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ConstructionRisk.com Report
http://www.ConstructionRisk.com
Vol. 7, No. 7, November 05
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Inside
This Issue:
• Recent
California
Decision Erodes Certainty of 10-Year Statute of Repose Against
Construction Defect Claims
•
Risk Adjusted GO-NO-GO Decision
Process
• Waiver of Subrogation
Enforced, Denying Insurance Company Recovery against Contractor it
Alleged was Grossly Negligent
• New
California
Law Prohibits Type I Subcontractor Indemnity in Favor of Residential
Builders
• Proving Constructive
Acceleration Claims Can be Difficult for Contractors
======================================
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ARTICLE 1
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Recent
California Decision Erodes Certainty of 10-Year Statute of Repose
Against Construction Defect Claims
by Gregory
R. Shaughnessy, Esq.
For many years, contractors and construction lawyers in California
understood that a bright line existed regarding potential liability for
construction defects – no liability 10 years after substantial
completion of the project. The recent decision by the California Court
of Appeal in Acosta v. Glenfed Development Corp., 128 Cal.App.
4th 1278 (2005) took a narrow exception to the 10-year rule, for actions
based on “willful misconduct or fraudulent concealment,” and
expanded the exception to the point that it may swallow the rule. In so
doing, the Court took a statute intended to provide certainty and reduce
risk and created a great deal of uncertainty and potential added risk.
Background
Code of Civil Procedure §337.15 provides a statute of repose that bars
actions to recover damages for construction defects more than 10 years
after substantial completion of the work of improvement. Case law has
clarified that this 10-year bar does not apply to personal injury
claims. See, Geertz v. Ausonio, 4 Cal.App.4th 1363 (1992).
In Acosta, the court granted summary judgment in favor of a
developer/contractor on the grounds that 47 of the 59 named plaintiffs
had been brought into the case more than 10 years after recordation of
notices of completion on their single-family homes. The plaintiffs
argued that an exception to the 10-year rule applied, namely subdivision
(f) of §337.15, which provides: “This section shall not apply to
actions based on willful misconduct or fraudulent concealment.”
In opposition to the motion for summary judgment, counsel for the
plaintiffs asserted this exception.
Plaintiffs submitted two declarations from expert witnesses that listed
defects that are commonly found in reports by expert witnesses in
substantial construction defect litigation, including:
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Horizontal
attachments for vertical truss supports in the garages were
missing.
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Lack of adequate
shear transfer.
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Missing or
inadequate holddowns.
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Missing or
inadequate straps and hangers on load-bearing members.
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Some driveways
were short by as much as 3.5 feet.
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Stucco defects.
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Leaking windows.
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Less expensive kraft paper used to flash
around the windows instead of the asphalt polyethelene sheeting
specified on plans approved by the city.
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The experts opined that most of the defects undermined the structural
integrity of the homes and created a substantial risk of injury to
persons and/or property. They also opined that the defects:
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Involved
conspicuous failures to comply with applicable building code
provisions, with the city-approved building plans and with basic
construction industry practices.
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Were of a type
that inevitably would have been recognized by any competent
construction supervisor conducting even minimal day-to-day
inspections of the type required in a construction project such as
the one at issue and would have caused the construction supervisor
to require the responsible subcontractors to remedy the defects
immediately before work could proceed on the houses.
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Had the financial impact of producing, in
defendants’ favor, substantial cost savings.
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The experts stated that the defects appeared to be the result of willful
misconduct by defendants in that they were “so serious and prevalent
that they were either the result of [a] deliberate decision to ‘cut
corners’ for cost savings or the result of a near total, virtually
reckless, failure by the developer to adequately supervise
subcontractors.”
Analysis
The Acosta court recognized that other case law had emphasized
the purpose of §337.15 was to “provide a ‘firm and final’ outside
limitation period for construction suits involving claims for latent
defects.” Nonetheless, the court held that the “willful misconduct
exception” applied, holding that the term encompassed “not only
intentional wrongdoing, but negligence of such a character as to
constitute reckless disregard for the rights of others.”
The Acosta court was able to locate only one other decision
applying the exception in §337.15 (f), Felburg v. Don Wilson
Builders, 142 Cal.App.3d 383, 390 (1983). There, a defendant
builder sold plaintiffs a home that had been built over an oil sump.
