On Behalf of Meynardie & Nanney, PLLC | Mar 25, 2019 | Blog, Business Law, Construction Contracts, Construction Contracts & Litigation, Construction Litigation, Firm News
by Bob Meynardie December 11, 2014 Bob Meynardie, Construction Contracts, Construction Contracts & Litigation, Construction Litigation The most commonly used general conditions (AIA A201 – 2007) provides that an owner may terminate a construction contract...
On Behalf of Meynardie & Nanney, PLLC | Mar 25, 2019 | Blog, Business Law, Construction Contracts, Construction Contracts & Litigation, Construction Litigation
by Bob Meynardie April 11, 2015 Bob Meynardie, Construction Contracts, Construction Contracts & Litigation, Construction Litigation North Carolina General Statute § 1-50(a)(5) provides that “[n]o action to recover damages based upon or arising out of the...
On Behalf of Meynardie & Nanney, PLLC | Mar 25, 2019 | Blog, Business Law, Construction Contracts, Construction Contracts & Litigation, Firm News
by Bob Meynardie July 15, 2016 Bob Meynardie, Construction Contracts, Construction Contracts & Litigation Our Top 10 Construction Terms series identifies and discusses the key construction contract provisions that affect risk allocation among the project...
On Behalf of Meynardie & Nanney, PLLC | Mar 25, 2019 | Blog, Business Law, Construction Contracts
by Bob Meynardie August 15, 2016 Bob Meynardie, Construction Contracts Our Top 10 Construction Terms series identifies and discusses the key construction contract provisions that affect risk allocation among the project participants. Indemnification Part 1 described...
On Behalf of Meynardie & Nanney, PLLC | Mar 25, 2019 | Blog, Business Law, Construction Contracts, Construction Contracts & Litigation
by Bob Meynardie June 30, 2017 Bob Meynardie, Construction Contracts, Construction Contracts & Litigation Although virtually any contract provision can impact the outcome of a dispute, most significant contract disputes are determined by how risks are allocated in...
On Behalf of Meynardie & Nanney, PLLC | Mar 25, 2019 | Blog, Business Law, Construction Contracts, Construction Contracts & Litigation
by Bob Meynardie July 22, 2017 Bob Meynardie, Construction Contracts, Construction Contracts & Litigation Under North Carolina law, pay when paid clauses are unenforceable. Simple enough, in theory. To be more specific, “payment by the owner to a contractor is not...