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Volume 5 - Number 33 | August 20, 2007
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EDITOR'S NOTES
This weeks first case reads more like a Hollywood marquee than a construction lawsuit. Erin Brockovich Ellis hired Femme Fatale Development to remodel her home in Los Angeles shortly after the success of the movie that bore Brockovichs name. The developers president signed the contract with Brockovich Ellis, who did not know at the time that the business did not have a current contractors license. A series of legal scuffles ensued after work began. The main questions in the present case are these: If a contract is declared null, does the attorney fee clause survive? And, can a corporate president be held personally liable for attorney fees if the contract was signed in the presidents corporate capacity? In the instant case, the answer to both questions is yes, says a California appeals court.
Though the players in the second case this week are not as high profile, they face a similar question: Can a subcontractor be held personally liable for a breach of warranty if he signs a contract without proper corporate protections? Again, the answer is yes.
Finally, a municipal agency is faulted for not giving reasonable time extensions to a contractor after issuing numerous change orders.
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ATTORNEY FEE SHIFTING CLAUSE SURVIVED VOID CONTRACT
A contracts attorney fee clause endures despite the demise of the contract. The corporate president is found personally liable because she relied on the voided contract to make her argument against personal liability.
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ON THE MOVE
Find out who got hired and who got promoted in this new column. Want to see your companys latest news here? E-mail it to editor@wpl.net.
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