the contractor is required to commence the contract can be set by a
notice to proceed from the owner. This is contemplated by Section 3.1 of the
A101. The A201 includes more than 15 different circumstances under which one
party must give notice to the other (including, among others, claims for
changes in the work), and the timing requirements with respect to such notices
vary. As a result, both the contractor and the owner should refer to the
contract regularly to ensure compliance with the procedures for making and
preserving claims under the contract. Moreover, each party should consider
whether it would benefit to add a single page to the contract that laying out
all of the notice rules and deadlines in a single place in a straightforward
way. This 15 minutes of foresight could save substantial time and money during
the course of construction, and could serve to reduce the possibility of
litigation.
Limitations on the Owner’s Power to Order
Changes
A. Exceeding
the Scope, or Defeating the Purpose, of the Contract
Although the
changes clause permits the owner to make unilateral changes – and requires the
contractor to perform the modified work – there is a limit to the owner’s power
(Valley Construction Co. v. City of Calistoga
(1946) 72 Cal.App.2d 839, 842, 165 P.2d 521 [“the right to make alterations in
the plans is limited to changes that do not unreasonably alter the character of
the work or unduly increase its cost”). Whether the owner exceeds
that permissible limit, is a question of fact (Valley Construction at 72 Cal.App.2d 842-44). By doing
so, the owner breaches the contract (Amelco
Electric v. City of Thousand Oaks (2002) 27 Cal.4th 228, 238, 38
P.3d 1120, 115 Cal.Rptr.2d 900 [“Under the cardinal change doctrine, the
cardinal change ‘constitutes a material breach of the contract.’
[citation] The contractor may recover breach of contract damages for that
additional work.”]).
The permissible
limit can be exceeded by an extraordinary increase in the quantity of work (Daugherty v. Kimberly-Clark Corp.
(1971) 14 Cal.App.3d 151, 92 Cal.Rptr. 120), by an extraordinary decrease in
the quantity of work (Hensler
v. City of Los Angeles (1954) 124 Cal.App.2d 71, 268 P.2d 12; Boomer v. Abbett (1953) 121
Cal.App.2d 449,463-65, 263 P.2d 476), or by an extraordinary change in the
quality of the work (Coleman
Engineering Co. v. North American Aviation, Inc. (1966) 65 Cal.2d
396, 55 Cal.Rptr. 1, 420 P.2d 713 [change in the center of gravity of missile
transportation trailers that plaintiff agreed to build]).
Hensler v. City of Los
Angeles
(1954) 124 Cal.App.2d 71, 268 P.2d 12, involved construction of a runway and
taxiways for LAX across a state highway. The city could not get timely
consent from the state to detour the highway, so it deleted the affected work
by change order. Hensler laid concrete around this gap, and sued for his
lost profits on the deleted work. Held (124 Cal.App.2d at 78-80):
There is no
question but that … the language of this agreement looks to a complete work of
public improvement. … By the terms of the agreement, plaintiff bound
himself to deliver the completed work required of him. The corollary duty
assumed by the city was to permit plaintiff to consummate the work he had
undertaken, subject to its right to make changes, within designated
limitations, in order to complete the project more satisfactorily. The
deletions ordered by the engineer did not have for their purpose the satisfactory
completion of that which both parties set out to accomplish; the fact is that
the project was abruptly terminated in an unfinished state, thus leaving the
so-called improvement unusable in connection with the existing runways.
Nor were those deletions unnecessary to the project — the court found that
defendant completed virtually all the work deleted from plaintiff’s contract
through the medium of a new contract with a different company. …
The power vested in
the engineer to effect changes in the quantities of the work is not so
extensive as to enable him to abrogate or change the contract which the parties
executed [citations], nor does it authorize defendant to employ such right to
defeat the object of the contract which is reasonably deducible from its terms.
The changes which may be ordered … must clearly be directed either to the
achievement of a more satisfactory improvement or the elimination of work not
integrally necessary to the project. The purpose of such powers is to
maintain a degree of flexibility in adapting conditions to the end
sought. However, the discretion committed to the engineer must be
exercised within the framework of the contract and for the purpose of
implementing the work originally intended. It cannot be used in an arbitrary
manner, divorced from the object and intention of the contract, for the purpose
of legitimatizing the deletion of so integral a part of the work as to leave
the improvement in an unfinished condition and still insulate the city from
liability. [citations] Such a construction would render nugatory
plaintiff’s fundamental rights under the contract and give to defendant an
unconscionable advantage plainly not intended. …
In Boomer v. Abbett (1953) 121
Cal.App.2d 449, 263 P.2d 476, the federal government contracted with Abbett to
build a 25 mile transmission line in northern California that required about
225 steel towers. Abbett subcontracted to Boomer the erection of the
towers. The subcontract had a typical flow-down clause incorporating the
prime contract into the subcontract. The government issued a change order
deleting one mile in the middle of the transmission line involving 16
towers. Subcontractor Boomer sued Abbett for its costs of preparing to
perform that work and its lost profits on that work. In reversing a
directed verdict against Boomer, the court explained (121 CA2d at 464-65):
We do not believe
that the prime contract, as a matter of law, authorized the deletion of the 16
towers without liability except for an “equitable adjustment.” There can
be no doubt that the prime contract contemplated that some towers might be
deleted during construction, and that such deletion could be made without
liability. But the contract also contemplated and provided that the
transmission line was to be constructed. It is a contract to construct a
transmission line, not to construct about 225 towers. It is one thing to
delete towers found to be unnecessary in the construction of the transmission
line. It is quite another to delete an integral part of the work that
results in the transmission line not being constructed. This 1-mile gap
in the transmission line was not bridged until four years after this dispute
arose, and then by a wooden pole line. …
Under the cases, if
the contract imposes a duty on the government to complete the construction of
the structure involved in the contract, a “changes” clause does not authorize
the deletion of an integral part of the work. [citations] These
cases establish the law to be that under a changes clause the government has no
power to change the essential nature or main purpose of the contract, but may
only make changes incidental to the primary object of the contract. The
change order under such clauses may not essentially alter the project
contemplated by the contract.
This construction
of such clauses is not only in accordance with their obvious purpose, but is
also strongly supported by public policy. If the government were
empowered by such clauses to alter materially the object of the contract, after
construction had started, all bidders would have to take such possibility into
consideration and materially raise their bids in anticipation of such losses,
thus increasing the cost of public works.
Thus the question
is, did the deletion of the 16 towers materially alter the fundamental object
of the contract, or merely provide for a deletion incidental to the primary
object of the contract? This was a question of fact … that should have
been left to the jury.
A change order, or
group of change orders, that exceeds the permissible limit may be called a
change in the scope of the work or change in the character of the work (Valley Const. Co. v. City of Calistoga
(1946) 72 Cal.App.2d 839, 165 P.2d 521) or a “cardinal change” in the contract
(Cray Research, Inc. v. Department of Navy
(D.C.Dist. 1982) 556 F.Supp. 201). Exceeding the limit may also be
characterized as an “abandonment” of the contract (C. Norman Peterson Co. v. Container Corp. of America
(1985) 172 Cal.App.3d 628, 218 Cal.Rptr. 592; Daugherty v. Kimberly-Clark Corp. (1971) 14 Cal.App.3d
151, 92 Cal.Rptr. 120; Opdyke
& Butler v. Silver (1952) 111 Cal.App.2d 912, 917-19, 245 P.2d
306; but see Amelco Electric v. City of
Thousand Oaks (2002) 27 Cal.4th 228, 115 Cal.Rptr. 2d 900, 38 P.3d
1120, where the majority purports to distinguish “abandonment” from “cardinal
change” for purposes of local government contracts only [27 Cal.4th at 236-38],
and the dissent explains why the distinction is nonsense which no other
jurisdiction in the United States has adopted [27 Cal.4th at 248-253]).
Besides describing
changes beyond the permissible limit by different names, the courts have also
struggled to define the permissible limit. It has been described as “what
should be regarded as having been fairly and reasonably within the
contemplation of the parties when the contract was entered into” (Freund v. U.S. (1922) 260 US 60,
63), or as prohibiting “changes [that] are of great magnitude in relation to
the entire contract” (Coleman
Engineering Co. v. North American Aviation, Inc. (1966) 65 Cal.2d
396, 406, 55 Cal.Rptr. 1, 420 P.2d 713), or as prohibiting changes “to the
essential nature or main purpose of the contract … . Thus the
question is, did the [change] materially alter the fundamental object of the
contract, or merely provide for a [change] incidental to the primary object of
the contract?” (Boomer v. Abbett
(1953) 121 Cal.App.2d 449, 464-65, 263 P.2d 476), or as prohibiting changes in
“the character of the work or unduly increase its cost” (Valley Construction Co. v. City of Calistoga
(1946)72 Cal.App.2d 839, 842, 165 P.2d 521).
The cardinal
change/abandonment theory can be used by a subcontractor against a prime
contractor (Sehulster Tunnels/Pre-Con v.
Traylor Brothers, Inc./Obayashi Corporation (2003) 111 Cal.App.4th
1328, 1343-46, 4 Cal.Rptr.3d 655 [tunnel for City of San Diego]; Daugherty v. Kimberly-Clark Corp.
(1971) 14 Cal.App.3d 151, 92 Cal.Rptr. 120 [private job]; Boomer v. Abbett (1953) 121
Cal.App.2d 449, 263 P.2d 476 [transmission line for federal government]).
The Relationship Between Extra Work and
Change Orders
A. General
Rule: Extra Work Requires a Change Order
Change orders
should be issued when the contractor is required to do extra work. Extra
work is labor, services, equipment or materials provided by the contractor that
was neither required by the contract nor expected to be included by the parties
when the contract was executed (City
Street Improvement Company v. Kroh (1910) 158 Cal. 308, 321, 110
Pac. 933 [“Extra work is, of course, work not included in the contract.”], C. F. Bolster Co. v. J. C. Boespflug etc. Co.
(1959) 167 Cal.App.2d 143, 151, 334 P.2d 247; Frank T. Hickey, Inc. v. L. A. J. C. Council (1955) 128
Cal.App.2d 676, 683, 276 P.2d 52).
If the owner admits
that extra work was required, a change order will be issued. If the owner
refuses to issue a change order, the contractor will usually proceed with the
work and pursue a claim for extra work under either a breach of contract theory
(Byson v. Los Angeles (1957) 149
Cal.App.2d 469, 473, 308 P.2d 765 [“Plaintiff could comply with the demands of
the city [for extra work] and sue for breach of contract.”]) or an implied
contract theory (City
Street Improvement Company v. Kroh (1910) 158 Cal. 308, 323, 110
Pac. 933 [“In cases where extra work is caused by authorized deviations from a
building contract, and no agreement is made regarding the price thereof, or
payment therefor, the law implies an agreement by the owner to pay the
reasonable value of the extra work. … and for the extra labor, the party is
entitled to his quantum meruit.”];
Benson Elec. Co. v. Hale Bros. Assoc., Inc.
(1966) 246 Cal.App.2d 686, 697-98, 66 Cal.Rptr. 73; C. F. Bolster Co. v. J. C. Boespflug etc. Co. (1959)
167 Cal.App.2d 143, 151, 334 P.2d 247).
B. What the
Contract Requires the Contractor to Do
Most extra work
disputes arise when the contractor reads the plans and specifications
differently than they are read by the owner or design professional. These
disputes are usually resolved by the parties doing a careful analysis of the
contract documents, applicable reference documents, and customs and practices
in the industry. When the analysis reveals that extra work is required,
the contractor is entitled to a change order. If the dispute goes into
arbitration or litigation, expert witnesses often will testify about what the
contract documents and reference documents really require, or what the industry
customs and practices are in these situations (e.g., Warner
Constr. Corp. v. City of Los Angeles (1970) 2 Cal.3d 285, 291-93,
85 Cal.Rptr. 444, 466 P.2d 996).
Sometimes these
disputes fall into patterns for which legal doctrines have been
developed. The underlying concept is that a contractor only has to build
what the parties actually agreed would be built. This concept leads to
(1) the implied warranty that contract documents are complete and accurate, and
(2) what amounts to another implied warranty that information made available to
bidders accurately and completely represents the actual nature of the work (a
breach of this inchoate warranty is now often described as a non-disclosure of
material facts). The implied warranty that contract documents are
accurate and complete focuses upon what the contract documents actually require
the contractor to do. It is breached when the contract documents call for
work that cannot be done or will not achieve the purpose of the project;
therefore, extra work is required to produce the proper or desired
result. The implied warranty of accurate and complete bid information focuses
upon all of the information made available to the contractor for preparation of
its bid, not just the contract documents. It is breached when the owner
provides incomplete or inaccurate pre-bid information about job conditions,
thereby misleading bidders about the scope or nature of the work, and, as a
result, requiring extra work to produce the result anticipated by the owner.
Many situations
otherwise falling under these doctrines are now addressed by a changed or
differing site conditions clause. That clause is not discussed here.
1. Implied
Warranty of Complete and Accurate Contract Documents
Both statutes and
court decisions require the owner to provide the contractor with complete and
accurate contract documents. Any extra work required to correct deficiencies
arising from inadequate plans or specifications must be paid for by the owner
as either a breach of the implied warranty that that the contract documents are
complete and accurate, or as a breach of a statutory duty to provide such
contract documents.
Examples of the
California statutes are: California Government Code section 4004 (“Prior
to the commencement of the public work, the engineer [defined to include
engineers of the state, a county, a city and any “other district or political
subdivision or agency of the state”] shall prepare and file in his
office … full, complete and accurate plans and specifications …”), and
California Public Contract Code section 1104 (“No local public entity [or]
charter city … shall require a bidder to assume responsibility for the
completeness and accuracy of … plans and specifications on public works
projects, except on clearly designated design-build projects.”), section 10120
(“Before entering into any contract for a project, the department shall prepare
full, complete, and accurate plans and specifications and estimates of cost,
giving such directions as will enable any competent mechanic or other builder
to carry them out.” On this statute see discussion in Welch v. State of California (1983)
139 Cal.App.3d 546, 559, 188 Cal.Rptr. 726), section 10503 (“Before entering
into any contract for a project, the Regents of the University of California
shall cause to be prepared estimates and either: ¶ (a) Complete plans and
specifications setting forth such directions as will enable a competent
mechanic or other builder to carry them out. … [or] Documents for the
solicitation of bids on a design-and-build basis … [or] for construction
manager mode of contracting … [or] on a cost-plus fee mode of contracting …
[or] other contracting mode …”), section 10720 (“Before entering into any
contract for a project, the trustees … shall cause to be prepared full,
complete, and accurate plans and specifications and estimates of cost, giving
such directions as will enable any competent mechanic or other builder to carry
them out.”), sections 20124, 20391 and 20404 for counties, their highways,
bridges and subways, section 20621 for county drainage districts, section
20192 for municipal utility districts, section 20201 for public utility
districts, and section 22039 for agencies that have joined the uniform
construction cost accounting program.
The court case
usually cited as the source for the owner’s implied warranty that the contract
documents are complete and accurate is U.S. v. Spearin
(1918) 248 U.S. 132, 63 L.Ed. 166, 39 S.Ct. 59. The court held (at 248
U.S. 137-38):
[I]f the contractor
is bound to build according to plans and specifications prepared by the owner,
the contractor will not be responsible for the consequences of defects in the
plans and specifications. This responsibility of the owner is not
overcome by the usual clauses requiring builders to visit the site, to check
the plans, and to inform themselves of the requirements of the work … [¶]
“[T]he insertion of the articles prescribing the character, dimensions and
location of the sewer imported a warranty that, if the specifications were
complied with, the sewer would be adequate. … [¶] … The breach of
warranty … [made the Government] liable for all damages resulting from its
breach.
California cases
also find such an implied warranty in contract documents. The seminal
California case is probably Souza
& McCue Construction, Co., Inc. v. Superior Court (1962)
57 Cal.2d 508, 20 Cal.Rptr. 634, 370 P.2d 338. There the contractor was
allowed to amend its cross-complaint to allege that the city had concealed its
breach of the warranty. The court held (at 57 Cal. 2d 510-11):
A contractor of
public works who, acting reasonably, is misled by incorrect plans and specifications
issued by the public authorities as the basis for bids and who, as a result,
submits a bid which is lower than he would have otherwise made may recover in a
contract action for extra work or expenses necessitated by the conditions being
other than as represented. [citations] This rule is mainly based on
the theory that the furnishing of misleading plans and specifications by the
public body constitutes a breach of an implied warranty of their
correctness. [citations] The fact that a breach is fraudulent does
not make the rule inapplicable. [citations].