After subsidence caused considerable damage to the home, the plaintiffs
filed suit about 12 years after substantial completion of the home. In
opposition to the defendant’s motion for summary judgment, the
plaintiffs submitted an expert declaration that stated that “it would
have been impossible to pour the foundation of the home without seeing
the evidence, in plain view, that the lot was over an oil sump.” The
plaintiffs also offered evidence indicating that the builder actually
had received a boring report from a soils engineer that showed the
existence of the oil sump on or near the plaintiff’s lot.
The Acosta court found that the facts in Felburg were
“remarkably similar” to those in the Acosta case. It is
submitted that the obvious knowledge in Felburg that a house
was being built on a woefully deficient construction site with total
disregard of a soils report showing the existence of the oil sump is not
remotely, much less remarkably, similar to garden variety construction
defects that were present in the Acosta case. Indeed, the
principal defects in Acosta appeared to be defects that may
have undermined the structural integrity of the houses and which created
the risk of injury but that had not actually caused any
injury.
Importantly, the Acosta court held that the
developer/contractor could be found to have engaged in willful
misconduct even if it did not have actual knowledge of the defects, for
example, where the work was performed by subcontractors. The court
reasoned that the developer/contractor was liable to buyers for the acts
of the subcontractors because developers/contractors “have supervision
over the construction, including the work of the subcontractors” and
found that this duty was non-delegable. The court also found that
imposing supervisory obligations on developers/contractors was
consistent with the contractor’s license law. Finally, the court found
that under the exception in subdivision (f), which states that it
applied to “actions based on willful misconduct,” “it is only
necessary that the action be based on and arise from willful misconduct
by someone. It does not matter whether defendants committed such
misconduct directly or it was done by subcontractors hired by them.”
Comment
The California Supreme Court denied a petition for review and request
for depublication. Thus, plaintiffs now have authority that could make
overcoming the 10-year statute of repose in most construction defect
cases easier. The 10-year statute of repose no longer will be seen as an
almost insurmountable barrier.
It is difficult to imagine a case where a creative plaintiff’s lawyer
will be unable to come up with a declaration that the construction
defects were the result of a deliberate decision to cut corners for cost
savings and that there must have been a near-complete failure by the
developer to exercise even minimal supervision. In such cases, it may be
difficult for a defendant to escape from the case by a motion for
summary judgment that relies on the 10-year statute of repose. Thus,
plaintiffs frequently will be able to get cases before a jury that would
otherwise have been disposed of by summary judgment. Whether the conduct
by the developer/contractor was willful misconduct normally will be a
question of fact for the jury. Colich & Sons v. Pacific
Bell
, 198 Cal.App.3d 1225 (1988).
The Acosta decision is not remarkable in its application of the
“willful misconduct” exception but rather in the manner in which it
applied the exception. It allowed expert declarations that were not
remarkable and that did not remotely approach the egregious facts in the
Felburg decision to create a triable issue of fact, even
against a developer/contractor when there was no direct evidence that
the developer/contractor had knowledge of the defects. In effect, the Acosta
decision could create strict liability by the developer/contractor for
any willful misconduct by the subcontractors or when the defects were
the result of a lack of supervision.
Some steps can be taken by developers/contractors to try and keep the
10-year limitation period intact. This includes conducting special
inspections and keeping good records of such inspections. This would
tend to show that proper supervision was provided and that attention to
quality control was given, perhaps enough to overcome the conclusory and
self-serving declarations of the plaintiff’s experts on a motion for
summary judgment. Notably, there was no discussion in Acosta of
the fact that the allegedly grossly defective work presumably had passed
inspections by local building officials.
Special inspections actually have been fairly common for the last five
years on condominium projects in
California
, as most such projects were built with wrap OCIP insurance policies,
which typically require such inspections as part of the OCIP program.
However, such OCIP policies typically also have 10-year “tail”
coverage following substantial completion. Under Acosta,
construction defect actions can be brought after the expiration of the
10-year tail, leaving developers, contractors and subcontractors exposed
to liability for construction defects with no insurance coverage -- thus
further chilling the market for construction of single-family housing in
California
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About the Author: Gregory
R. Shaughnessy
is
an attorney in the law firm of Thelen Reid & Priest.
