Construction Contracts Force Majeure In Houston

State:
Multi-State
City:
Houston
Control #:
US-00462
Format:
Word; 
Rich Text
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Description

The Construction Contracts Force Majeure in Houston document provides a comprehensive framework for agreements between contractors and owners in construction projects. It outlines essential elements such as the scope of work, work site specifications, and the requirement for obtaining necessary permits. Key features include the contractor's responsibilities regarding soil conditions, insurance obligations, and the process for modifying the scope of work through written change orders, ensuring clarity and accountability. The form specifies payment structures, either as a cost-plus or fixed fee, and addresses late payments with a defined penalty. This contract includes a warranty clause, limiting the contractor's liability for defects in workmanship. This form is especially useful for attorneys, partners, owners, associates, paralegals, and legal assistants involved in construction projects. They can utilize it to ensure all contractual obligations are documented clearly, mitigating potential disputes. The form serves as a standard reference, helping parties involved understand their rights and responsibilities, which is crucial in navigating the complexities of construction law in Houston.
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FAQ

Many contracts include a "force majeure" or "act of God" clause. A force majeure clause is a part of a contract that says if something unexpected happens, one or both parties may be excused from doing what the contract says they should do.

In the construction industry, force majeure is a term used to describe insurmountable problems that can affect the completion of your project and the terms of the contract. Another way you may have heard of this is “Acts of God” or “Natural Disasters” when it comes to different types of insurance.

If a contract is silent on force majeure or if the event does not meet the definition of force majeure under the parties' contract, a party's performance may still be excused in certain circumstances under the doctrine of commercial impracticability.

A "force majeure" clause (French for "superior force") is a contract provision that relieves the parties from performing their contractual obligations when certain circumstances beyond their control arise, making performance inadvisable, commercially impracticable, illegal, or impossible.

In Clause 19 of the FIDIC 1999 Red2, Yellow3 and Silver4 Books, the term "Force Majeure" is principally identified as being an "exceptional" event or circumstance, beyond the Party's control, and something that it could not have reasonably provided against before entering into the Contract.

Commonly referred to as “acts of God”, force majeure events are unforeseeable, exceptional or out with the control of contracting parties. Examples include natural disaster, terrorism, industrial strike action, fire and pandemic/epidemic events such as Covid-19.

For events to constitute the use of force majeure, they must be unforeseeable, external to contract parties, and unavoidable. Force majeure means “greater force” and is related to an act of God, an event for which no party can be held accountable.

Exhaustive, of examples of force majeure events. Force majeure events generally can be divided into two basic groups: natural events and political events. These may include earthquakes, floods, fire, plague, Acts of God (as defined in the contract or in applicable law) and other natural disasters.

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Construction Contracts Force Majeure In Houston