In Macomber v. State of California
(1967) 250 Cal.App.2d 391, 58 Cal.Rptr. 393 the plans failed to accurately show
the existing conditions into which a new spiral staircase had to fit. The
court observed (at 250 Cal.App.2d 397):
The State does not
question the general rule that a contractor who, acting reasonably, is misled
by incorrect plans and specifications and who, as a result, submits a bid which
is lower than he would otherwise have made, may recover in a contract action
for extra work necessitated because of the incorrect plans and
specifications. [citations] Also, the State concedes that its plans
and specifications were incorrect.
In Tonkin Construction Co. v County of Humboldt
(1987) 188 Cal.App.3d 828, 233 Cal.Rptr. 587, the contract required work on a
seawall to be completed within 40 working days of the notice to proceed, or the
contractor would be assessed liquidated damages. That work could not be
performed without a dredge that was under contract with the Corps of
Engineers. The contract informed Tonkin that it had to coordinate
scheduling with the Corps. Despite all of Tonkin’s coordination efforts,
the dredge did not timely arrive. Tonkin recovered its extra work and
standby costs. Held at 188 Cal.App.3d 832:
Clearly an implied
term of the contract herein was that once the notice to proceed was issued, the
dredge would be available for work on the project. The apparent intention
of the parties was completion of the seawall within 40 working days of the
issuance of the notice to proceed. … This intention of prompt completion
of the seawall could not have been effectuated absent an implied term that the
County would insure the dredge’s availability for work on the project. …
Tonkin, acting as a
reasonable public works contractor, was misled by this incorrect implied
representation in its submission of a bid. Tonkin justifiably relied on
this representation in determining the cost of constructing the seawall.
Accordingly, it did not include in its bid the cost of maintaining the seawall
for an indefinite period of time while awaiting the arrival of the
dredge. As the County impliedly warranted the correctness of these
representations, it is liable for the cost of extra work which was necessitated
by the dredge’s failure to arrive.
2. Corollary
to Implied Warranty of Complete and Accurate Contract Documents
A corollary to the
implied warranty that the contract documents are complete and accurate is the
absence of any duty of the contractor to correct defects in the contract
documents by building something other than what the contract documents
prescribe. In Kurland
v. United Pacific Insurance Company (1967) 251 Cal.App.2d 112, 59
Cal.Rptr. 258, the subcontract called for the air conditioning system to cool
the building 30 degrees below the outside temperature. However, the
subcontractor did not design the system, and the subcontract required the
system to be built according to plans and specifications provided by the owner.
The specified system was inadequately designed, and could not achieve the
30-degree temperature reduction. The subcontractor refused to perform
extra work to make the system achieve that goal. The owner and prime
contractor sued the subcontractor’s performance bond surety for the cost of
that extra work. They lost. Held at 251 Cal.App.2d 117-19:
Our conclusion is
that the subcontractor did not warrant or guarantee that the system embodied in
the architect’s plans and specifications would produce the desired variation
from outside temperature for the cooling of the apartment building.
Since the plans and
specifications were prepared by the owners’ architect and not by the
subcontractor, and since the subcontractor undertook to do the work in
accordance with his specific proposal, we cannot reasonably conclude that the
subcontractor assumed responsibility for the adequacy of the plans and
specifications to meet the purpose of achieving “a 30 degree variation from
outside temperature for cooling.” The language upon which the plaintiff
relies constituted a statement of the purpose sought to be achieved by means of
the owners’ plans and specifications rather than an undertaking on the part of
the subcontractor of responsibility for the adequacy of such plans and specifications
as the design of a system capable of producing the desired result.
In the light of the
reasoning which has been heretofore set forth in this opinion, we construe the
“guarantee” as being an undertaking on the part of the subcontractor not that
the system as designed was adequate to produce the results desired by the
owners but that the subcontractor’s work pursuant to the plans and
specifications would be done as effectively as possible to achieve those
desired results. Because of the defects in the design to which the
subcontractor had to adhere, that goal could not be reached. It would not
be reasonable to construe the language of “guarantee” as being sufficiently
broad to constitute a basis for a transfer to the subcontractor of responsibility
for defective plans and specifications procured by the owners.
In Sunbeam Construction Co. v. Fisci
(1969) 2 Cal.App.3d 181, 184, 82 Cal.Rptr. 446, the owner sought the cost to
fix a leaking roof. The court explained the owner’s argument (at 2 Cal.App.3d
184):
[The owner]
concedes that the roof was constructed in a good and workmanlike manner and in
exact conformance to the plans and specifications furnished by [the owner],
which did not call for a pitch, slope or crown. [The owner’s] sole
contention is that a contractor is liable under an implied warranty for leaking
of a roof covering where drainage of water is not provided by it, even though
the contractor complies with the plans and specifications furnished which do
not provide for drainage.
The court rejected
the owner’s argument and affirmed a summary judgment in favor of the
contractor.
Thus, when the
contract documents tell the contractor what to do, but fail to adequately
describe the work or conditions required to achieve the anticipated result, the
contractor cannot be compelled to perform extra work to achieve that result
without getting a change order for the extra work, or without compensation for
the extra work if the contractor proceeds without a change order.
3. Implied Warranty of Accurate and Complete
Bidding Information
(Non-disclosure of
Material Facts)
Turning to the
implied warranty that bidding information is accurate and complete, the court
case usually cited as the source of that warranty is Hollerbach v. U.S. (1914) 233 U.S.
165, 58 L.Ed. 898, 34 S.Ct. 553. The contract was for repair of a dam;
the existing conditions were misrepresented in the bidding documents. The
court held (at 233 U.S. 172):
[T]he
specifications spoke with certainty as to a part of the conditions to be encountered
by the claimants. … this positive statement of the specifications must be
taken as true and binding upon the Government … [U]pon it rather than upon
the claimants must fall the loss resulting from such mistaken representations.
…
The seminal California
case is probably Gogo v.
Los Angeles County Flood Control District (1941) 45 Cal.App.2d 334,
114 P.2d 65. The contract required excavation of rock for a dam.
The agency represented both orally and in bidding documents that ongoing quarry
operations would reduce the rock grade to a certain elevation. It did
not. When the contractor came onto the job site, it had to remove over
twice the estimated 52,000 cubic yards of rock. Held (at 45 Cal.App.2d
341-42):
It may be stated
generally that where the plans and specifications induce a public contractor
reasonably to believe that certain indicated conditions actually exist and may
be relied upon in submitting a bid, he is entitled to recover the value of such
extra work as was necessitated by the conditions being other than as
represented. [citations, including Hollerbach]
The facts of the instant case bring it within the foregoing rule.
The authorities are
divided concerning the theory upon which recovery is allowed in this type of
case. … [T]he correct basis of recovery is on the theory that the action
is one to recover damages for the misrepresentation by which the contract was
induced. (Hollerbach v. United States [233 U.S. 165, 34
S.Ct. 553, 58 L.Ed. 898] …) It would be inequitable to permit defendant
to enforce the literal terms of the contract which called for the excavation of
“all materials” necessary to complete the job when plaintiffs were induced by
defendant’s misrepresentation to submit a bid which was much lower than was
warranted by the true facts. If instead of stating in the specifications
that West Slope Construction Company would excavate to rough grade, defendant
had stated the true facts of which it had knowledge–that West Slope
Construction Company was obligated by contract to excavate no lower than five
feet above grade–the present situation would not have arisen. Having
failed to impart this knowledge to plaintiffs and having willfully or
carelessly misrepresented the true situation, defendant is obligated to
plaintiffs for the additional work occasioned.
The warranty of
accurate and complete bidding information extends to subcontractors. In Coleman Engineering Co. v. North American
Aviation, Inc. (1966) 65 Cal.2d 396, 55 Cal.Rptr. 1, 420 P.2d 713,
North American provided bidding documents to Coleman describing trailers North
American needed to transport missiles it was building for the federal
government. Those documents indicated that the trailers’ center of
gravity was different than North American actually wanted. Coleman’s bid
was based upon the information provided, so it refused to proceed with the
revised center of gravity without a substantial price adjustment. North
American terminated the contract. Coleman sued for its costs trying to
perform; North American cross-claimed for the difference between Coleman’s bid
and the cost to have another firm build the trailers. Held (at 65 Cal.2d
404):
A contractor who,
acting reasonably, is misled by incorrect plans and specifications issued by
another contracting party as the basis for bids and who, as a result, submits a
bid which is lower than he would otherwise have made may recover in a contract
action for extra work necessitated by the incorrect plans and specifications.
In Warner Constr. Corp. v. City of Los Angeles
(1970) 2 Cal.3d 285, 294, 85 Cal.Rptr. 444, 466 P.2d 996, the court describes a
breach of the implied warranty that bidding information is accurate and
complete as a cause of action for non-disclosure of material facts:
In transactions
which do not involve fiduciary or confidential relations, a cause of action for
non-disclosure of material facts may arise in at least three instances: (1) the
defendant makes representations but does not disclose facts which materially
qualify the facts disclosed, or which render his disclosure likely to mislead,
(2) the facts are known or accessible only to defendant, and defendant knows
they are not known to or reasonably discoverable by the plaintiff; (3)
the defendant actively conceals discovery from the plaintiff. [footnotes
omitted]
Thus, the elements
of a cause of action for breach of the implied warranty that bidding
information is accurate and complete – or for non-disclosure of material facts
– are: (1) information that was made available to the bidders contained material
facts about the project, and (2) the contractor relied upon that information in
preparing its bid, but (3) that information failed to disclose other material
facts (a) that the owner concealed from the contractor, or (b) that the owner
knew were not reasonably discoverable by the contractor, or (c) that
significantly qualified the facts which were disclosed, or (d) that made the
facts disclosed likely to mislead the bidder, and (4) as a result of its
reliance, the contractor’s bid did not cover all of the work which was
required.
Subsequent
California cases follow the Warner
formulation. In Welch v.
State of California (1983) 139 Cal.App.3d 546, 188 Cal.Rptr. 726,
the contract for repair of a bridge fender required work by divers. The
contract documents provided misinformation about the tides and current under
the bridge. Caltrans had recently repaired a nearby fender on the same
bridge, had relied upon information from that project to design the one in this
case, but failed to disclose any information about that project in the bidding
documents for this project. Strong currents interfered with diving, and
high tides forced a change in construction methods from pouring concrete in
place to precasting in sections. Welch sued for the increased costs.
Held (at 139 Cal.App.3d 558):
The undisclosed
information doubtless would have qualified or cast doubt upon any false
impression of favorable tide conditions given by the tide data in the general
note. The failure to disclose such information compounded the effect of
misleading half-truths in the general note.
Therefore, Welch
had a cause of action for nondisclosure.
In Howard Contracting Inc. v. G. A. MacDonald
Construction Co., Inc. (1998) 71 Cal.App.4th 38, 83 Cal.Rptr.2d
590, the contractor recovered damages for nondisclosure, because the agency
failed to disclose construction constraints which it knew would be contained in
permits that were not issued until after bid day.
4.
Determining Whether a Misrepresentation or Nondisclosure Occurred
When the contractor
asserts a breach of the implied warranty of complete and accurate contract
documents, the court will search the contract documents for an actual statement
by the owner that misled the contractor. When the court cannot find one,
the contractor loses. In Wunderlich
v. State of California (1967) 65 Cal.2d 777, 784-785, 56 Cal.Rptr.
473, 423 P.2d 545, the Caltrans contract documents told bidders that “samples”
taken from potential borrow sites “indicated” material of “satisfactory
quality” for base, gravel blanket and mineral aggregate. Caltrans offered
access to its test results from those sites. For the borrow site
Wunderlich ultimately decided to use, an internal Caltrans memo, which was
shown to Wunderlich’s estimator before bid time, reported tests showing 55% to
88% of the material passing a No. 4 sieve (material passing this sieve is sand,
material not passing is gravel). Wunderlich assumed from this information
that the borrow site would yield the median amount of gravel (about 30%).
Wunderlich found much less gravel, and complained to Caltrans. Caltrans
performed new tests, which were consistent with the pre-bid tests.
Wunderlich sued claiming that Caltrans had warranted the quantity of gravel in
the selected borrow pit. The court rejected that argument (at 65 Cal.2d
783-85):
The Special
Provisions state simply that samples had been taken from the pit, and that they
appeared to point to the fact that there was suitable material in the
pit. There was no representation as to quantities in the source, or that
a consistent proportion of materials would be found throughout the source. …
[T]he memorandum … does not purport to disclose the average of overall
condition of the Wilder pit. It purports to explain, rather, that the pit
was composed of sand and gravel, and expressly states that “some test holes
encountered considerable coarse material, while others were practically all
sand.” It forewarns bidders that there might be more sand than
anticipated … Although the memorandum accurately reported the fact
that borings results ranged from 55 percent to 88 percent sand, this would
hardly seem to warrant the conclusion that the pit would average the median of
that range, as claimed by plaintiffs. …
There is no
positive representation as to the material content of the Wilder pit. The
state did little more than report the results of its testing. … and the
plaintiffs were given or had access to the identical, accurate information that
was available to the state.
What plaintiffs
argue, in effect, is that by the presentation of its borings and tests, though
accurately reported, the state assumes liability for the contractor’s erroneous
assumption in bidding that the pit would average approximately a fixed
percentage of gravel. …
In the instant case
… [a]ll the information the State had concerning the soil conditions was
available to claimant and claimant had been invited to make an investigation of
its own. Under these circumstances, the State is not chargeable for
claimant’s loss. …
When the contractor
asserts a nondisclosure of material facts, the court will search for an impact
on the contractor’s bid from information that was withheld or from half-truths
in the bidding information. When it cannot find any, the contractor
loses. In Wiechman Engineers v. State
of California (1973) 31 Cal.App.3d 741, 107 Cal.Rptr. 529, the
contract documents offered access to soil borings which showed substantial
subsurface boulders, and Weichman’s estimator’s own site visit revealed many
boulders on the surface. When the boulders Weichman encountered made
construction of the road much more difficult and time consuming, Weichman sued
for nondisclosure of the boulder information Caltrans had. The court
rejected Weichman’s argument, holding (at 31 Cal.App.3d 752-53):
Here, there was no
representation of any kind as to subsurface conditions. Absent such a
representation, there was no disclosed fact which was likely to mislead
plaintiff.
Secondly, knowledge
of the boulderous condition was not known or accessible only to the state, nor
did the state have such facts as were not known or reasonably discoverable by
plaintiff, if plaintiff had made what would have been admittedly a reasonable
and prudent inquiry.
As previously
pointed, out, section 5-1.05 of the Special Provisions of the contract provided
in part: “Where such investigations [of subsurface conditions in areas where
work is to be performed] have been made, bidders or Contractors may, upon
written request, inspect the records of the Department as to such investigations
. . . .”
Nothing in this
language in any way limited accessibility or precluded plaintiff from obtaining
all information available if it desired to inquire. Thus, there was no
concealment of the boulderous condition on the job site or the test hole
surveys. The record clearly shows actual visibility of boulders in the
job area, a fact readily apparent and known
to plaintiff before the bid
was submitted, as evidenced by Barkley’s detailed testimony.
Finally, Barkley,
the very person entrusted with the responsibility to investigate and prepare
the contractor’s bid, not only assumed the state had test information as to the
road subsurface, but testified he simply decided not to inquire about the same,
fully mindful of the fact that the movement of rocks and boulders necessarily
would be involved in the performance of the contract. We observe that had
plaintiff elected to examine the available test hole surveys, it merely would
have confirmed what onsite observations disclosed; namely, that the work of
construction was to be undertaken in a boulderous area and the degree and
nature of the condition would be something to consider when submitting a
bid. Plaintiff elected to make its decision in this regard based on its
own expertise in performing the work and its own judgment that further inquiry as to subsoil
conditions was not required.
A public entity is
not liable for an imprudent or careless investigation on the part of a
contractor. …
See also Jasper Construction, Inc. v. Foothill Jr.