This article originally appeared in the legal newsletter
of Thelen Reid & Priest as well as their website,
www.ConstructionWebLinks.com. For
more information about the issues covered in this report, contact
Gregory R. Shaughnessy in the
San Francisco
office of the firm at 415-369-7235 or at
gshaughnessy@thelenreid.com.
=====================================
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__________
ARTICLE 2
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__________
ARTICLE 3
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Waiver of Subrogation Enforced, Denying Insurance Company
Recovery against Contractor it Alleged was Grossly Negligent
By J. Kent
Holland
In an insurance
case arising out a church fire, a state supreme court held that Reliance
National, and other insurance carriers of the church, were not entitled
to subrogate against the contractor whose employee allegedly caused the
fire, because a waiver of subrogation in the church’s contract with
the contractor was enforceable to bar the claim.
The contract
between the church and contractor contained the following provision:
“"The Owner and Contractor waive all rights against each other,
separate contractors, and all other subcontractors for damages caused by
fire or other perils to the extent covered by Builder's Risk or any
other property insurance, except such rights as they may have to the
proceeds of such insurance."
The fire was
caused when an employee of the contractor, Knowles Industrial Services,
Corp. (Knowles), brought a
cigarette or open flame within ten feet of a section of the Church to
which large quantities of the paint stripper had been applied earlier
that day. The church was
destroyed, with damages totaling almost $15 million.
The church’s insurance carriers paid it about half of those
losses. Those carriers then
sought to bring a subrogation suit in the church’s name against
Knowles and the manufacturers of the paint stripper that was used.
As to the
contractor, Reliance’s complaint alleged willful and wanton
misconduct, negligence, breach of contract, and breach of warranty.
As to the chemical defendants, the complaint alleged strict liability,
negligence, and breach of warranty.
The lower
appellate court granted a motion for summary judgment in favor of
Knowles and the chemical defendants, and against the church/Reliance
because the court found that the waiver of subrogation barred the claims
On
appeal to the state supreme court, Reliance argued that genuine issues
of material fact exist with respect to whether Knowles misrepresented
its qualifications and intentions to comply with all pertinent federal
and state regulations in order to obtain the contract from the Church.
In reviewing this allegation the Supreme Court stated that as subrogee
of the Church, Reliance is bound by the Church's statement of material
facts and record references. Since
the church did not argue or prove that Knowles made misrepresentations,
the Court said this issue was not genuine and could not be presented by
Reliance.
The court next dealt with the question of whether a wavier of
subrogation is void as against public policy.
As explained by the court, “ A waiver of subrogation is a
provision by which parties to a contract relieve each other of liability
to the extent each is covered by insurance, thereby shifting the risk of
loss to an insurer.” The
court further explained that it has previously held "waivers of
subrogation are encouraged by the law and serve important social goals:
encouraging parties to anticipate risks and to procure insurance
covering those risks, thereby avoiding future litigation, and
facilitating and preserving economic relations and activity."
In this case, Reliance
argued that there must be public policy exception to the general rule
that waivers of subrogation are enforceable. Specifically,
Reliance contended that public policy precluded the enforcement of the
waiver of subrogation in this case based on Knowles's willful and wanton
misconduct or its violation of a positive statutory duty, or because
enforcement will be harmful to the interests of society.
The Supreme Court
rejected all these bases. It
acknowledged that exculpatory clauses are unenforceable in the face of
claims of gross negligence or willful and wanton misconduct.
But, the Court concluded “that principle is inapposite to
waivers of subrogation.” “The rule exists for exculpatory
clauses to ensure that "a party injured by another's gross
negligence will be able to recover its losses. [citations omitted].
In cases involving waivers of subrogation, however, there is no risk
that an injured party will be left uncompensated, and it is irrelevant
to the injured party whether it is compensated by the grossly negligent
party or an insurer.” The
point that the court was making is that there is a major distinction
between a party indemnifying another for its own negligence and parties
allocating risk to insurers.
What was particularly
problematic to the Court with regard to Reliance’s argument was that,
“Adopting the approach advocated by Reliance would require us to
distinguish between varying degrees of negligence. We have
rejected the concept of gradations of negligence, [citation
omitted] and we decline to change our approach with respect to waivers
of subrogation for two reasons.” The
first reason given by the Court is that “waivers of subrogation deter
litigation among parties to complicated construction contracts.”
