Ethics Aspect of Construction Assignment
Ethics Aspect of Construction Assignment
Ethics Aspect of Construction Assignment
1506712032
Ethics Aspect of Construction Assignment
Case Study :
Eighteen months into the project, the owner found several failures which submitted
by the contractor; the slow progress and poor quality of the works. Accordingly, the
owner served some causes that the contractor was in default by separate substantial
breaches under the contract and requiring the contractor to show cause (in writing) why
the principal should not:
1. Take the whole or part of the remaining work out of the contractor’s hands; or
According to the initial contract, the causes must (among other things) specify the
alleged substantial breach. The allegations of substantial breach made against the
contractor, in the show causes, were failed to;
1. Proceed with the works with due expedition and without delay;
However, the owner determined that the contractor had not shown cause, so then
the owner took the work out of the contractor’s hands and engaged a third party
contractor to complete the work. The contractor responded to the show cause and
complaint that the show cause did not specify the alleged substantial breaches with
sufficient particulars and were therefore invalid. Accordingly, the principal’s attitude in
taking the work out of the contractor’s hands was unlawful.
Argument :
In a project, the contractors are strictly mandated to complete the project on time,
except when prohibited by the owner or relieved by the explicit provision of the contract.
The effect of extending time is to maintain the obligation that the contractor is required to
complete the project within the stipulated time, and for damages which caused by the
contractor's nonperformance, the contractor bears the liability for damages according to
the terms of the contract (Egglestone, 2001). The time extension also has various
purposes, such as; to retained stipulated time of completion, to escape the strict
obligation to keep the completion without delay due to the designated neutral event, and
to retain the owner’s rights to liquidated damages against acts of prevention. And about
the reimbursement, the delay time is reimbursable or not is determined from the cause or
reasons of the delay time and the proof of cost arising, unless the owner has been
granted an extension time. (Egglestone, 2001). However, the claim has to be made under
several sub-clauses, if the contractor also asks reimbursement of additional costs and
reasonable profit. There are two delays of completion time; rate of progress and delay
damages. When the owner found that the rate of progress is too slow to complete within
the time for completion, the owner entitled to require the contractor to revised the
working methods in order to speed up the works and finish without delay. The owner may
do so only if the causes of the delay time are reasonable. Delay damages occur if the
contractor fails to finish the project within the time for completion calculated from the
commencement date, the contractor should pay to the owner as written in the final
contract, which represents a genuine pre-estimate of the damages likely to be suffered.
References :
• Potts, Keith. Construction Cost Management. USA: Taylor & Francis, 2008, pages
268-269.