College Dist. of Santa Clara County (1979) 91 Cal.App.3d 1,
153 Cal.Rptr. 767.
5. Effect of Disclaimers
Since
commercial contracts seek protection against the unknown, it is not surprising
that owners (both public and private) have long sought to insulate themselves from
the mysteries that lie beneath or within the subject work area. Federal agencies first recognized the
unfairness caused by this reasoning.
Contractors were expected to be able to predict the conditions and
applicable costs of performing work, while being unable to seek additional
compensation from the government if the contractor’s “crystal ball” wasn’t
accurate on a particular occasion.
Government information was not mandatory, which left the contractor in a
position to assume all risks involved.
Federal
contract clauses attempt to balance the risk between the parties. Private contracts, however, do not
necessarily possess the uniformity of provisions found in all federal
contracts. Courts interpreting private
contracts have demonstrated little uniformity in their decisions as to the
effectiveness of exculpatory language vis-a-vis changed conditions. One reason for this is the vast variety of
types of general conditions to be found in private contracts. Changed condition clauses range from the very
explicit to nonexistent, and exculpatory provisions may be generously added.
Differing
site claims interpreted under state laws clearly illustrate the principle that
each case stands on its own facts, based on various states’ interpretations.
Case law precedent becomes less compelling given the different circumstances
that may arise from one contract to the next.
Not only will the facts giving rise to the claim always differ, but the
provisions upon which the claims (or defenses to the claims) are based may vary
by only as much as a phrase and still affect the outcome.
The courts refuse
to allow general disclaimers to overcome either of the implied warranties. In U. S. v.
Spearin (1918) 248 US 132, 137, 63 L.Ed 166, 39 S.Ct 59, the court
held that the implied warranty that the contract documents are complete and
accurate is not overcome by the general clauses requiring the contractor, to
examine the site, to check up the plans, and to assume responsibility for the
work until completion and acceptance. The
obligation to examine the site did not impose upon him the duty of making a
diligent enquiry into the history of the locality with a view to determining,
at his peril, whether the sewer specifically prescribed by the Government would
prove adequate. The duty to check plans
did not impose the obligation to pass upon their adequacy to accomplish the
purpose in view. And the provision concerning contractor’s responsibility
cannot be construed as abridging rights arising under specific provisions of
the contract. [¶] Neither § 3744 of the Revised Statutes, which
provides that contracts of the Navy Department shall be reduced to writing, nor
the parol evidence rule, precludes reliance upon a warranty implied by
law. [footnotes omitted]
In Hollerbach v. U.S. (1914) 233 U.S.
165, 58 L.Ed. 898, 34 S.Ct. 553, paragraph 20 of the specifications declared
that:
quantities given
are approximate only, and that no claim shall be made … on account of any
excess or deficiency … Bidders … are expected … to visit the locality
of the work, and to make their own estimates of the facilities and difficulties
attending the execution of the proposed contract, including local conditions,
uncertainty of weather, and all other contingencies.
And, specifications
paragraph 70 required each bidder to “visit the site … and ascertain the nature
of the work … and obtain the information necessary to enable him to make an
intelligent proposal.” Nonetheless, the court rejected the argument that
these clauses insulated the owner from its positive misrepresentations of job
site conditions in other clauses, holding (at 233 U.S. 172):
[I]t would be going
quite too far to interpret the general language of the other paragraphs as
requiring independent investigation of facts which the specifications furnished
by the Government as a basis of the contract left in no doubt. If the
Government wished to leave the matter open to the independent investigation of
the claimants it might easily have omitted the specification as to the
character of the filling back of the dam. In its positive assertion of the nature of
this much of the work it made a representation upon which the claimants had a
right to rely without an investigation to prove its falsity.
California courts
follow the same rules. In E. H.
Morrill Company v. State of California (1967) 65 Cal.2d 787,
789-90, 423 P.2d 551, 56 Cal.Rptr. 479, the contract stated, “Boulders … vary
in size from one foot to four feet in diameter. The dispersion of
boulders varies from approximately six feet to twelve feet in all directions,
including the vertical.” However, the boulders found were substantially
larger and more concentrated. Held (at 65 Cal.2d 791-93):
[T]he complaint
states a cause of action for recovery on a theory of breach of implied warranty
…
The responsibility
of a governmental agency for positive representations it is deemed to have made
through defective plans and specifications “is not overcome by the general
clauses requiring the contractor, to examine the site, to check up the plans, and
to assume responsibility for the work. …” (United
States v. Spearin, 248 U.S. 132, 137 [63 L.Ed. 166, 39 S.Ct.
59].) Accordingly, the language in section 4 requiring the bidder to
“satisfy himself as to the character . . . of surface and subsurface materials
or obstacles to be encountered” cannot be relied upon to overcome those
representations as to materials and obstacles which the state positively
affirms in section 1A-12 not to exist, and plaintiff was entitled to rely and
act thereon.
Even when the
disclaimers are more specific, California courts are inclined to read them
narrowly to preserve a contractor’s implied warranty claim. In Warner Constr. Corp. v. City of Los Angeles
(1970) 2 Cal.3d 285, 85 Cal.Rptr. 444, 466 P.2d 996, the test-hole logs had a
warning:
The test-hole
information on these plans shows conditions found only at the date and location
indicated. Bidders are cautioned that the city in no way warrants that
such information is representative of conditions at any other location, or at
any other time. Groundwater levels, particularly, are subject to change.
City argued that
this warning disclaimed the warranty, but the court held (at 2 Cal.3d 292):
[W]e find, on
closer examination, that the warranty and the disclaimer pass each other
without collision. The warranty describes the subsurface conditions at
the test holes, but says nothing about conditions elsewhere on the site.
The disclaimer states that “the test-hole information … shows conditions found
only at the date and location indicated,” and cautions bidders that the city
does not warrant that the data is representative of other locations, but it in
no way disclaims the accuracy of the test-hole logs. Reading the two
together, we conclude that the bidder takes the risk in making deductions from
accurate test data, but the city retains responsibility for any inaccuracy in
the data. [footnotes omitted]
Welch v. State of California (1983) 139
Cal.App.3d 546, 551, 188 Cal.Rptr. 726, holds:
Although the
contract between Caltrans and Welch contains a provision requiring on-site
inspection by contractors as well as other general disclaimers of warranty, it
does not absolve the State from responsibility for positive and material
misrepresentations contained in the plans and upon which a contractor had a
right to rely. [citations] There is no provision in the contract
specifically disclaiming any responsibility on the part of the State for the
accuracy of the tide data contained in the general note.
In Tonkin Construction Co. v County of Humboldt
(1987) 188 Cal.App.3d 828,233 Cal.Rptr. 587, the county argued that the
contractual requirement that Tonkin coordinate scheduling with the Corps of
Engineers constituted a disclaimer as to the exact time of the dredge’s
arrival. Held (at 188 Cal.App.3d 833-34):
[T]he facts of the
instant case do not reveal an explicit disclaimer with respect to the County’s
implied representation of the dredge’s availability. Absent a contract
provision specifically disclaiming responsibility on the part of the public
body for the accuracy of the contested information, general disclaimers of
warranty will not absolve the public body from responsibility for positive and
material misrepresentations contained in the plans and upon which a contractor
had a right to rely.
However, when the
disclaimer is precise and is contained in the same contract clause as the
representation on which the breach of warranty claim is based, the disclaimer
may be enforced. In Wunderlich
v. State of California (1967) 65 Cal.2d 777, 56 Cal.Rptr. 473, 423
P.2d 545, the court held that there was no representation concerning the
quantity of gravel Wunderlich could expect in the borrow site. The court
also pointed out (at 65 Cal.2d 785-86):
[A]ny
representation as to the quantity of materials in any of the sources described
by the state was explicitly and clearly disclaimed by an express provision of
the Special Provisions. At the outset of the same paragraph in which the
representation is found, the bidders are referred to section 6 of the Standard
Specifications. That section provides expressly that when sources of
material are designated, the contractor shall satisfy himself as to the quantity of acceptable material
which may be produced at the source, and disclaims state responsibility for the
quantity of acceptable material. Hollerbach
[v. U.S. (1914) 233 U.S. 165, 58
L.Ed. 898, 34 S.Ct. 553] and the other cases relied upon by plaintiffs to
establish liability of the state do not stand for the proposition that the
government may never effectively disclaim the intention to warrant
conditions. In the Hollerbach
cases there was no specific disclaimer [citation], just as there was no
indication to bidders of the basis upon which the statement had been
made. In the instant case, however, the very paragraphs containing the
alleged warranty contain direct references to disclaimer paragraphs and to a
specific disclaimer of the attributes of the source allegedly warranted.
Given
this background, no hard and fast rules can be given regarding disclaimers and
their effect on changed condition clauses. The following cases demonstrate why
this is true:
A
contractor was required to dredge to a minimum depth of 38 feet in a designated
area. Boring logs included in the
bidding documents specified sand, silt and limestone fragments. However, solid, heavy rock was encountered
when dredging began. The owner denied
the contractor’s DSC claim on the basis that, among other things, the boring
information only represented a general indication of the materials likely to be
found adjacent to the boring holes. The
court found that the boring information which was furnished was misleading
since it did not, in fact, give a general indication of the materials likely to
be found. Cruz Construction Co., Inc. v.
Lancaster Area Sewer Authority, 439 F. Supp. 1202 (E.D. Pa. 1987).
While
constructing an irrigation pumping system, the contractor encountered
conditions materially different from those indicated in the plans and brought
suit for its additional costs under the DSC clause in the contract (identical
to the federal DSC clause). The owner
(State of Montana) contended that exculpatory language in the contract required
that the contractor make an affirmative effort to inquire about discrepancies
in the plans. The Court held that the
exculpatory clauses relied on by the State did not waive, eliminate or modify
the contractor’s right to rely on the representations made in the plans; nor
did they eliminate its right to rely on the DSC clause. Stock & Grove, Inc. v. United States, 493
F.2d 629 (Ct. Cl. 1974).
A
contractor was denied recovery of extra costs paid to its excavation
subcontractor for the removal of a substantial quantity of unanticipated rock,
because, among other things, (1) the test boring data made available to bidders
by the owner was specifically excluded from the contract, and (2) the data was
obtained only upon the contractor’ s unqualified release of the owner from any
liability. Thus, the contractor was not
justified in relying on the boring data. (The contract did not contain a “Changed
Conditions” clause.) Sornsin Construction Co. v. Montana, 180 Mont. 248, 590
P.2d 125 (1978).
C. What the Contract Requires the Owner to
Do
Besides prescribing
the work that the contractor must do, the contract also assures that the
contractor will be allowed to proceed with that work.
1. Site
Access and No Interference
Except as
specifically allowed by the terms of the contract, the owner cannot interfere
with the contractor’s performance of the work; to the contrary, the owner must
facilitate the contractor’s performance. Acts or omissions of the owner,
beyond what the contract permits, can disrupt the contractor’s orderly
performance of the work, delay performance of some work, or require the
performance of some work to be accelerated. Extra work is often the
result. For that extra work, the contractor is entitled to a change order
(Civil Code sections 1655, 1656). This concept was explained in Gray v. Bekins (1921) 186 Cal. 389,
395, 199 Pac. 767:
In every building
contract which contains no express covenants on the subjects there are implied
covenants to the effect that the contractor shall be permitted to proceed with
the construction of the building in accordance with the other terms of the
contract without interference by the owner and that he shall be given such
possession of the premises as will enable him to adequately carry on the
construction and complete the work agreed upon. Such terms are necessarily
implied from the very nature of the contract and a failure to observe them not
consented to by the contractor constitutes a breach of contract on the part of
the owner entitling the contractor to rescind, although it may not amount to a
technical prevention of performance.
This rule has been
regularly reiterated in various contexts: Lapp-Gifford Company v. Muscoy Water Company (1913) 166
Cal. 25, 30, 134 Pac. 989 (“Appellant having contracted for the construction of
a pipe-line over a fixed and determined route, the law implies a covenant
either that it possesses or will procure a right to construct such pipe-line
over the route specified.”); Bomberger
v. McKelvey (1950) 35 Cal.2d 607, 613, 220 P.2d 729 (“[The contract
contained] an implied covenant that plaintiffs would be given possession of the
premises for the agreed purpose at a reasonable time to be chosen by them. …
Defendants’ conduct in forbidding plaintiffs to enter, therefore, was
sufficient not only to excuse their performance but also to constitute a breach
or anticipatory breach of the contract.”); COAC,
Inc. v. Kennedy Engineers (1977) 67 Cal.App.3d 916, 920, 136
Cal.Rptr 890 (“District owed appellant a legal duty not to hinder, delay,
interfere with or prevent his performance. … where plans, specifications
and conditions of contract do not otherwise provide, there is an implied
covenant that the owner of the project is required to furnish whatever
easements, permits or other documentation are reasonably required for the
construction to proceed in an orderly manner.”); Howard Contracting Inc. v. G. A. MacDonald Construction Co., Inc.
(1998) 71 Cal.App.4th 38, 50, 83 Cal.Rptr. 2d 590 (“The rule is well settled
that in every construction contract the law implies a covenant that the owner
will provide the contractor timely access to the project site to facilitate
performance of work. When necessary permits relating to the project are
not available or access to the site is limited by the owner, the implied
covenant is breached.”).
ADJACENT PROPERTIES
The latent
characteristics of properties adjacent to a construction site may not be fully
apparent during the contractor’s pre-bid site investigation. If the owner is
aware of possible adverse conditions involving adjacent properties, such
conditions should be included in the bid documents. On the other hand, even the
owner and designers might not be aware of and/or might not have considered the
adjacent property’s potentially adverse effects on construction. Conditions
that can potentially cause schedule delays and additional costs may include:
A seasonal
watercourse that drains precipitation into excavations
Heavy vehicle
traffic that restricts or delays perimeter site mobility and access
Concurrent
construction excavation activity that causes unanticipated delays and effects
These kinds of
conditions can be difficult to recognize before they begin to affect the work.
Accordingly, once they appear, the contractor is advised to attempt to quantify
them and notify the owner.
BUILDING CODE
COMPLIANCE
The architect and
its sub consultants are most often responsible for ensuring that the design
meets the requirements of all entities having jurisdiction over the project.
Whether it is ceiling headroom, provisions for the handicapped, the number of
exits or handrail configurations, engineering and design are the responsibility
of the design professionals. Conversely, contractors are most often only
responsible for construction means and methods and performing the work per the
requirements of the contract documents.
The initial
indications of a designer’s failure to meet building code requirements will
often come from a contractor’s construction experience, as opposed to design
experience. For example, a flashing or exterior finish insulation system (EFIS)
detail may be shown completely different from the way the contractor has always
seen it in the past. Once an apparent building code violation has been
observed, the process may or may not proceed in a straightforward manner,
depending upon the owner’s and architect’s responses
BUILDING PERMIT
PLAN APPROVALS
Permit plan
approval is similar to building code compliance in that it is the designer’s
responsibility to incorporate all building code requirements into the documents
and satisfy the local building department. The process of applying for and
securing the building permit should be little more than the clerical formality
of delivering the plans, specifications, and fee to the building department. If
schedule delays are experienced because the building department discovers a
design error or flaw, that schedule delay typically belongs to the owner and/or
the designer. A more common problem is having the permit granted but
conditioned on some additional modification to the design. This may not delay
the job start, but could result in additional work and costs.
The contractor
should not wait until it is moving onto the site to pick up the building
permit. It is advisable to file the documents and permit application
immediately upon contract award. If a problem is encountered and the permit is
likely to be delayed, the contractor should confirm with the responsible
building department representative that mobilization and temporary office setup
can proceed, pending correction of the design. Before leaving the building
department, the contractor might even establish with the building inspector the
fastest way to communicate with all interested parties that the changes will
need to be incorporated into the design.
EASEMENTS AND
RIGHTS OF WAY
The contractor’s
access to the site should be clearly identified in the contract. If adequate
site access is apparent, the contractor should proceed. Potential change orders
usually involve a partial or total restriction of site access. If the
contractor can demonstrate that the restrictions are contrary to that which
could reasonably have been anticipated at the time of bid, compensation may be
justified. To anticipate and avoid such problems, the contractor should review
the contract documents looking for potential restrictions to access and for
items such as easements, parking, traffic patterns, and businesses at the
immediate perimeter of the contract limit lines. If an easement exists, the
contractor should request a complete description from the owner of all
conditions of the easement. In most cases, site access interferences occur with
little or no warning. The first indication might be when job cost reports
indicate that job productivity and efficiency have been impacted.
