Concurrency in Delay Claims
Concurrency in Delay Claims
Concurrency in Delay Claims
Overview
SOME DEFINITIONS HOW DELAYS ARE ASSESSED CASES ON APPORTIONMENT WHY CONCURRENCY MATTERS?
What is concurrency?
Society of Construction Law Delay and Disruption Protocol definitions Oxford Dictionary: Acting in conjunction; cooperating For today competing causes of delay arising during a single period and caused by more than one event. Key factor is that time delay is suffered, not when it occurs.
Kennedys Law LLP
Tort v Contract
Tort
Law is reasonably clear Claimant can recover in full if he establishes that the cause for which the defendant is liable caused or materially contributed to his loss*
Contract
Position less clear and, therefore, potentially more difficult Courts reluctant, prefer to rely on bargain of risk for
Liquidated damages Extensions of time Loss and expense
Overarching principle: Contractor allowed an extension of time where there are concurrent causes of delay one of which is its fault and one of which is not.
* Peak Construction (Liverpool) Ltd v McKinney Foundations Ltd 1 BLR 111 * Henry Boot Construction (UK) Ltd v Malmaison Hotel (Manchester) Ltd (1999) 17 Con LR 32
Conclusions
Concurrent delays are those which arise during a single period, caused by more than one event. It is the time that the delay is suffered, and not the time that the event occurs, that is key. Delays are usually and best assessed by a critical path analysis and contractor should update their programme. Concurrency matters because different delays have different consequences for contractors and employers and because extensions of time and loss and expense claims are dealt with very differently in construction contracts. Contractors will be generally entitled to an extension of time where there are concurrent delays, even if one of those delays is due to his breach. The City Inn and John Doyle cases decided in Scotland have opened the door to an apportionment where there are concurrent delays, but only for loss and expense claims, not for extensions of time. The project owns the float and it is available on a first come, first served basis.