In this case, the Court
noted the real injured party in this case—the Church—was not a party
to the appeal because the waiver of subrogation did what it was intended
to do: it allowed the Church to resolve its claims quickly. The
court further explained that the Church was made whole to the limits of
its insurance and it was not divested of a remedy, and, “Were we to
hold that parties cannot bar subrogated claims for gross negligence or
willful and wanton misconduct, these benefits will evaporate, as the
parties will have the incentive to litigate the question of whether a
heightened standard of negligence applies.”
The
second reason given by the Court was that “waivers of subrogation have
a beneficial economic effect that furthers the public interest.
They help parties avoid the higher costs that result from having
multiple insurance polices and overlapping coverage. [citation
omitted]. In addition,
because insurers can account for such waivers when setting premiums,
[citation omitted], there is still an economic incentive for parties to
refrain from committing gross negligence or willful and wanton
misconduct.” For these
reasons, the Court concluded that “public policy favors enforcement of
waivers of subrogation even in the face of claims of gross negligence or
willful and wanton misconduct.”
Reliance
National Indemnity et al. v. Knowles Industrial Services, Corp. et al.
(868 A.2 220, 2005 ME 29).
Comment.
This case highlights why project owners routinely seek
waivers of subrogation as one of the terms of the construction contract.
It also demonstrates why insurance carriers need to take these
waivers seriously during the underwriting process—deciding whether to
put limitations on them, or to charge additional premium for permitting
the insured to grant a waiver of subrogation.
Some carriers, particularly in professional liability policies,
have granted greater leeway to their insureds to waive the right to
subrogate. But the policy
language states that such waivers must not be granted after the damage
or claim, but may only be granted as part of the initial contract terms
and conditions. Exercise
caution before agreeing to any waiver.
Be sure you know what your insurance policy permits.
Discuss this with your insurance broker or carrier as
appropriate.
About the author: Kent
Holland is a construction lawyer in Tysons Corner, Virginia, and is a
risk management consultant for the environmental and design professional
liability. He also publisher of ConstructionRisk.com Report.
=====================================
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__________
ARTICLE 4
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New
California
Law Prohibits Type I Subcontractor Indemnity in Favor of Residential
Builders
By: Dion N. Cominos, Esq.
Under an Assembly Bill
recently signed into law by California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger,
“Type I” subcontractor indemnity agreements in favor of builders
entered into after January 1, 2006 will no longer be enforceable in the
context of residential construction projects.
Existing law provides
that Type I indemnity agreements between builders and subcontractors are
permissible except where they purport to indemnify the builder for its
sole negligence or willful misconduct.
However, AB 758 will amend section 2782 of
California
’s Civil Code to provide that a builder may no longer obligate a
subcontractor to indemnify the builder for the builder’s own
negligence or for damages unrelated to the scope of work set forth in
the agreement.
The new law will not prohibit a subcontractor and builder from
mutually agreeing to structure defense or reimbursements arrangements in
any particular fashion so long as the central prohibition against Type I
indemnity clauses is not affected. Further,
the obligation of a subcontractor’s insurance carrier to defend an
entire action against a builder under an additional insured endorsement
remains unchanged under the legislation.
The legislation is also inapplicable to contracts entered into
prior to January 1, 2006, contracts involving commercial construction,
condominium conversions or apartment construction, and also does not
apply to personal injury claims. Further,
AB 758 does not restrict a general contractor’s ability to incorporate
Type I indemnity clauses into its subcontracts so long as the general
contractor is not also a “builder” (I.e., in the business of selling
residential units to the public).
Interestingly, the bill does not specifically mention design
professionals by name, and speaks only in terms of “subcontractors.”
It is thus unclear at this time whether residential builders will
be able to include Type I indemnity provisions in contracts with design
professionals after January 1, 2006.
About the Author:
Dion Cominos is an attorney with the firm of Gordon &
Rees LLP, 275 Battery Street, CA 94111; (415) 875-3133; dcominos@gordonrees.com;
www.gordonrees.com.