SOIL BORINGS AND
SUBSURFACE DATA
Geotechnical and
soil boring data provide the contractor with information regarding subsurface
characteristics of the site. Contractors should review and develop an
understanding of geotechnical data to gain insight into how such data will
affect construction. From these data, the contractor can begin the process of
assessing the relative ease or difficulty of working at a site. For example, a
high percentage of fine particles and low moisture content suggest that
construction vehicle traffic may cause surface problems. Water and fine
particles could rise to the surface and make the work areas impassable or
difficult to access. Under these circumstances, the contractor may need to
construct and maintain a temporary road of gravel or crushed stone throughout
the construction period.
Considerations
related to soil boring locations include:
Relevance to the
construction areas - If the geotechnical engineer provides boring data only
around the perimeter of the site, the soil conditions in the middle of the site
present only some uncertainty. If the boring locations within the building
footprint are asymmetrical, they could fail to disclose the existence of
subsurface rock.
Water consistency
throughout the site - The contractor may have prepared his bid based on a
geotechnical report that used few boring points relative to the size of the
site. The contractor should review boring data and soil characteristic
information and look for inconsistencies in the depths of the borings, erratic
boring locations, and the relationship between boring locations and
construction areas. In addition, the contractor should analyze water table
information and consider where the table will be in dry and wet seasons. When
the contractor encounters undisclosed subsurface conditions that are
inconsistent with the geotechnical and boring data, the contractor may have a
basis to seek additional compensation.
INTERFERENCE FROM
UTILITIES
The locations of
pre-existing utilities such as storm and sanitary sewer, telephone, power, and
water on a site are normally indicated on the plans. This information is
typically made available to, the designer(s) by the respective utility
companies. Incorrect information often comes from two sources:
errors in the
respective utility companies’ recordation or transmittal of as-built
information, and
errors on the
plans.
A contractor is
free to plan activities, locate temporary facilities, stockpile materials, and
sequence the work around or between the utilities as required. However, before
any excavation is performed, there is usually some entity to contact to
reconfirm the exact locations of the utilities. As a precautionary measure, the
contractor should endeavor to confirm that the information is consistent with
the information on file with the respective utility and that the information
has not changed since the information was originally provided to the designer.
The contractor can
assume significant risk if it begins work in the vicinity of a utility without
verifying its most current status with the respective authority. If damage is
done to the utility under these circumstances, the responsibility may rest with
the contractor. On the other hand, if the verification process reveals changed
information regarding the utility, adversely affecting the work, this clearly
justifies a change order.
TEMPORARY UTILITIES
The contractor’s estimator
will typically make sure that temporary utilities have been accommodated in the
bid estimate. Therefore, unless some qualification was included in the original
agreement, the absence of temporary power and other utilities at the site will
typically be difficult for the owner to accept as a changed condition. The rare
cases where extra costs for temporary utilities become justified often go back
to changed conditions between the time the project was bid and the time that
the work actually begins at the site. If it can be demonstrated that the
conditions observed at the time of bid with respect to temporary utilities were
materially different from those when work begins, the contractor may be
justified in requesting compensation for additional actual costs.
2. Third Party Cooperation
Another
ramification of the contractor’s right to perform the work is the owner’s duty
to obtain third party consent or cooperation necessary to perform the
contract. If the owner fails to do so, regardless of the reason for the
failure, the contractor is entitled to a change order for any extra work or
delay arising from the third party’s failure to consent or cooperate (Klauber v. San Diego St. Car Co.
(1892) 95 Cal. 353, 30 Pac. 555; Hensler
v. City of Los Angeles (1954) 124 Cal.App.2d 71, 268 P.2d
12). Note, however, that the owner’s duty can be altered by the
contract. By the terms of the contract, the contractor may become
responsible for obtaining necessary third party consent or cooperation, e.g., pulling building permits.
V. Contract Clauses Designed to Defeat Extra Work
Claims
Owners, design
professionals, and other consultants to owners, have created dozens of contract
clauses that are designed to control and prevent extra work claims. Courts will first look closely at the specific
language of these clauses in the context of the contract to determine what they
require. Often that is different from
what the owner or contractor contends. Some of the typical clauses and how the courts
have interpreted them are discussed below.
A. Written Change Order Required for Extra Work
Many contracts
require a written change order before the contractor performs any extra work,
and declare that the failure to get one is a bar to, or waiver of, all
claims for the extra work. In Acoustics, Inc. v. Trepte Constr. Co.
(1971) 14 Cal.App.3d 887, 92 Cal.Rptr. 723, section 29 of the contract General
Conditions required defects in the contract documents to be brought to the
State Architect for resolution and “[s]hould the Contractor proceed with the
work affected without instruction from the State Architect, he shall be
responsible for any . . . added cost resulting therefrom.” Enforcing this
clause, the court rejected the extra work claim (at 14 Cal.App.3d 912),
because:
Compliance with
contractual provisions for written orders is indispensable in order to recover
for alleged extra work. … [¶] [provisions] of the General
Conditions established conditions precedent to the right of Trepte to claim or
receive additional moneys for allegedly extra work, and Trepte’s failure to
comply with these conditions releases the State from liability therefor.
Most construction
contracts provide that the contractor shall not proceed with any extra or
changed work until a written change order has been issued. It is not uncommon, however, for contractors,
in an effort to keep the project on schedule, to perform extra work after
receiving oral authorization and assurances that a written change order would
be forthcoming. Most contractors have heard
this: “Please go ahead with the extra
work so as not to delay the project and we will send you a written change order
when we have time to complete the paperwork.” This practice of performing extra work based
on an oral authorization may be common, but it can also be very risky for the
contractor—especially on a public contract.
In a California
case, a California appellate court ruled that any oral authorization to perform
extra work was insufficient because the contract required all changes to be in
writing. P&D Consultants, Inc. v. City of Carlsbad, 190 Cal.
App. 4th 1332 (4th Dist. 2010). The
owner’s prior actions in approving verbal change orders was of no avail for the
contractor.
Five Situations Where You May Be Able To Avoid A Contractually Mandated
Written Change Order
Almost all written
construction contracts require that the contractor obtain a written change
order as a condition to payment for the additional work. However, owners
customarily direct contractors to perform the work and promise that they will
subsequently negotiate a fair price for the work. Almost every contractor can
recite an example of such a promise that is then ignored by the owner when the
time for payment arises.
Written change order
provisions are placed in contracts so that the owner is assured that it will
expressly approve any changes to the scope of work. In addition, such
provisions are designed to give the owner timely and ample notice of the change
in scope so it can investigate the claim and then either avoid the additional
cost or take steps to mitigate the additional expense. Courts have routinely
upheld such provisions when the additional work was performed without any
notice to the owner.
However, the courts
will be less inclined to enforce the written change order requirement when the
owner has timely notice and orally induces the contractor to perform the
changed work. Similarly, courts will not find it equitable to enforce such
clauses against subcontractors when general contractors induce them to perform the
additional work with a promise that they will be paid for the work at a later
date.
The remainder of this
article will review five legal theories that have been approved by California
courts as a legal basis for avoiding the written change order provision in
private works contracts when the owner knowingly approved the additional work.
The article will then discuss written change requirements for California public
works projects.
Private Works
1. Oral Waiver of the Written Change Order Provision
The doctrine of
waiver has long been accepted by the courts. In essence, the courts treat
appropriate action or conduct of the owner as waiver of the written change
order provision. Quite simply, if the other party orally approves the
additional work, it acts in a manner that is inconsistent with that party’s
intent to rely on the change order provision. As a result, the court will treat
that conduct as a waiver of the clause and allow the contractor to recover the
value of the additional work. (See for example Howard J. White v. Varian
Associates (1960) 178 Cal App 2nd 348).
It should be noted
that many contracts include additional clauses that seek to avoid such waiver
arguments. In addition, some contracts include clauses that state that only
certain personnel can approve change orders. For example, the provision may
limit the change order approval to home office personnel rather than field
personnel. Under appropriate circumstances, such anti-waiver provisions have
been upheld by the courts as valid.
2. The Owner May Be Estopped From Relying On The Clause
The doctrine of
promissory estoppel has been applied to a number of construction contract
disputes. Promissory estoppel occurs when a party makes a promise to the other
which the other party would reasonably rely on to take action based on the
promise. If the owner promises to pay for the work and then allows the work to
proceed it will be estopped from denying the promise to pay for the work.
3. A Requirement For A Written Change Order Can Be Rescinded By The Parties
As in the case of
waiver, the parties can effectively rescind the written change order provision
by their conduct. If the contractor and the owner orally agree that written
change orders are not necessary the courts will treat the provision as being rescinded
by the parties.
4. Allowing The Owner To Receive The Improvements Without Compensation
Would Unjustly Enrich The Owner
This legal theory is
based on the concept that once the work is complete the owner will have the
permanent benefit of it and the contractor will not be able to repossess the
work. However, the owner can only be unjustly enriched if the contractor was
induced to perform the additional work by fraud, coercion, mistake, request or
coercion by the owner. Thus the claim must be based on some action of the owner
that resulted in the contractor performing the additional work.
5. California Statutory Law Allows A Written Contract To Be Orally
Modified
California Civil Code
section 1698 allows a written contract to be modified when the oral change
order agreement is executed by the parties or if the change order is supported
by new consideration. California courts have held that if the contractor fully
completes the additional change order the oral modification to the contract is
deemed executed by the parties and is thus effective. The section also states
that it does not preclude “in an appropriate case the application of rules of
law concerning estoppel, oral novation and substitution of a new agreement,
rescission of a written contract by an oral agreement, waiver of a provision of
a written contract, or oral independent collateral contracts.” Thus, the
section does not prohibit the four other legal theories that have been applied
by California courts to uphold oral change orders.
California Public Works
California public
entity contracts are based on state and local procurement laws. The laws
typically require approval for the changed scope of work before it is
performed. For example, the Public Contract Code requires the county board of supervisors
to approve change orders if the amount exceeds a certain threshold amount.
However, the board may authorize the inclusion of a clause in the contract that
allows for county employees to approve any work that is necessary for proper
completion of the work.
Most public works
projects include written change order provisions. The courts will uphold such
provisions since they give the public entity timely notice of the change in
scope so it can investigate the claim and then either avoid the additional cost
or take steps to mitigate the additional expense.
1. A Public Agency’s Misrepresentation Maybe Allow A Contractor To Avoid
The Written Change Order Clause
If the public entity
was actively negligent in the design of the project or misrepresented the
conditions that the contractor would encounter, the courts will not enforce the
written change order requirement. Thus, if the contractor can establish that
the public agency knowingly and positively misrepresented the site condition
such clauses can be avoided. Generally, there is an implied warranty that plans
and specifications are complete. If a showing can be made that the plans and
specifications were inaccurate and that the public agency provided statements,
although unintentional, that mislead the contractor, a contractor can recover
the value of the extra work.
2. Reliance On The Statements Of A Public Official May Not Allow A
Contractor To Avoid The Written Change Order Provision
While California
courts will allow a contractor to avoid a written change order clause if a
private owner promises to pay for the additional works, they will not permit a
public works contractor to rely on such unauthorized statements to avoid the
provision. However, if the contract vests a certain official or the project architect
or engineer with the authority to approve the oral change order the courts will
enforce the oral change order.
3. If An Unauthorized Public Official Orally Orders The Work, Proceed
Under Written Protest
As previously stated,
most public works contracts authorize certain public officials to approve
change orders so that any additional work that is necessary for proper
completion of the work is performed. If an unauthorized public official demands
that the change order proceed, the contractor should give prompt notice that
such work will be performed under protest. If the contract has a clause that
sets forth the method of notifying the public agency of such a change order,
those requirements should be followed. If the contractor provides timely written
notice that it is proceeding under protest, the courts may not enforce the
requirement for a written change order.
Conclusion
Construction
contracts typically include a requirement that change orders be in writing. If
such a provision exists, a prudent contractor will insist that all change
orders be in writing. If the owner, or the prime contractor if the agreement is
between a general contractor and a subcontractor, chooses to disregard the
requirement of a written change order, confirm the instructions in writing. The written confirmation should be provided to
the other party and the architect, if any.
TIP: AVOID THE VERBAL CHANGE ORDER
Change order disputes take up a large portion of a construction
lawyer’s day. Almost half of all lawsuits (and attorney’s fees) in construction
law involve the issue of the right to payment for verbal or unsigned change
orders. Was the extra work necessary and
reasonable? Was the extra work
authorized? Can the contractor include
these charges in his construction lien?
Is a verbal promise to later execute a change order binding, and if so,
for how much?
Instead of paying attorneys to deal with these issues in a lawsuit, we
suggest some practical ways to avoid these disputes. At a minimum, you can strengthen your position
even if you have no choice but to record a lien or file a lawsuit. These suggestions apply to general
contractors seeking payment from an owner, as well as to subcontractors seeking
payment from general contractors (even though there are some differences
between the two situations).
Governments have other defenses for public projects that will not be
discussed here.
The typical contract provision dealing with change orders includes
requirements that: (1) only certain people can authorize change orders
(typically officers, not PMs or supers); (2) the change order must be in
writing and signed to be enforceable; (3) the change order can only be for
extra work directed by the owner/GC and not for work that can be inferred from
the original scope; (4) the contractor must give notice of the claim for extra
work within a short period of time after discovering the claim; (5) the
subcontractor is not entitled to payment unless the GC is paid by the owner for
this extra work; and (6) the contractor must perform the work even if there is
a dispute over the change order.
Subcontractors who perform extra work without a written and signed
change order often hear these defenses from the GC:
•
We never knew you expected to claim extra money.
You never gave notice. Now, it is too late for us to seek payment from the
owner.
•
Sure, we knew it would be some extra cost, but
had we known how much this was going to cost, we never would have asked you to
perform the work.
•
Our project manager did not have the authority to
agree that you would be paid for this extra work.
•
Only if and when we get paid for from the owner,
we will pay you for your share of the money collected.
General contractors often hear similar defenses from the owner,
including:
• The work was not extra; it was inferred from the plans.
• You are not entitled to a change order because the plans stated that
the GC would use "first class material" or that, in the event of any
contradicting provisions, the "most stringent requirement would apply.”
Avoid getting to the point where you have to argue about whether you
should be paid for the change order.
Start with the negotiation of the contract. Because the contract often states that claims
for extra money or time are not binding unless they are in writing, it is
reasonable for you to add language such as: “Contractor shall not be required
to begin any extra work without a change order executed by all parties.”
After the work begins, typical scenarios include:
Scenario Number 1: In the field, the owner or the GC directs you to perform work that you
believe entitles you to extra money and/or time, but the work needs to be done
now and there is no time to prepare a written change order or wait for the
change order to be signed. The GC or subcontractor should:
• Hold off on performing the work as long as possible as if you were
playing a “game of chicken.” You may be at a stage that you can refuse to call
for inspections that will “slow” down the project. The experienced contractor knows that, once
they complete the work without a signed change order, your leverage is gone and
parties will find excuses not to pay you.
• If you must begin with the work, immediately send the owner/GC a
confirming email stating: "Without a signed change order, you have
directed us to perform __________, which we believe entitles us to extra
compensation and/or time. The cost
and/or extra time are unknown at this time.
We will continue to perform the work and make a formal claim for which
the owner/GC will be responsible after the cost and time become known. If this is inaccurate in any way, let us know
in writing immediately."
• Send the owner/GC a proposed change order as soon as possible, but
certainly within the time required by the contract, even if you don't yet know
all the costs or time impact. To be
safe, instead of stating "zero" in the request for extra time, insert
"Unknown at this time."
However, when costs and time become known, send a revised proposed
change order immediately.
• Follow the contract requirement for calculating cost. Most likely,
this will be cost plus a percentage or unit price. You need to keep great
records of your costs, including keeping separate time records for the extra
work and having the owner or GC's representative sign the time records each
day.
Scenario Number 2: You submit a proposed change order, but there are delays in signing
and the owner/GC directs you to start work. The GC or subcontractor should:
·
Send this email: "You have directed us to
begin the work in proposed change order ___ despite the fact that we have not
yet received a fully executed change order. We will proceed as directed in
reliance that the proposed change order is acceptable to you. If this is
inaccurate in any way, let us know in writing immediately."
