A full day in depth training course on the high risks
involved with the construction contract commercial terms of
indemnity and choice of law/venue; the obligation to provide
additional insured status and contractual liability
insurance; and the value, if any, of anti-indemnity
legislation.
A half day overview seminar on the high risks involved
with the construction contract commercial terms of indemnity
and choice of law/venue; the obligation to provide
additional insured status and contractual liability
insurance; and the value, if any, of anti-indemnity
legislation.
Outline of Commercial Terms and Issues Covered
in the Course/Seminar
Indemnity: Broad form and intermediate form indemnities
make your company contractually responsible for the financial
consequences arising out of claims for personal injury,
including death, and property damage caused by the negligence of
your client. These types of indemnities can also make your
company contractually responsible for paying the costs of your
client’s legal defense of these claims. Learn how to understand,
analyze and evaluate these dangerous commercial terms and how to
negotiate changes that will lower, limit, or eliminate your
company’s risk that may arise out of these terms.
Anti-Indemnity Legislation: 41 States presently have some
form of so called anti-indemnity legislation (statutes) in
place. Is any of this legislation a benefit to your company when
faced with a broad or intermediate form indemnity in your
client’s contract? Not all these various state statutes are
created equal, and a lot of this legislation provides little if
any actual "anti-indemnity" protection to your company. There
are actually only a very few effective state anti-indemnity
statutes. Much or this legislation is a "wolf in sheep’s
clothing". Learn where to find the state by state legislation
and how to read example anti-indemnity statutes to determine if
they have any commercial protection at all for your company from
broad and/or intermediate form indemnities in construction
contracts. Learn about the so called "insurance loophole" in
anti-indemnity legislation.
Additional Insured Status: Granting your client
additional insured status (typically as a contractual
obligation) gives your client the full benefit of your insurance
(typically your General Liability policy) for free. Your client
may be able to make a claim against your company’s insurance for
personal injury, including death, and property damage that
arises out of his direct negligence, or his vicarious liability.
Your company’s insurance carrier will pay the claim, your
company will pay the deductible (it’s your company’s policy) and
the loss history will likely go against your company and may
result in increased future premiums or in the extreme,
cancellation. No insurance, no work. Learn how understand,
evaluate and analyze the risk associated with granting
additional insured status and how to negotiate alternatives that
will lower, limit or eliminate your company’s risk that may
arise out of accepting this contractual obligation.
Contractual Liability Insurance: Contractual liability
insurance is typically a component part of, or separate
endorsement to, your company’s general liability insurance
policy. It is designed to provide some degree of coverage for
your company’s exposure under a broad or intermediate form
indemnity that your company has agreed to accept in a
construction contract. Do you know if your company’s general
liability insurance policy has this coverage? Do you know what
the coverage allows, or disallows, in the way of indemnity
coverage? Learn how understand what contractual liability
insurance covers, how it works, or doesn’t work, and why your
clients really want your company to have this coverage along
with granting them additional insured status. Learn how a
misunderstanding of the extent of this coverage could possibly
place your company in a breach of contract situation.
Choice of Law/Venue: Working on a project in one state,
but contractually subject to the laws of another state? Why?
Your client may have good and valid reasons, but then there may
also be a hidden agenda. The hidden agenda may be to circumvent
the protection afforded by a state’s effective anti-indemnity
legislation. This is called "contractual rendition" and could
expose your company to the risk of a broad or intermediate form
indemnity where you thought you had protection from these
dangerous terms. Learn how to understand the risks that may
arise by agreeing to work in one state but be subject to the
laws of another state.
Benefits of taking this course/seminar: Learn how to
better understand and evaluate the high risk associated with the
commercial terms and conditions typically found in and issues
associated with all construction contracts. Learn how to
protect the assets of your company by lessening or eliminating
commercial risk through successful negotiation of a contract’s
commercial terms and conditions. Insist on and negotiate a fair
and balanced construction contract.
Method: The course is taught using a power point slide
presentation along with numerous examples and handouts of
typical commercial language found in construction contracts.
Copies of all slides and handouts are included in a three ring
binder for all attendees. Constant dialogue between the
instructor and each of the attendees is encouraged. The
dialogue process helps attendees to better understand and
evaluate the risk in the commercial terms presented, and how to
lessen the associated risk by negotiating improved commercial
terms. The course can be taught off-site or at your company
offices.
Typical Course/Seminar Attendees: Contractors,
subcontractors, suppliers of materials to construction projects,
procurement managers, sales personnel and sales managers, risk
managers, insurance managers, project managers, accounting
managers, and all corporate managers and executives interested
in better understanding and managing their company’s commercial
risk exposure assumed in a construction contract. A fair and
balanced construction contract benefits all companies involved
in a construction project.
Time: The full day course typically begins at 8:00am and
concludes at 4:00pm with a one hour lunch break and two fifteen
minute breaks per day. The half day seminar (good for corporate
business meetings) begins at 8:00am and concludes at Noon, with
a fifteen minute break midway through the seminar.
Class Size: Ten to fifteen attendees is a good class
size. Larger or smaller class sizes can be arranged.
Instructor: Mr. Kit Werremeyer, Owner and President,
Southernstar Consultants LLC. Over 30 years of US and
international construction contract negotiation experience. See
web page on this site: "About
the Owner".