Essential contract coverage to consider.
Construction projects are inherently risky undertakings. A well-drafted construction contract both defines the scope of the work and allocates risk to protect project participants in the event of nonperformance or defective work.
Effective risk allocation assigns responsibility to the party best positioned to control or mitigate a given risk, reducing uncertainty and disputes. Without a clear framework, participants face increased exposure to liabilities and litigation.
Construction contracts allocate risk through mechanisms such as surety bonds, indemnification provisions, insurance requirements and warranties, often using an “all of the above” approach to create a comprehensive risk management scheme.
Bonds
Surety bonds are among the most fundamental risk allocation tools in construction. Their primary purpose is to provide security to project owners and, in the case of payment bonds, subcontractors and suppliers, ensuring that contractual obligations will be fulfilled.
The Tripartite Relationship
A bond creates a relationship among three parties: the principal (typically the contractor), the obligee (usually the owner) and the surety (the bonding company). The surety guarantees the performance of the principal’s obligations to the obligee. If the principal defaults, the surety must step in to remedy the default, subject to the terms of the bond.
Performance & Payment Bonds
These are the two primary types of bonds commonly used on construction projects.
A performance bond guarantees the completion of the contractor’s work according to the contract. If the contractor defaults, the surety may complete the work itself, arrange for completion by another contractor or compensate the owner for the cost of completion up to the penal amount of the bond.
A payment bond, by contrast, protects subcontractors and suppliers by guaranteeing payment for labor and materials furnished for the project up to the penal amount of the bond.
Miller Act & ‘Little Miller Act’ Requirements
On federal public works projects, the Miller Act requires prime contractors to furnish both performance and payment bonds. All 50 states have enacted analogous “Little Miller Acts” that impose similar bonding requirements on state and local public projects.
Bond Claims
Bond claims are not self-executing and are subject to strict procedural requirements. These include providing timely notice of a claim, satisfying statutory prerequisites and complying with contractual conditions precedent. Failure to adhere to these requirements can result in forfeiting bond rights.
Qualified Surety
Qualified sureties are insurance or bonding companies authorized by a state insurance commissioner and/or the U.S. Treasury to issue bonds. These corporate sureties are regulated, ensuring they have the necessary financial resources and stability to back large projects, providing far greater risk mitigation for the obligee and the project.
Indemnity
Indemnification provisions are another cornerstone of construction risk allocation. Their primary purpose is to protect upstream parties — typically owners and general contractors — from liability arising from third-party claims caused by downstream parties’ acts.
Personal Injury & Property Damage Claims
Indemnity clauses are particularly significant for these claims. For example, if a worker employed by a subcontractor is injured on the job or a subcontractor causes damage to third-party-owned property adjacent to the project or to the project itself, the owner and general contractor are often named as defendants.
A properly drafted indemnity provision shifts the financial burden of such claims back to the subcontractor responsible for the work, ensuring that liability rests with the party whose actions caused the loss.
Duty to Defend vs. Duty to Indemnify
This is a critical distinction in indemnity law. The duty to defend typically requires the indemnitor to provide a legal defense to the indemnitee upon the assertion of a covered claim, often at the outset of litigation.
The duty to indemnify concerns the ultimate obligation to pay damages or settlements, which typically is known only at the end of litigation.
Contracts should clearly articulate whether both duties apply and when they are triggered.
First-Party Versus Third-Party Claims
Most construction indemnity clauses focus on third-party liability and protect the owner or general contractor from lawsuits filed by outside parties. Some parties extend indemnity to cover first-party losses (i.e., the direct losses between the contracting parties) such as damages arising from a contractor’s defective work.
Anti-Indemnity Statutes
Most states have anti-indemnity statutes that limit or prohibit clauses requiring one party to indemnify another for the latter’s own negligence. These laws are intended to prevent parties with superior bargaining power from shifting liability to others for losses they did not cause. Because the statutes vary by state, enforceability depends on the project’s jurisdiction.
Insurance
Insurance is a critical component of construction risk management. Unlike indemnity, which reallocates liability among project participants, insurance transfers risk to an external insurer.
Appropriate Insurance Types
Construction contracts typically require a range of insurance coverages, including commercial general liability, workers’ compensation, employer’s liability, and in some cases, builder’s risk or professional liability insurance. The adequacy of these coverage types depends on both the scope of the project and the nature of the risks involved.
Coverage Limits
Ensuring sufficient coverage limits is essential. Inadequate limits can leave parties exposed to significant uninsured losses, particularly in cases involving catastrophic injury or substantial property damage.
Qualified Insurer
Equally important is the financial strength and reliability of the insurer as coverage is only as valuable as the insurer’s ability to pay claims.
Endorsements & Waivers
These two key contractual mechanisms play a central role in maximizing the effectiveness of insurance coverage.
Additional insured endorsements extend coverage under one party’s policy to other project participants, typically upstream parties such as owners and general contractors. This allows those parties to access the subcontractor’s insurance directly in the event of a claim.
Waivers of subrogation prevent insurers from pursuing recovery against other project participants after paying a claim. These waivers reduce the likelihood of intraproject litigation and promote a more collaborative risk-sharing environment.
Cost to Defend
Insurance also affects claims defense. When coverage is triggered, insurers typically assume the defense, appoint counsel and control litigation strategy. While this can reduce costs, it may create tensions if the insurer’s interests diverge from those of the insured. In addition, defense costs are often deducted from policy limits, potentially reducing funds available for covering the loss.
Warranty
While bonds, indemnity and insurance primarily address third-party risks and financial exposure, warranties provide direct assurances regarding the quality and durability of the contractor’s work.
Guarantee of Work Quality
The primary purpose of a warranty is to ensure that the work conforms to contractual requirements and that it is free from defects. Warranties provide owners with defined remedies if the work fails to meet contractual standards, typically requiring the contractor to repair or replace defective work at their own expense.
Long-Term Assurance of Quality
Warranty provisions typically require the contractor to agree to repair or replace defective work, including into the warranty period, which may range from one to several years, depending on the contract and applicable law.
Latent Defects
Warranties are particularly important in addressing deficiencies that are not apparent at the time of completion but emerge later. By extending the contractor’s responsibility beyond completion, warranties provide a mechanism for resolving such issues without resorting to litigation.
A construction contract should function as a coordinated system of complementary risk management tools. Bonds, indemnity, insurance and warranties each address different risks, and no single mechanism is sufficient. These provisions must be aligned to reduce uncertainty, promote project stability, and meaningfully lower the likelihood and impact of disputes.