Scenario Number 3: Progress payments and partial releases. It is not uncommon for owners
or GCs to require a "clean" release.
In other words, a release with no reservation of any outstanding
claims. To avoid a waiver of your claim
for extra work not yet agreed to, first, try to insert a statement that:
"This release does not waive any claims for extra work arising from
____________________".
If the owner or GC refuses to pay you with this language added, send
the partial release with a separate email or letter stating the same. This is
not great, but at least gives you an argument.
Scenario Number 4: You are
subject to liquidated damages for failure to achieve a certain milestone,
typically substantial or final completion.
But, you never delivered proposed change orders requesting additional
time. Or, you first raise these owner
delays at the end of the project when the owner or GC are trying to set off
liquidated damages from your last payment. In this case:
• Most likely, you are taking a discount on the money you have
rightfully earned. Learn from your error and, for the next project, be diligent
and send proposed change orders to increase the contract time as soon as the
cause for the delay occurs.
• Respect the time deadlines for notice in the contract. If your claim is made timely, it avoids the
argument that "we can't check the validity of the claim now, months
later" or "it is too late to back charge another contractor for the
delay".
Overall, create a strict procedure for your company to make claims for
extra work or time. Who will be responsible for making sure that these
requirements are complied with and how? Follow the contract requirements for
authorized signature, timing of notice, and calculation of the claim. All of these items are within your control
and failure to comply just gives the other party (and its attorney) an easy
excuse to dispute the claim.
If you have no choice but to perform the work without an agreed signed
change order, then do the next best thing to strengthen you claim – make
disclaimers, send emails and letters, and try to resist the new work as long as
possible.
With a smart plan in place to avoid change order disputes, you can
also avoid contributing to your construction law attorney’s retirement plan.
The importance of
following change order provisions in a construction contract was emphasized yet
again in a recent federal court decision: Carolina Conduit Systems,
Inc. v. MasTec North America, Inc.
In this case,
Carolina Conduit, a subcontractor, sued the general contractor, MasTec, for the
cost of installing additional flowable fill due to a change in the
configuration of duct banks. Although the design documents called for the
duct banks to be constructed in a vertical configuration, field conditions
required that the duct banks be built in a horizontal configuration,
necessitating additional flowable fill. Upon this discovery in December,
2008, Carolina Conduit’s president and project manager met with MasTec
personnel, who informed Carolina Conduit “not to worry” about the additional
fill and costs because plenty of funds were available. Carolina Conduit
proceeded to work on the project throughout the following spring. In May,
2009, Carolina Conduit’s president again discussed the extra cost of the duct
banks and MasTec’s vice president again advised “not to worry” and that
Carolina Conduit would be compensated.
At the close of the
project, MasTec refused to pay Carolina Conduit for the extra flowable
fill. After suit was filed, MasTec requested the court to grant it
summary judgment and dismiss the claim for extra flowable fill. MasTec
asserted, among other things, that the parties’ contract contained a provision
governing changes to the scope of work: “any additional work outside the
original scope of work shall be handled through a change order specifying
pricing and/or Unit prices approved by [the Owner].”
In opposing summary
judgment, Carolina Conduit argued that the contract’s requirements were
ambiguous, and that the parties had modified the contract, either by oral
agreement or in their course of dealing.
The court ruled in
MasTec’s favor while succinctly stating Virginia law applicable to change order
provisions:
Virginia law
provides that contractual provisions containing written change order
requirements are binding upon the parties to the contract . . . .
Contractual provisions requiring written change order requirements maintain
order and predictability in the construction business, and are meant to avoid
subsequent disagreement and prevent controversy . . . . For this reason,
where there is a method under the contract by which a party can insure the
recovery of the cost of extra work, that party is not entitled to recovery
where it fails to follow that method.
The court held that
since Carolina Conduit failed to follow the change order provision, it could
not recover any excess cost. The court rejected the argument that the
design was ambiguous, again noting that regardless of that assertion, Carolina
Conduit did not follow the change order provision.
The court also
quickly disposed of Carolina Conduit’s argument that the parties had modified
the change order provision. The court determined that MasTec’s statements
“not to worry” about additional cost were not sufficient to prove that MasTec
had waived the change order requirements. The court also noted that
Carolina Conduit submitted multiple change orders during and after the close of
the project on other issues which contradicted the argument that the parties
had waived the change order provision. Finally, the court noted that
Carolina Conduit could point to no instance where MasTec ignored the change
order provision; hence, there was no evidence of course of dealing indicating a
modification to the change order requirements.
This case marks the
second time in a year that a federal court applying Virginia law has ruled
against a subcontractor who failed to follow a contract’s change order
provision. See Artistic Stone Crafters v. Safeco Ins. Co., see also WM
Construction Alert, 10/13/2010, “Stone Crafters, Inc. v. Safeco
Insurance: A Reminder of the Importance of Lien Waivers and Change Order
Provisions.”
Rare Exception:
Court Allows Recovery For Verbal Extra Work Claim
Most construction
contracts have a standard provision requiring changes in the work or directions
to perform extra work to be made in writing. Courts generally hold that a
contractor who fails to obtain the required written authorization will not be
paid for such work.
However,
a contractor or subcontractor who performs extra work will not automatically
lose his extra work claim just because he failed to follow the contract
provision requiring written authorization. Courts are hesitant to deny a
just claim for extra work and have found that contractual requirements for
written orders can be waived under certain circumstances.
In the recent
case of Penava Mechanical Corp. v. Afgo Mechanical Services, Inc., an appellate
court ruled on whether recovery may be had for orally directed extra work
despite the contract provision that an extra work claim must be supported by
written authorization.
Background
Absolute Electrical
Contractors, Inc. entered into a subcontract with general contractor Richter
& Ratner Contracting Corp. The parties’ subcontract contained a
so-called “no- oral modification clause.” Pursuant to the clause, all
changes in the work or directions to perform extra work were to be made in
writing or were otherwise not compensable.
During the course
of construction, representatives of the general contractor verbally directed
the subcontractor to work overtime. The representatives also orally
agreed to pay for this premium time over and above the contract price, as they
had previously paid for other overtime work throughout the project.
The promised
overtime payment was in lieu of an extension of time to finish the work.
In addition, the general contractor’s project manager testified that he
instructed the subcontractor not to bother with the “tickets” that were usually
prepared by the subcontractor for such extra work and formed the basis for change
orders issued, but rather directed the subcontractor to “just get the work
done.” The subcontractor sued when the general contractor refused to make
payment for the subcontractor’s overtime.
In defense, the general contractor argued that the subcontract’s no-oral modification clause barred any claim by the subcontractor, since the direction to perform overtime work and promise to pay at a premium rate were made orally, and were not in writing. In addition, the general contractor argued that the subcontractor had waived any claims to the overtime pay pursuant to the express language of the lien waivers signed by the subcontractor.
In defense, the general contractor argued that the subcontract’s no-oral modification clause barred any claim by the subcontractor, since the direction to perform overtime work and promise to pay at a premium rate were made orally, and were not in writing. In addition, the general contractor argued that the subcontractor had waived any claims to the overtime pay pursuant to the express language of the lien waivers signed by the subcontractor.
The general
contractor moved for summary judgment, which the trial court granted. The
subcontractor appealed.
Decision
The appellate court
reversed the trial court, denying the general contractor’s motion for summary judgment
and directing a trial on whether the subcontractor had been paid in full for
the overtime work performed.
According to the
appellate court, under New York law, oral directions to perform extra work, or
the general course of conduct between the parties, may modify or eliminate
contract provisions requiring written authorizations or notice of claims.
The appellate court relied heavily on the verbal directions by the
general contractor to the subcontractor to perform the overtime work and verbal
promises to pay the subcontractor.
The court
also relied on the general contractor’s verbal direction that the subcontractor
not bother with the work tickets that would form a written basis for a formal
change order. Under these circumstances, the court held that the general
contractor cannot argue that it did not have to pay for the overtime.
As to the general contractor’s argument that the claims had been released, the appellate court held that since the subcontractor was required to sign these waivers whenever it received partial payment, and since payments were made after waivers were given, the parties treated the waivers as mere receipts of the amounts stated in the waivers, not as complete waivers of all claims to that point.
As to the general contractor’s argument that the claims had been released, the appellate court held that since the subcontractor was required to sign these waivers whenever it received partial payment, and since payments were made after waivers were given, the parties treated the waivers as mere receipts of the amounts stated in the waivers, not as complete waivers of all claims to that point.
Comment
While courts
routinely seek to enforce the express terms of an agreement that was freely
negotiated, courts also seek to prohibit bad-faith dealings. Here, where
the general contractor verbally promised payment, and verbally stated that
written work tickets were not necessary to protect the subcontractor’s right to
payment, the court would not allow the general contractor to rely on the
subcontract’s provisions to the contrary.
A prudent
contractor or subcontractor, however, should not ignore the contractual
requirement for written extra work orders in the hope that a court may make an
exception and find a waiver of the contract provisions under particular
circumstances. He should insist on a written order in the form specified
by the contract provisions before he performs any extra work. A written
extra work order will ensure his right to be paid for performing such work.
Beware of Orders for Extra
Work without Authority
In the California
case, the City of Carlsbad hired P&D Consultants (“P&D”) to provide
civil engineering and other services for the redesign of a municipal golf
course to satisfy numerous conditions imposed by the California Coastal
Commission. The original contract price was $556,745. The written
contract stated that no amendments, modifications, or waivers of contract terms
would be allowed unless there was a written agreement signed by both parties.
During the design
phase of the project, the City often requested that P&D perform extra
work. When this happened, P&D would typically submit a proposed
change order with a fixed price to the City’s project manager, and the project
manager provided the City with the information for its preparation of an
amendment to the contract. The City typically took several weeks to
execute an amendment and the project manager frequently authorized P&D to
begin the extra work before it received a signed amendment. The parties,
following this process, signed Amendments Nos. 1 through 4, which increased the
contract price by $63,525.50 for extra work.
After execution of
Amendment No. 4, P&D raised concerns about additional extra work the City
wanted that P&D believed was beyond the scope of the contract
documents. The City’s project manager notified P&D that the City had
“finally reached resolution on what we expect to be the final changes for the
golf course per the Coastal Commission.” The City’s project manager asked
P&D to prepare a final projected scope of work and the cost to finish all
of the design services to complete the plans and specifications.
P&D, as
instructed, submitted a proposed change order for Amendment No. 5 totaling
$209,956, which included $69,073 for extra work already performed and $139,833
for the cost “to complete services for final plan submittal and City
approval.” The City was not happy. The City’s project manager
objected to the proposal claiming that the amount was excessive, it included
charges for work already specified in the written contract documents, and it
exceeded the maximum sum the City had set aside for completion of the design
services. The City’s project manager sent P&D an email stating:
“We have limits for both our purchase order authority and this proposed
Amendment No. 5. We are now at those limits. No further costs will
be authorized nor should be to finish these design packages.” The City’s
project manager told P&D that the breakdown of the costs for the extra work
needed to “get below” $100,000.
The parties
subsequently negotiated and signed Amendment No. 5, which authorized that the
extra work be done on a time and materials basis with a cap of $99,810.
As was customary, at the City’s project manager’s direction P&D began the
work several weeks before the City executed the amendment. P&D
completed the work and subsequently sought compensation from the City for
additional work that P&D claimed was not covered by Amendment No. 5.
When the City refused to pay, P&D sued the City seeking to recover
$109,093.
P&D Wins at Trial
P&D’s trial
theory was that the contract’s written change order requirement was modified by
the City’s project manager’s oral authorization of the extra work for which
P&D sought payment, and by the parties’ conduct in handling Amendments Nos.
1 through 5 whereby P&D would commonly begin performance, as directed by
the project manager, before any writing was executed.
At trial, the
City’s project manager, John Cahill, testified that after P&D submitted its
proposal for Amendment No. 5, P&D began seeking payment for extra work it
claimed was beyond the scope of that amendment. Cahill also testified
that P&D’s project manager, Charles Moore, threatened that if the City did
not pay the additional amount, P&D would discontinue work. In
Cahill’s view, the work was not extra, but rather work that was included in
Amendment No. 5. He believed that Amendment No. 5 “was a complete, final
projection of all costs and work by P&D” necessary to complete the
design. Cahill nonetheless told Moore, “if you feel strongly that you’ve
got additional work outside the contract and the amendments, put it together
with the proper backup and the City will evaluate it.” Cahill denied
preparing a sixth amendment and he did not recall whether he told Moore he
would do so.
Moore testified
that Cahill told him that the City was running out of money for the project,
and when Moore objected to P&D continuing with extra work, Cahill told
Moore to keep working and that he would “take care of it”—words that almost all
contractors have heard at some time. Apparently accepting P&D’s
version of the facts, the jury found the City liable for breach of contract and
awarded P&D the full amount of damages it requested, $109,093.
P&D Loses on Appeal
The California Court
of Appeal reversed the jury award. The court ruled that any oral
authorization by the City’s project manager for extra work beyond the work
contemplated in Amendment No. 5, or the parties’ conduct in which they
supposedly modified the written change order procedure based on the handling of
Amendment Nos. 1 through 5, is insufficient to bind the City. The court
stated: “The plain language of the contract limits the City’s power to
contract to the prescribed method. By ostensibly relying on Cahill’s oral
authorization or direction to begin or perform extra work without a written
change order, P&D acted at its peril. The purpose of including a
written change order requirement in a municipal works contract is obviously to
protect the public fisc from the type of situation that occurred here.”
Despite the jury
award, the court ruled that P&D could not recover for extra work without a
written change order as required by the contract. Instead of getting more
than $109,000 for the extra work it performed, P&D got nothing and was
ordered to pay the City $6,614.69 for defective or incomplete work and was also
ordered to pay the City’s appeal costs.
Lessons Learned
When dealing with a
public entity, contractors must be aware of the risk of performing extra work without
a written change order as many courts are likely to enforce a public contract’s
requirement for written change orders. These strict limitations on the
authority to contract (or to modify a contract) will often trump the public
entity’s oral instructions to begin the extra work immediately before the
written change order is executed. Remember, the words “we will take care
of you” may not always mean what you think.
Waiver of the Written Change Order Requirement
However, the
written change order requirement can be waived. In Weeshoff Construction Company v. Los Angeles
County Flood Control District (1979) 88 Cal.App.3d 579, 589-90, 152
Cal.Rptr. 19, the court held:
California
decisions have . . . established that particular circumstances may provide
waivers of written “change order” requirements. If the parties, by their
conduct, clearly assent to a change or addition to the contractor’s required
performance, a written “change order” requirement may be waived. [citations]
In the present
case, there is much evidence to support plaintiff’s claim that the district
intended to force it to utilize temporary pavement on Whittier Blvd.
Trial testimony included: (1) prior to April 20, 1973, plaintiff’s procedure
for filling his contractual requirement to restore three traffic lanes daily
had been to backfill excavations with hard packed sand (a procedure which was
found by the trial court to comply with contract requirements); (2) on April
19, 1973, the district’s senior construction specialist, T. D. Russi, issued a
written memorandum directing plaintiff to provide a method of operation which
would restore three traffic lanes on Whittier Blvd. at commute hours as
required by contract; (3) on April 20, 1973, the district advised plaintiff
that if, by April 22, he had not provided sufficient traffic lane restoration,
the district itself would commence restoration procedures; (4) when plaintiff
inquired of Russi how he must comply, he was verbally ordered to “fix it.” (5)
On April 22, the district itself placed temporary pavement on a portion of
Whittier Blvd. and informed plaintiff that the cost incurred by district for
such restoration would be deducted from plaintiff’s final payment.
Thereafter, plaintiff used temporary pavement to restore Whittier Blvd. at the
end of the day and removed the temporary pavement before beginning work each
morning. … [¶] [I]t is clear that the district, by its conduct,
exerted an intentional attempt to affect a contractual change without complying
with the change order provision. … We find there is substantial evidence
to support the trial court’s finding that by its conduct, the district did
intend to waive the contractual provision requiring a written change order …
See also Frank T. Hickey, Inc. v. L.A.J.C. Council
(1954) 128 Cal.App.2d 676, 682-83, 276 P.2d 52.