=====================================
__________
ARTICLE 5
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Proving
Constructive Acceleration Claims Can be Difficult for Contractors
By:
Katz & Stone
When claiming entitlement to cost for constructive
acceleration, contractors must prove that any time extensions received
were inadequate to remedy their excusable delays.
Time extensions do not have to be granted
immediately, and the mere failure to grant extensions does not, by
itself, constitute constructive acceleration so long as the procedures
set forth in the parties’ contract for time extensions are being
followed.
In Fraser Construction Co. v. United States,
384 F.3d 1354 (Fed Cir. 2004), the government contracted with a
contractor to excavate material from the bottom of a shallow lake.
The contract period was from May to September of 1993. To
facilitate excavation, the water level of the lake was lowered, leaving
only a small stream running through the lakebed which the contractor
diverted with a dike. The contractor designed the dike to
withstand water flow substantially higher than the average water flow
for the lake.
Shortly after the project began, the lake began
experiencing high water flows because of rain in the region. The
high water flows overran and destroyed the dike and caused damage to the
work site. The contractor experienced delays associated with
repairing the dike and inundation of the work site. The contractor
requested a time extension which the government denied but later
granted. The contractor contended that the extensions that were
later granted were not sufficient to compensate it for the extra
expenses it had incurred in dealing with the high water flows, because
upon being told that it would not receive time extensions or that those
extensions would be dealt with later, it was forced to continue its
operations at a substantial additional cost. The contractor further
argued that many of the time extensions that it was ultimately granted
were of no use to it because they were not granted on a timely basis.
The court rejected the contractor’s argument that
the extensions were not timely, finding that it was standard practice
for parties to negotiate after the fact to determine the number of days
to extend the contract period. The court found it significant that
the government followed the standard procedure for reviewing extension
requests and had daily discussions with the contractor regarding delays
and progress on the project.
The court also rejected the contractor’s claim that
the government forced it to accelerate its performance by pressuring it
to work through delays that should have resulted in an extension.
The contractor’s evidence of constructive acceleration consisted of a
letter from the government urging the contractor to adhere to the
contract schedule and threatening termination if it did not. An
expression of concern about progress combined with a refusal to issue
extensions can be the equivalent of an order to accelerate.
However, this letter was sent by the government before the contractor
ever made a claim for excusable delay based on high water flow.
Also, the delays which precipitated the government’s letter were due
to subcontractor problems not associated with high water levels.
As a result of this case,
contractors should be aware that when making claims for constructive
acceleration, they must prove that extensions granted by the government
were not sufficient to offset excusable delays. Furthermore, time
extensions do not have to be granted immediately and the mere failure to
grant extensions does not, by itself, constitute constructive
acceleration so long as the procedures set forth in the parties’
contract for time extensions are being followed.
About the Author:
This article is reprinted with permission from Katz
& Stone, L.L.P. Construction Newsletter (March/April 2005
issue). Katz & Stone’s
practice is devoted to the construction industry, with its attorneys
working exclusively for those who own, develop, design, build and bond
construction projects. The
address is 8230 Leesburg Pike,
Suite
600
,
Vienna
,
VA
22182
. (703) 761-3000.
=====================================
ABOUT
THIS NEWSLETTER & A DISCLAIMER
This newsletter Report is published and edited by J. Kent Holland,
Jr., J.D., a construction lawyer and risk management consultant for Environmental and
Design Professional Liability. The
Report is independent of any insurance company, law firm, or other
entity, and is distributed with the understanding that
ConstructionRisk.com, LLC, and the editor and writers, are not hereby
engaged in rendering legal services or the practice of law. Further,
the content and comments in this newsletter are provided for educational
purposes and for general distribution only, and cannot apply to any
single set of specific circumstances. If you have a legal issue to which
you believe this newsletter relates, we urge you to consult your own
legal counsel. ConstructionRisk.com, LLC, and its writers and editors,
expressly disclaim any responsibility for damages arising from the use,
application, or reliance upon the information contained herein.
=====================================
Copyright 2005, ConstructionRisk.com, LLC
Publisher & Editor: J. Kent Holland, Jr., Esq.
8596 Coral
Gables Lane
Vienna, VA
22182
703-623-1932
Kent@ConstructionRisk.com
_____________________________________________
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