The written change
order requirement can also be overcome by oral modifications to the extent the
modifications have been performed (California Civil Code section
1698[b]). Oral change orders are enforced on this basis (Healy v. Brewster (1967) 251
Cal.App.2d 541, 551-52, 59 Cal.Rptr. 752). As the court pointed out in Girard v. Ball (1981) 125
Cal.App.3d 772, 785, 178 Cal.Rptr. 406, there is a “commonly known custom and
practice in the construction industry where oral agreements frequently modify
or extend written agreements.”
The written change
order requirement also can be rescinded (McFadden
v. O’Donnell (1861) 18 Cal. 160, 164-65 [“Whether the contract
provided against extra work except agreed to in writing, is immaterial; for the
parties could rescind this provision in the contract if they chose and agree to
alterations by parol.”]).
Notwithstanding
clauses purporting to prevent modifications of the contract, the parties’
conduct can effect such modifications, including abandonment of the written
change order requirement (Opdyke
& Butler v. Silver (1952) 111 Cal.App.2d 912, 916, 245 P.2d 306
[“The parties to a written contract . . . are as free to alter it after it has
been made as they were to make it, and all attempts on their part by its terms
to tie up their freedom of dealing with each other will be futile. … To
this end parol agreements will be as effective as written ones. … And
implied agreements satisfactorily established will have all the force of express
ones.”]; Bettelheim v. Hagstrom Food
Stores, Inc. (1952) 113 Cal.App.2d 873, 249 P.2d 301 [held, lease
provision prohibiting waivers unless in writing was waived; “[e]ven a waiver
clause may be waived by conduct.”]).
B. Notice
Requirements and Extra Work Claim Forfeitures
Many contracts
require specific notice of claims for extra work, changed conditions or other
matters, and frequently declare the claims to be released or waived if the
notice is not timely or properly given.
Contracts are to be
interpreted reasonably – to avoid unusual, extraordinary, harsh, unjust or
inequitable results; to avoid forfeitures; and to avoid placing one party at
the mercy of the other (California Civil Code sections 3542 & 3520; Yamanishi v. Bleily & Collishaw, Inc.
(1972) 29 Cal.App.3d 457, 462-63, 105 Cal.Rptr. 580; Hertzka & Knowles v. Salter
(1970) 6 Cal.App.3d 325, 335, 86 Cal.Rptr. 231; Hawley v. Orange County Flood etc. Dist. (1963) 211
Cal.App.2d 708, 713-16, 27 Cal.Rptr. 478). This doctrine often impels a
court to find ways to interpret notice requirements to avoid forfeitures.
For example, a
notice requirement can be construed as a covenant, or promise by the
contractor, instead of a condition precedent to recovery (California Civil Code
section 1436; Restatement Contracts 2d section 226). The courts prefer
interpreting the language as a covenant, rather than a condition, in order to
avoid a forfeiture of the contractor’s claim (California Civil Code sections
1442, 1670.5, Restatement Contracts 2d section 227; Hawley v. Orange County Flood etc. Dist. (1963) 211
Cal.App.2d 708, 713, 27 Cal.Rptr. 478). When the notice requirement is
found to be a covenant, the owner is entitled to recovery, as an offset against
the contractor’s claim, whatever damages the owner actually suffered from not
getting timely notice.
The general rule on
forfeiture clauses is set forth in Universal
Sales Corporation, Ltd. v. California Press Manufacturing Company
(1942) 20 Cal.2d 751, 771, 128 P.2d 665 (“Forfeitures are not favored by the
courts, and if an agreement can be reasonably interpreted so as to avoid a
forfeiture, it is the duty of the court to avoid it. The burden is upon
the party claiming a forfeiture to show that such was the unmistakable
intention of the instrument. [citations] ‘A contract is not to be
construed to provide a forfeiture unless no other interpretation is reasonably
possible.’ [citations]”)
In D. A. Parrish and Sons v. County Sanitation
District (1959) 174 Cal.App.2d 406, 344 P.2d 883, the contract
required written notice of a claim within 10 days after discovering the factual
basis for the claim, and, it provided: “The Contractor’s failure to notify the
Owner within such ten (10) day period shall be deemed a waiver and
relinquishment of any such claim against the Owner.” In refusing to
enforce this forfeiture, the court held (at 174 Cal.App.2d 414): “[A]
forfeiture clause, such as this, will not only be strictly construed [citation]
but has been interpreted by this court not to apply to claims arising from breaches
of the contract caused by the other party.”
Besides
interpreting the contract requirement as a covenant or rejecting the
forfeiture, courts find that the owner got “constructive notice” thereby
satisfying the contract requirement (e.g.,
Welding, Inc. v. Bland County Service Authority
(Va. 2001) 541 S.E.2d 909 [mention of the claim issues in the progress meeting
minutes was found to satisfy the notice requirement]) or courts find that the
notice would serve no useful function in the context of the case.
Finally, the courts
also have inherent equitable power to relieve parties from the failure to
perform conditions which result in a forfeiture (California Civil Code section
3275; Restatement Contracts 2d section 229; O’Morrow
v. Borad (1946) 27 Cal.2d 794, 800-01, 167 P.2d 483).
C.
No-Damage-for-Delay Clauses
Extra work often
causes delays in completion of the project. Many contracts have a
no-damage-for-delay clause. California cases and statutes limit the
enforceability of those clauses.
In Milovich v. City of Los Angeles
(1941) 42 Cal.App.2d 364, 108 P.2d 960, the contract required the city to
timely provide steel pipe for the water line Milovich was building. It
failed, but asserted the no-damage-for-delay clause as a bar to Milovich’s
delay damages claim. In rejecting the city’s argument, the court narrowly
construed the contract language against the city, and observed (at 42
Cal.App.2d 378):
To uphold
appellants’ contention in this regard would be to give to the language of the
contract a construction at variance with equitable principles and to clothe the
appellant department with an unconscionable advantage over the contractor, by
permitting the former to make amends for its contractual derelictions, delays
and neglect by simply extending the time within which the contract could be
completed regardless of the financial loss accruing to the contractor.
This we cannot do in the absence of a plain, unequivocal intention on the part
of the contracting parties, as evidenced by the language of the contract, to
restrict the remedy of the contractor to that of obtaining an extension of
time.
In McGuire & Hester v. City etc. of San
Francisco (1952), 113 Cal.App.2d 186, 189, 247 P.2d 934, work on a
water line took more than twice the contract time, because the city failed to
timely obtain rights of way, thereby pushing the work into winter
weather. Section 49 of the contract provided:
Apart from granting
the Contractor extensions of time for unavoidable delays, no payment or
allowance of any kind shall be made to the Contractor by way of compensation or
damages on account of any hindrance or delay from any cause in the progress of
the work or any portion thereof, whether such delay be avoidable or
unavoidable.
In refusing to
enforce this no-damage-for-delay clause, the court observed (at 113 Cal.App.2d
189)
Nowhere [in the
contract] is there the slightest suggestion that defendant will be absolved
from damages caused by its not keeping its agreement to secure rights of way
prior to the starting of the work. To construe that language in section
49 . . . to mean that it was thereby intended by the parties that the only
remedy for the contractor, when the city broke its solemn agreement to procure
rights of way in advance, was for the contractor to obtain an extension of time
to do the work, would be to give the clause and the contract as a whole a
strained, unreasonable and unfair interpretation.
In Hawley v. Orange County Flood Control Dist.
(1963) 211 Cal.App.2d 708, 712, 27 Cal.Rptr. 478, the contract provided:
[I]f the contractor
suffers any delay caused by the failure of the District … to supply
necessary plans or instructions … the contractor shall be entitled to an
extension of time … but shall not be entitled to any damages for such
delay.
The trial court
found that, given the job conditions, the district had compelled Hawley to keep
a sewer trench open for an unreasonable time (2 months), and, as a result, the
trench caved-in, dislocating the sewer line, opening up joints in it, and
allowing sewage to leak and flood the trench. Hawley sued for the
clean-up costs. At the close of his evidence, the trial court granted a
nonsuit, believing that the no-damage-for-delay clause precluded any
recovery. The appellate court reversed. First, it extensively reviewed
California, out-of-state and federal cases which refused to enforce
no-damage-for-delay clauses when the delay was caused by events the parties did
not contemplate at the time the contract was executed, such as an owner’s
breach of contract. Then, the court concluded (at 211 CA2d 717) that
“whether or not the delay damage clause was intended by the parties to prevent
recovery under the peculiar circumstances here involved resolves itself into a
factual question requiring the weighing of all the facts presented.”
For public works
projects, these California cases have been codified into California Public
Contract Code section 7102. That statute makes unenforceable any public
works prime contract or subcontract clause that limits damages for delay when the
“delay is unreasonable under the circumstances involved, and not within the
contemplation of the parties.” In Howard
Contracting, Inc. v. G. A. MacDonald Construction Co., Inc. (1998)
71 Cal.App.4th 38, 83 Cal.Rptr.2d 590, the contract allowed time extensions for
unforeseen events, but not damages, unless the event was an unreasonable and
unanticipated delay caused by the city. The city contended that, given
the facts in the case, Howard was only entitled to time, not damages, under the
limited no-damages-for-delay clause in the contract. In rejecting that
argument, the court held (at 71 Cal.App.4th 49-51):
[Public Contract
Code] Section 7102, however, specifically prohibits public agencies from
requiring “the waiver, alteration, or limitation of . . . applicability of [the
statute’s restrictions on no-damage-for-delay clauses and renders] [a]ny such
waiver, alteration, or limitation . . . void.” Even before the adoption
of section 7102, California courts generally held that “no damage for delay”
clauses in public contracts did not apply to delays arising from a breach of
contract caused by the other party to the contract. [citations]
. . . The trial
court found the delays were caused by the City’s breaches of contract and
implied covenant [to provide timely access to the project site] in failing to
disclose known restrictions on project performance, to obtain necessary
permits, and to provide timely access to perform the work. Those findings
render the “no damage for delay” provision in the contract inapplicable. …
[or] a basis exists for concluding that the delays were unreasonable and not
within the contemplation of the parties.
D. Accord and
Satisfaction Language in Change Orders
Language in the
contract or language in a change order frequently attempts to turn a change
order into an accord and satisfaction (California Civil Code sections
1521-1523) for all potential disputes related to the change, for example, delay
or impact claims. Sometimes the courts will buy these efforts and bar the
related claims (Huber, Hunt & Nichols,
Inc. v. Moore (1977) 67 Cal.App.3d 278, 302, 136 Cal.Rptr. 603),
other times they will not (Semas v.
Bergmann (1960) 178 Cal.App.2d 758, 761, 3 Cal.Rptr. 277.
The party claiming
an accord and satisfaction has the burden of proof (Higson v. Montgomery Ward & Co. (1968) 263
Cal.App.2d 333, 343, 69 Cal.Rptr. 497).
Further, all
language in the contract, and in any change order purporting to be an accord
and satisfaction, must be interpreted to give effect to the mutual intention of
the parties (California Civil Code section 1636; Rabinowitz v. Kandel (1969) 1 Cal.App.3d 961, 965, 81
Cal.Rptr. 897). That generally permits looking at the circumstances
surrounding the execution of the contract or change order, and the conduct of
the parties (California Civil Code section 1860; California Metal Enameling Co. v. Waddington (1977) 74
Cal.App.3d 391, 395-96, 141 Cal.Rptr. 443). These sources frequently
provide a basis for avoiding or minimizing the effect of the language in
question.
E.
Disclaimers
Disclaimers in
contract documents are common. Typically they say that, if the true
conditions on the job are different from information provided in the contract
documents, then the owner is not responsible for the difference, so the
difference cannot be the basis for an extra work claim. The disclaimers
are usually coupled with a clause requiring the contractor to inspect the site,
and rely only upon the information gathered by the contractor.
Information that would have been discovered in the inspection also cannot be
the basis for extra work claims. See the discussion of disclaimers above.
F. Excuse,
Waiver and Estoppel
Whatever the
language in the contract, conduct by the parties may excuse performance, waive
performance, or estop the party entitled to performance from claiming it.
Any performance
required by a contract can be excused by various acts, conditions or events
(California Civil Code sections 1440, 1441, 1511, 1512, 1515; Restatement
Contracts 2d sections 246 & 247; Peter
Kiewit Sons’ Co. v. Pasadena City Jr. College Dist. (1963) 59
Cal.2d 241, 243-45, 28 Cal.Rptr. 714, 379 P.2d 18).
When a contractor’s
extra work claim arises from willful acts or omissions of the owner, or a
violation of law, then any performance required of the contractor to perfect
his claim may be excused (California Civil Code section 1668; Klein v. Asgrow Seed Co. (1966) 246
Cal.App.2d 87, 54 Cal.Rptr. 609; Halliday
v. Greene (1966) 244 Cal.App.2d 482, 53 Cal.Rptr. 267; but see
limitations on this doctrine in Cregg v.
Ministor Ventures (1983) 148 Cal.App.3d 1107, 196 Cal.Rptr. 724; Tokio etc. Co. Ltd. v. McDonnell Douglas Corp.
(2d Cir. 1980) 617 F.2d 936).
Any performance
required under a contract can be waived. Examples: Written change
order requirement (Weeshoff
Constr. Co. v. Los Angeles County Flood etc. Dist. (1979) 88
Cal.App.3d 579, 590, 152 Cal.Rptr. 19), written claim requirement, even with a
contract clause declaring it cannot be waived (Transpower Constructors v. Grand River Dam Authority
(10th Cir. 1990) 905 F.2d 1413); Bettelheim
v. Hagstrom Food Stores, Inc. (1952) 113 Cal.App.2d 873, 249 P.2d
301 [held, lease provision prohibiting waivers unless in writing was waived;
“[e]ven a waiver clause may be waived by conduct.”]).
Any party by its
conduct can be estopped to rely upon (prevented from relying upon) any
requirement in the contract (Maurice
L. Bein, Inc. v. Housing Authority (1958) 157 Cal.App.2d 670,
681-82, 321 P.2d 753).
CONTRACTOR'S RIGHT TO ABANDON FOR UNPAID
EXTRAS
When
the contractor has not followed the claims procedure set forth in the contract
and there is no "Change Order" or "Construction Change
Directive," but the contractor has performed extras for which he has not
been paid, can the contractor suspend work and abandon the project?
The
answer to this question should be found in an analysis of whether there is a
legal obligation for the owner to pay. As a general rule, when one party
to contract commits a material breach of that contract, the other party is
discharged or excused from any obligation to perform. Hernandez v. Gulf Group Lloyds,
875 S.W.2d 691, 693 (Tex. 1994). Nonpayment sometimes qualifies as a
justification for abandonment. See The
Brooklyn & Ownes Screen Mfg. Co. v. U.S., 97 Ct.C. 532 (1942); Overstreet v. U.S., 55 Ct.C. 154
(1920). However, at least one case has held that, in this context,
"nonpayment" refers to nonpayment of agreed contract amounts, but not
to claims for additional payments which are not yet resolved. See, DWS, Inc. , ASBCA
33245, 87-3 BCA ¶ 19960, 29 G.C. ¶ 265. That case involves a government
contract that was not a construction contract. Nevertheless, it can be used as
authority that nonpayment of extras does not justify abandonment.
Oxford
Dev. Corp. v. Rausauer Builders, Inc., 304 N.E. 2d 211, 216 (Ind. 1973), on the
other hand, held that nonpayment of extras justified abandonment in the context
of a construction contract. A distinguishing factor in Rausauer , however, is
that the court found a legal obligation on the part of the owner to pay for the
extras. It is, therefore, reasonable to conclude that absent a legal obligation
to pay, there is no right to abandon performance for nonpayment of extras. That
result is consistent with the contractual scheme of the AIA 201. Art. 4.3.4
specifically requires the contractor to proceed diligently with performance of
the work pending final resolution of claims. Furthermore, Art. 4.5.3
requires the same during the arbitration process.
Once
the legal obligation to pay for the extras is established, and all other
criteria justifying abandonment exist, the contractor is entitled to "walk
the job" for the nonpayment of extras. It should be noted that in
some jurisdictions, a contractor can lose the right to abandon performance once
it has been obtained. In those jurisdictions, a contractor is put to an
election at the time that a material breach occurs. The contractor may abandon
performance or continue performance and sue for damages. Board of Regents of Univ. of Tex.
v. S&G Constr. Co.,
529 S.W.2d 90 (Tex. Civ. App.--Austin 1975, writ ref'd n.r.e.). Continued
performance after the material breach can constitute a waiver of the right to
abandon. It is unclear how long a contractor's continued performance must be
before a waiver occurs. It would appear that due to the factually
intensive nature of the analysis of the existence of the right to abandon, no
practitioner can predict the outcome with any degree of certainty. To
counsel a contractor to abandon performance for nonpayment of extras is risky
at best. However, situations exist where it is not only advisable, but it is
the only realistic course of action for the contractor.
Drafting Tips
One drafting consideration from the owner's perspective
is to include a requirement that the contractor commence and continue
performance, including any changed work, pending necessary modifications or
amendments to the contract price or time. Standard contract language typically
provides the owner with the right to order the contractor to proceed with
disputed work, unless the work is so far beyond the scope of the contract as to
constitute a cardinal change.
From the contractor's perspective, it is important to
articulate who has authority on behalf of the owner to direct and approve
changes in the work. The contract should include a clear designation of
authority, and a mechanism that permits the contractor to verify authorization
of a change or extra work order without violating any contractual duty or
direction to proceed with disputed work.
Generally, even if
the contractor disputes an ordered change, it must proceed with the work and
seek recourse through the contract's respective claims and disputes provisions.
Standard of Proof
Some courts have held that a contractor's extra work
claim must be proven by a higher evidentiary standard — clear and convincing
evidence. Duncan v. Cannon, supra.
There Must Be Extra Work
Labor and materials which are incidental and necessary
to performance of the contract cannot be regarded as extra work for which a
contractor or builder may recover. Likewise, "general" or
undocumented discussions may be inadequate to prove and present a CO claim.
Time May Also Be
Affected
The presence or absence of CO's may have a bearing not
only on price and cost, but may also affect time of completion to shorten or
extend time allowed for the substantial completion and final completion of the
work.
Change Order or Change Directive?
Watch out for proposals or plans originally presented
by a party as a CO, for which mutual agreement is required, but if agreement is
lacking the same or similar work and changes are then cast or re-labeled as a
"Construction Change Directive" or an "Interim Directed
Change."
Does Extra Work Allowance Include Contractor Overhead
and Profit?
Be sure to review and determine whether the CO
provision, and any CO proposed and agreed upon, includes allowance for
contractor overhead and profit (added or deleted), implicitly or explicitly.
Reservation of Rights
An owner, architect
or engineer in charge may issue and approve a CO with a reservation of rights.
Sample language would be that, "Neither this Change Order nor the
extension of time of performance granted hereunder, constitute an admission
that Owner is responsible for any delays or hindrance to past or future work
under the contract." Travelers Casualty and Surety Company v. Dormitory
Authority — State of New York, 2010 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 88320 (S.D.N.Y. 2010).
Sample Clauses:
Article 7 of the AIA A201 General Conditions of the
Contract for Construction©:
§ 7.1.1 Changes in the Work may be accomplished after
execution of the Contract, and without invalidating the Contract, by Change
Order, Construction Change Directive or order for a minor change in the Work,
subject to the limitations stated in this Article 7 and elsewhere in the
Contract Documents.
§ 7.1.2 A Change Order shall be based upon agreement
among the Owner, Contractor, and Architect; a Construction Change Directive
requires agreement by the Owner and Architect and may or not be agreed to by
the Contractor; an order for a minor change in the Work may be issued by the
Architect alone.
§ 7.2.1 A Change Order is a written instrument prepared
by the Architect and signed by the Owner, Contractor, and Architect, stating
their agreement upon all of the following:
1) the change in the Work;
2) the amount of the adjustment, if any, in the
Contract Sum; and
3) the extent of the adjustment, if any, in the
Contract Time.
§ 7.3.3 If the Construction Change Directive provides
for an adjustment to the Contract Sum, the adjustment shall be based on one of
the following methods:
1) mutual acceptance of a lump sum properly itemized
and supported by sufficient substantiating data to permit evaluation;
2) unit prices stated in the Contract Documents or
subsequently agreed upon;
3) cost to be determined in a manner agreed upon by the
parties and a mutually acceptable fixed or percentage fee; or
4) as provided in Section 7.3.7.
§ 7.3.5 Upon receipt of a Construction Change
Directive, the Contractor shall promptly proceed with the change in the Work
involved and advise the Architect of the Contractor's agreement or disagreement
with the method, if any, provided in the Construction Change Directive for
determining the proposed adjustment in the Contract Sum or Contract Time.
The AIA© documents identify three different types of
possible changes: (1) Formal Change Orders, agreed upon and signed by both the
owner and the contractor; (2) Construction Change Directives, signed only by
the owner; and (3) Field Orders, signed by the architect for only minor changes
in the work.
ConsensusDOCS© refer primarily to two situations, the
Change Order and the "Interim Directed Change" –
§ 8.1 CHANGE ORDER — § 8.1.1 The Contractor may request
or the Owner may order changes in the Work or the timing or sequencing of the
Work that impacts the Contract Price or the Contract Time. All such changes in
the Work that affect Contract Time or Contract Price shall be formalized in a
Change Order. Any such requests for a change in the Contract Price or the
Contract Time shall be processed in accordance with this Article 8.
§ 8.1.2 The Owner and the Contractor shall negotiate in
good faith an appropriate adjustment to the Contract Price or the Contract Time
and shall conclude these negotiations as expeditiously as possible. Acceptance
of the Change Order and any adjustment in the Contract Price or Contract Time
shall not be unreasonably withheld.
§ 8.2 INTERIM DIRECTED CHANGE - § 8.2.1 The Owner may
issue a written Interim Directed Change directing a change in the Work prior to
reaching agreement with the Contractor on the adjustment, if any, in the
Contract Price or the Contract Time.
§ 8.2.2 The Owner
and the Contractor shall negotiate expeditiously and in good faith for
appropriate adjustments, as applicable, to the Contract Price or the Contract
Time arising out of an Interim Directed Change. As the Changed Work is
performed, the Contractor shall submit its costs for such work with its
application for payment beginning with the next application for payment within
thirty (30) Days of the issuance of the Interim Directed Change. If there is a
dispute as to the cost to the Owner, the Owner shall pay the Contractor fifty
percent (50%) of its estimated cost to perform the work. In such event, the Parties
reserve their rights as to the disputed amount, subject to the requirements of
Article 12.
Under ConsensusDOCS©, the Owner must pay the Contractor
50% of the estimated cost to complete the disputed work, whereas no such
obligation exists under the AIA forms. This is an added protection and leverage
for the Contractor, but can also benefit the Owner by insuring that the project
can move forward while the parties negotiate details.
Federal Acquisition Regulations - § 52.243-5 Changes
and Changed Conditions
CHANGES AND CHANGED CONDITIONS –
a) The Contracting Officer may, in writing, order
changes in the drawings and specifications within the general scope of the
contract.
b) The Contractor shall promptly notify the Contracting
Officer, in writing, of surface or latent physical conditions differing
materially from those indicated in this contract or unknown unusual physical
conditions at the site before proceeding with the work.
c) If changes under paragraph (a) or conditions under
paragraph (b) increase or decrease the cost of, or time required for performing
the work, the Contracting Officer shall make an equitable adjustment (see
paragraph (d) upon submittal of a proposal for adjustment (hereafter referred
to as proposal) by the Contractor before final payment under the contract.
d) The Contracting Officer shall not make an equitable
adjustment under paragraph (b) unless—
1) The Contractor has submitted and the Contracting
Officer has received the required written notice; or
2) The Contracting Officer waives the requirement for
the written notice.
e) Failure to agree to any adjustment shall be a
dispute under the Disputes clause.
ARCHITECT LIABILITY
TO THE OWNER IN THE CHANGE ORDER PROCESS
The
design professional can have liability to the owner in the change order
process. Generally speaking, an action against an architect/engineer by the
owner can be based on either contract or tort law, or both. Under
contract law principles, an architect may be liable to the owner based upon the
breach of the contract between the parties. Williams Engineering, Inc. v. Goodyear, 496
So.2d 1012 (La. 1986). Under tort theory, an owner can bring a claim
against the architect based upon the breach of a legal duty owed to the
owner. Corcoran v.
Sanner , 854 P.2d 1376 (Colo. 1993). Sometimes, the
limitations periods (which can be different) will dictate the type of action an
owner is allowed to bring.
Under
tort theory, absent a provision to the contrary, implicit in every contract
between an owner and an architect is the duty of the architect to
"exercise the care of those ordinarily skilled in the
business." Nelson
v. Commonwealth of Virginia, 368 S.E.2d 239, 243 (Va. 1988) quoting
Surf Realty Corp. v.
Standing, 78 S.E.2d 901, 907 (Va. 1953). A breach of that duty
entitles the owner to damages. Proof of professional negligence by an
architect ordinarily requires expert testimony. Allied Properties v. John A. Blume
and Assoc., Eng'rs, 102 Cal. Rptr. 259, 265 (1972).
Where
the architect's duties include formulating changes to the project, initiating
the change order process, and processing change orders, it would appear that he
must perform those functions under the standard of negligence expressed above. Hence, failing to process change orders in a
timely manner could constitute professional negligence on the part of the
architect. If such failure is
established, the architect should be liable to the owner for all damages
proximately caused thereby.
For
example, a design professional can be liable for delays. Under the AIA B141 , an architect is
specifically obligated not to delay the work on the project. AIA B141
Art. 2.6.12. When the time for occupancy
of a building is delayed due to the negligence of the architect, an owner may
recover damages for the loss of the use of the building, including lost
profits. Northern
Petrochemical v. Thorsen & Thorshov, Inc., 211 N.W.2d 159
(Minn. 1973). One court has gone
as far as to award delay damages to an owner against the architect that were
based upon the liquidated damages specified in the prime contract (between the
owner and contractor). E.C.
Ernst, Inc. v. Manhattan Constr. Co.
of Texas , 387 F.Supp. 1001 (S.D. Ala. 1974), modified on other
grounds, 551 F.2d 1026 (5th Cir. 1977). It
follows that delays caused by the architect negligently performing change order
functions should render the architect liable to the owner for the delay
damages.
However,
some jurisdictions have held that in actions against an architect based upon
negligence, economic damages are not recoverable unless accompanied by physical
property damage or bodily injury. Sandarac
Ass'n., Inc. v.
W.R. Frizzell Architects, Inc.,
609 So. 2d 1349 (Fla. 1992), review denied, 626 So.2d 207 (Fla. 1993).
This is commonly referred to as the "economic loss doctrine." The
applicability of this doctrine will depend on the jurisdiction of the lawsuit.
As
mentioned above, an architect owes contractual duties to the owner in addition
to duties of care implicit to the professional services. For example, an architect
can be liable under the contract between the owner and architect when the
architect fails to properly supervise the project adequately. First Nat'l Bank of Akron v. Cann
, 503 F. Supp. 419 (N.D. Ohio 1980) affirmed, 669 F.2d 415 (6th Cir. 1982). Hence,
if for some reason the owner does not pursue the architect for negligence in
the change order process, the architect can still be liable for breach of its
contractual duties.
If
the contractual duties of the architect include active involvement in the
change order process and the scope of that process includes the use of
Construction Change Directives, it would appear that the architect would owe
the duty to perform that function under the same professional standard as
exists for all other functions performed by the architect. Hence, where
there are numerous changes and the change order processing has been slow, the
failure of the architect to use, or recommend that the owner use, Construction
Change Directives should be actionable conduct based upon both tort and
contract principles. It follows that if delays occurred that could have been
prevented by using Construction Change Directives, the architect should be
liable to the owner for all resulting delays as well as all other
damages.
It
should also be noted that one reason change orders may be necessary is because
of substandard plans or specifications prepared by the architect. An architect
may be liable to an owner for defective or inadequate plans and
specifications. Huber,
Hunt & Nichols, Inc. v. Moore , 136 Cal. Rptr. 603.
Therefore, if defective plans and specifications are the reason for numerous
change orders that result in delays to the project, the architect should be
liable to the owner for all the resulting damages.
CONSTRUCTION CHANGE
DIRECTIVE
The
Construction Change Directive procedure detailed in Art. 7.3 of the AIA 201 is
a means to compel a contractor to perform extra work even though, for whatever
reason, there is no agreement as to price or time adjustments. This is
sometimes called "force account" work. The procedure calls for
the issuance of a written directive from the owner and architect containing
proposed price and time adjustments. The contractor does not agree to the
terms of the directive, but is allowed to include the price adjustments in
future pay requests, Art. 7.3.2, 7.2.2 and 7.3.1. If the owner and
contractor do not ultimately agree to the adjustments, the matter is referred
to the architect for determination. Art. 7.3.7.
The
Construction Change Directive is an innovative procedure designed to
contractually obligate the contractor to perform force account work while, at
the same time, providing the contractor with some security that he will be
given some compensation for it. The contractor is allowed to include in
its "pay applications" requests for payment for changes authorized by
the directive. Art. 9.3.1.1 and 7.3.7. Hence, use of the procedure
provides contractors, subcontractors and suppliers with at least some degree of
cash flow during the course of the project. The Construction Change
Directive assures the owner that the project will not be delayed because of a
lack of agreement with the contractor for an adjustment as to price or time for
extra work. With the issuance of the directive, the contractor is given written
documentation providing (1) that a change has, in fact, been ordered and (2) a
precise description of the scope of the change.
The
Construction Change Directive is one approach to force account work. However, it is not unusual for public entities
to use much more strict procedures to compel contractors to perform force
account work, and to administer payment therefor.
In order to prove a
constructive change or extra work claim, here is what you should do:
Review your contract. There should be a "Changes",
"Alterations", or "Extra Work" clause. Generally, the clause permits the owner to
order the change in the work that has been requested.
Confirm change in writing. If the changes clause
requires the contractor to have a written change order prior to commencing
work, then you should make sure written approval has been given. You
would be surprised at the number of disputes arising from supposedly
"approved changes" that were never formally approved or reduced to a
writing.
Track your notice provisions. Again, the contract
contains the notice provisions regarding changes and the contractor will be
required to prove that it complied with those notice requirements.
Prepare for both entitlement and quantum. The contractor will be required to show
that the work was, in fact, additional work required by the owner. A written change order will go a long way to
establishing this claim, but the contractor also has to be prepared for the
case when the change is disputed by the owner. The contractor should keep track of the extra
costs it is claiming for proof at mediation or trial or arbitration.
Five Situations Where You May Be Able To Avoid A Contractually Mandated
Written Change Order
Almost all written
construction contracts require that the contractor obtain a written change
order as a condition to payment for the additional work. However, owners
customarily direct contractors to perform the work and promise that they will
subsequently negotiate a fair price for the work. Almost every contractor can
recite an example of such a promise that is then ignored by the owner when the
time for payment arises.
Written change order
provisions are placed in contracts so that the owner is assured that it will
expressly approve any changes to the scope of work. In addition, such
provisions are designed to give the owner timely and ample notice of the change
in scope so it can investigate the claim and then either avoid the additional
cost or take steps to mitigate the additional expense. Courts have routinely
upheld such provisions when the additional work was performed without any
notice to the owner.
However, the courts
will be less inclined to enforce the written change order requirement when the
owner has timely notice and orally induces the contractor to perform the
changed work. Similarly, courts will not find it equitable to enforce such
clauses against subcontractors when general contractors induce them to perform
the additional work with a promise that they will be paid for the work at a
later date.
The remainder of this
article will review five legal theories that have been approved by California
courts as a legal basis for avoiding the written change order provision in
private works contracts when the owner knowingly approved the additional work.
The article will then discuss written change requirements for California public
works projects.
Private Works
1. Oral Waiver of the Written Change Order Provision
The doctrine of
waiver has long been accepted by the courts. In essence, the courts treat
appropriate action or conduct of the owner as waiver of the written change
order provision. Quite simply, if the other party orally approves the
additional work, it acts in a manner that is inconsistent with that party’s
intent to rely on the change order provision. As a result, the court will treat
that conduct as a waiver of the clause and allow the contractor to recover the
value of the additional work. (See for example Howard J. White v. Varian
Associates (1960) 178 Cal App 2nd 348).
It should be noted
that many contracts include additional clauses that seek to avoid such waiver
arguments. In addition, some contracts include clauses that state that only
certain personnel can approve change orders. For example, the provision may
limit the change order approval to home office personnel rather than field
personnel. Under appropriate circumstances, such anti-waiver provisions have
been upheld by the courts as valid.
2. The Owner May Be Estopped From Relying On The Clause
The doctrine of
promissory estoppel has been applied to a number of construction contract
disputes. Promissory estoppel occurs when a party makes a promise to the other
which the other party would reasonably rely on to take action based on the
promise. If the owner promises to pay for the work and then allows the work to
proceed it will be estopped from denying the promise to pay for the work.
3. A Requirement For A Written Change Order Can Be Rescinded By The
Parties
As in the case of
waiver, the parties can effectively rescind the written change order provision
by their conduct. If the contractor and the owner orally agree that written
change orders are not necessary the courts will treat the provision as being
rescinded by the parties.
4. Allowing The Owner To Receive The Improvements Without Compensation
Would Unjustly Enrich The Owner
This legal theory is
based on the concept that once the work is complete the owner will have the
permanent benefit of it and the contractor will not be able to repossess the
work. However, the owner can only be unjustly enriched if the contractor was
induced to perform the additional work by fraud, coercion, mistake, request or
coercion by the owner. Thus the claim must be based on some action of the owner
that resulted in the contractor performing the additional work.
5. California Statutory Law Allows A Written Contract To Be Orally
Modified
California Civil Code
section 1698 allows a written contract to be modified when the oral change
order agreement is executed by the parties or if the change order is supported
by new consideration. California courts have held that if the contractor fully
completes the additional change order the oral modification to the contract is
deemed executed by the parties and is thus effective. The section also states
that it does not preclude “in an appropriate case the application of rules of
law concerning estoppel, oral novation and substitution of a new agreement,
rescission of a written contract by an oral agreement, waiver of a provision of
a written contract, or oral independent collateral contracts.” Thus, the
section does not prohibit the four other legal theories that have been applied
by California courts to uphold oral change orders.
California Public Works
California public
entity contracts are based on state and local procurement laws. The laws
typically require approval for the changed scope of work before it is
performed. For example, the Public Contract Code requires the county board of
supervisors to approve change orders if the amount exceeds a certain threshold
amount. However, the board may authorize the inclusion of a clause in the
contract that allows for county employees to approve any work that is necessary
for proper completion of the work.
Most public works
projects include written change order provisions. The courts will uphold such
provisions since they give the public entity timely notice of the change in
scope so it can investigate the claim and then either avoid the additional cost
or take steps to mitigate the additional expense.
1. A Public Agency’s Misrepresentation Maybe Allow A Contractor To Avoid
The Written Change Order Clause
If the public entity
was actively negligent in the design of the project or misrepresented the
conditions that the contractor would encounter, the courts will not enforce the
written change order requirement. Thus, if the contractor can establish that
the public agency knowingly and positively misrepresented the site condition
such clauses can be avoided. Generally, there is an implied warranty that plans
and specifications are complete. If a showing can be made that the plans and
specifications were inaccurate and that the public agency provided statements,
although unintentional, that mislead the contractor, a contractor can recover
the value of the extra work.
2. Reliance On The Statements Of A Public Official May Not Allow A
Contractor To Avoid The Written Change Order Provision
While California
courts will allow a contractor to avoid a written change order clause if a
private owner promises to pay for the additional works, they will not permit a
public works contractor to rely on such unauthorized statements to avoid the
provision. However, if the contract vests a certain official or the project
architect or engineer with the authority to approve the oral change order the
courts will enforce the oral change order.
3. If An Unauthorized Public Official Orally Orders The Work, Proceed
Under Written Protest
As previously stated,
most public works contracts authorize certain public officials to approve
change orders so that any additional work that is necessary for proper
completion of the work is performed. If an unauthorized public official demands
that the change order proceed, the contractor should give prompt notice that
such work will be performed under protest. If the contract has a clause that
sets forth the method of notifying the public agency of such a change order,
those requirements should be followed. If the contractor provides timely
written notice that it is proceeding under protest, the courts may not enforce
the requirement for a written change order.
Conclusion
Construction
contracts typically include a requirement that change orders be in writing. If
such a provision exists, a prudent contractor will insist that all change
orders be in writing. If the owner, or the prime contractor if the agreement is
between a general contractor and a subcontractor, chooses to disregard the
requirement of a written change order, confirm the instructions in writing. The
written confirmation should be provided to the other party and the architect,
if any.
A Change Order Checklist
It is inevitable that
change orders will be issued during the course of a construction project. The
change in the scope of work can result in the increase of the contract
completion time and/or the amount of compensation paid. This article shall
provide a checklist that can be followed to help ensure that the contract
change order clauses are complied with when a contractor seeks a change order.
From a lawyer’s point
of view, a change order is simply an amendment to the construction contract. Since it is an amendment to the contract it is
important to comply with the contract change order clauses. Typically, changes
in the scope of work can be made expressly through instructions from the other
party or constructively. A constructive change order occurs when the other
party effectively requires that work outside the contractually agreed upon
scope of work be performed. In all but the least sophisticated contracts there
are different change order contract provisions for express and constructive
change orders.
The express change
order provisions set forth how the change is be documented and the means for
pricing the change order. The constructive change order provisions will
typically include such provisions along with a notification requirement.
Most contracts have
specific requirements for how change orders are to be processed. It is not
uncommon for the owner to deny a change order based on an assertion that the
contract change order clauses were not complied with by the other party. It
should be noted that there are defenses to such allegations, which were
discussed in a previous article.
Since most change
orders are initiated in the field it is advisable to have a checklist for
change orders for field personnel to follow. Contractors should create such a
checklist and make it company policy for personnel to comply with it. Such a
checklist should, at a minimum, include the following:
1. Have the change
order contract provisions been reviewed relative to notice, form, timing and
pricing of the proposed change order?
2. Has adequate and
timely notice of the changed condition, extra work, and additional time
requirements been given to the other party?
When is the deadline for submitting claims?
Contracts will
typically require written notification on claims for compensation to be
submitted within a certain time period. The time period can range from between
7 to 21 days after a contractor is aware of an event giving rise to a claim.
Failure to provide notice within the prescribed time period may result in a
claim being barred. Therefore, contractors should be wary of any such notice
provisions and deadlines for making claims for changes.
It is important that
the notice provisions be complied with when the change in scope of the work is
first observed. A common defense to a change order proposal is the failure to
give timely notice which prevents the other party from documenting the changed
conditions, document the additional work and/or make an informed decision to
proceed with the additional work.
3. Is there a method
for logging the submission, response and payment of the change order ? If so,
has the proposed change order been logged in?
The time that another
party takes to respond to a change order can have a direct impact on the timely
completion of the contract work. A change order log allows a contractor to
track the time between submission and approval of the change order. It also
serves as a method for reminding the field personnel to follow-up on a tardy
response.
4. Does the proposed
written change order provide sufficient information so that the other party can
determine why the additional work and/or additional time requirements are
outside the agreed scope of work? Have you provided back-up documentation for
the change order?
It is advisable to
reference all the relevant general conditions and specifications. If you have
photographs, entries from daily job logs, relevant correspondence, including
such documentation with your change order may speed the acceptance and payment
of the change order.
5. Is the proposed
change order priced in a manner that complies with the contractual change order
requirements? If the change order can be fully priced until the work is
complete, are you providing pricing updates in accordance with the contract
requirements (e.g. daily, weekly, monthly) ?
Most contracts
provide for three basic means for pricing change orders; the choice of which
method is left to the owner. They include an agreed fixed amount, time and
materials or a requirement that the contract proceed with the work with cost to
be negotiated at a later date based on data that is developed during the
additional work. If you cannot agree on the exact amount before the additional
work is commenced, many contract clauses require the contractor to notify the
owner of the exact cost of the work on a regular basis. The clause may provide
that the failure to comply with such a requirement may result in a waiver of
the claim.
6. If the change
order is on a force account basis (i.e., the other party requires you perform
the work on a time and material basis), have you complied with the contractual
provisions for evidencing that work is being performed? Does the contract
require a representative of the other party to sign such documentation? If so,
are you complying with that requirement?
It is important to
have force account work documented in accordance with contract. Many require
that a specific project representative review and acknowledge that the work was
performed on a daily basis.
7. Does the proposed
change order include a component for any additional time that may be required
for the change order? If so, does the time component explain how the project
will be impacted?
8. If you are
uncertain as to how the proposed change order will impact the overall time for
completion of the project and/or impact other work, have you reserved your
right to claim such impacts (e.g., loss of productivity, delays, ripple costs,
acceleration) at a later date?
The overall impact on
a single change order or a series of change orders may not be realized until
well after the additional work is commenced. If you are uncertain as to the
impact of the change, it is wise to reserve your rights to make a claim for
such impacts. It is also advisable to track the impact of the change on the
job. A means for tracking the impact could include a time line. In a columnar
format, the key date and then a description of what occurred on that date
should be set forth. Key dates should, at a minimum, include: (a) when the
claim work was discovered, (b) when the claim work was reported, (c) when the
claim work was started, and (d) when the claim work was completed.
On some projects the
number and extent of change orders are well in excess of what the parties
contemplated when they entered into the construction contract. If the size,
nature and number of change orders becomes well in excess of that contemplated
by the parties, the contractual method for fairly compensating the contractor
may not be applicable. As a result, the doctrine of a cardinal change has been
developed by the courts. Generally, a cardinal change occurs when the
contractor is required to perform work that is such a nature, quantity and/or
impact that is dramatically beyond the types of changes the parties
contemplated when they entered into the contract. Maintaining detailed
documentation of how the excessive changes impacted the job is necessary for
proving a cardinal change.
9. If the change
order has been denied, have you complied with the contract clauses for later
submission of that change order as a claim resolution process? Have you
continued to track the costs and impacts of the additional work?
Such documentation
should include daily job logs, schedules, photographs, bid documentation,
relevant provisions of the plans and specifications, project correspondence,
change order pricing estimates and documentation, job cost reports and employee
time records for the subject work. Ideally, a separate file should be
established to include the aforementioned documents and to track the status of
the claim.
Have a provision in
the original contract specifically stating that all change orders will be in
writing.
Insist that the
contract terms be followed and require all change orders to be in writing and
signed and dated by the parties involved. The change orders should refer to the
original contract terms and note what was included and why the newly requested
work requires a change order.
The change order
should spell out exactly what the new changes are and spell out how the work is
changed from that originally requested. It should present an estimation of the
costs that will be incurred based on the changes, establish a new deadline and
the payment terms for the additional work and/or materials.
If working on an
hourly rate, confirm the hourly rate for the additional work required under the
change order.
Do not agree to a
change order that is open-ended.
There are times when
subcontractors believe they are being asked to do work not covered in the
original contract, but the contractor or owner disagree and think the requested
work was included in the original contract. This can be prevented if the
original contract designates either the project engineer or architect as the
decision maker in the event such an issue comes up.
Other things
subcontractors can do to protect themselves legally and to minimize disputes
over payment include:
Confirming in writing
any conversations with contractors concerning matters subcontractors consider
changes to the original contract.
Taking photos,
preferably videotapes, of work at various s stages of the project.
Keeping all documents
and receipts that support their claim that the work order was changed from the
terms of the original contract.
Attorneys experienced
in construction law and contracts can review the original contracts and work
requested to assist in determining whether a change order is required and help
with all related construction claims.
Conclusion
The failure to comply
with a contractual change order may result in the denial of a substantial
change order. Thus, it is important to establish a policy for the processing of
change orders. The checklist set forth in this article is not intended to be
all inclusive of the items that should be included, but rather represents a
sample of items that may be included.
Irrespective, the
starting point for every checklist are the contract change order provisions.
Based on the author’s experience in prosecuting change order disputes in the
courts, the importance of familiarizing yourself with and subsequently
complying with change order contract provisions cannot be stressed enough. It
is strongly recommended that a contractor require field personnel to read and
understand the importance of those provisions. By requiring field personnel to
gain an understanding of those requirements, the contractor has made a large
step in successfully processing change orders.
Avoid Five Costly Mistakes Made By
Government Construction Contractors
Although not
intentional, contractors tend to make the following mistakes which can cost
them thousands or millions in construction projects.
Failure to
understand how the various FAR clauses impact your ability to have equal
footing with the agency. Federal
contracts are primarily written for the benefit of the agency. Having your people trained in the various
clauses can save the company a substantial amount of money.
Not understanding
the difference between a Request for Equitable Adjustment and a CDA claim. There is a difference between the two. Having
a government construction lawyer to guide you around the lurking pitfalls can
also save you thousands in unnecessary attorney fees.
Failures to submit
a construction claim that meets the CDA requirements. Both small and large
contractors make fatal procedural and substantive errors then submitting their
claims. See information on Contract Disputes Act and Pass Through Claims. There
are statutory requirements that you must meet including getting
the contracting officer’s final decision. Failure to meet them can create
delays and even rejection.
Not understanding
what constitutes a Contracting Officer’s final decision. Your construction
claim must have a CO’s final decision before you can appeal to the Court of
Federal Claims or Board of Contract appeals.
Failure to properly
address cure notices. When a contracting agency believes that you are a
performance risk, a cure notice is forthcoming.
Prepare, Negotiate
and Litigate Construction Claims in Federal projects allow contracting officers
(COs) great latitude in resolving disputes. However, you may often find your
company trying to negotiate a claim that you know has merit.
Avoid Costly Pitfalls With
Requests for Equitable Adjustment Claims: An important part of the
government construction claims process is understanding the nuances between a
CDA claim and a Request for Equitable Adjustment. Develop Internal
Policies and Controls: Given the mandated increased oversight on federal
contractors, both small and large companies are targeted for audits
and investigations.
Get Help With Government
Construction Proposal Writing: Bidding on government contracts is very
tough business. Whether you are writing proposals for Army Corps Projects, Navy
projects or for another agency, you want to strengthen your technical
proposals, construction bid bond submissions and management
approaches.
Federal Construction
Contracting for Small Businesses: The laws associated with government
contracting include a wide array of complex regulations that dictate how you
perform. For example, small businesses are restricted to certain guidelines
under teaming agreements and joint venture contracts.
Issues arise concerning SBA size standards and limitation in
subcontracting requirements. At the law office of Watson & Associates our
government construction law attorneys provide legal advice on matters
pertaining to:
·
Prime
and subcontracting agreements
·
Size
standard disputes
·
Subcontracting
plans
·
Teaming
agreements
·
Joint
venture agreements
·
Filing
construction claims
·
Addressing
construction defect disputes
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.
Metropolitan has been
engaged by design-build engineering firms, general contractors, and specialty
subcontractors to prepare and substantiate differing site conditions claims and
has been engaged by project owners and public agencies to evaluate claims
submitted by contractors. Metropolitan
has in-house multidisciplinary expertise of engineers, geologists, construction
management professionals, and schedulers to analyze all aspects of DSC claims. The results of our development and evaluation
of DSC claims have been presented in discussions with our clients, written
reports, and testimony at review board hearings, arbitrations, mediations, and
trials.
In
general, Metropolitan has expertise to evaluate issues related to:
·
Entitlement
(technical merits of claim)
·
Cost
analysis
·
Delay
impacts
·
Disruption
·
Productivity
Loss
·
Acceleration
·
Design
defects
·
Construction
defects
In
Metropolitan’s evaluations of entitlement, our engineering and construction
professionals have used their education, training, and expertise to address
issues related to the following types of site conditions:
·
Excavation
and trench failure
·
Embankment
failure
·
Pile-driving
refusal
·
Rock
suitability for drilled shafts
·
Import
fill suitability
·
Borrow
source characterization
·
Unsuitable
material
·
Subgrade
suitability
·
Embankment/subgrade
R-value
·
Construction
equipment mobility
·
“Pumping”
and “rutting” of subgrade
·
Expansive
soil
·
Collapsible
soil
·
Liquefiable
soil
·
Cobbles
and boulders (particle size)
·
“Running
ground”
·
Sinkholes
·
Excessive
ground moisture
·
Groundwater
and seepage
·
Groundwater
pumping rates and volumes
·
Rock
rippability
·
Back-cut
slope stability
·
Unmapped
landslides
·
Faults
·
Ground
fissures
·
Hazardous
materials (naturally occurring and manmade)