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Volume 6 - Number 03 | January 21, 2008

EDITOR'S NOTES
Factoring arrangements allow an under-capitalized contractor to improve its cash-flow and perform contracts that might otherwise be beyond its reach. The contractor sells its accounts receivable in the form of approved progress payment invoices to a finance company or "factor." The factor promptly pays the contractor a discounted amount for the receivable and the contractor assigns the full progress payment to the factor. Factoring agreements can be tricky, however. The factor relies on representations from the other party to the construction contract regarding the approved status of the progress payment invoice. What happens if a representation proves to be inaccurate? A federal appeals court was called upon to sort out the respective rights and responsibilities in this situation.

Also this week, the ASBCA instructs that a prime contractor cannot adopt a subcontractor’s certification by reference. All paperwork must be in order when the contractor submits the sub’s claim. And, a federal appeals court distinguishes between a construction change directive and a claim.

Finally, John Livengood presents the fourth article in his series on the AACEI’s recently released Recommended Practice 29R-03 – Forensic Schedule Analysis. This article addresses some of the more controversial topics in forensic schedule analysis.


SUB’S FINANCE COMPANY COULD SUE PRIME OVER PROGRESS PAYMENTS
A finance company that fronts money to a subcontractor in a factoring arrangement can sue the prime contractor if the prime knowingly misrepresents the status of the subcontractor’s progress payment invoices.

PRIME CONTRACTOR MUST CERTIFY SPONSORED SUBCONTRACTOR CLAIM
A prime contractor cannot retroactively certify a claim that it sponsors for its subcontractor. The certification must happen when the claim is filed or the claim will be deemed invalid.

“CONSTRUCTION CHANGES” DISTINGUISHED FROM “CLAIMS” UNDER THE AIA CONTRACT DOCUMENTS
Settlement of a construction change directive is not the same thing as a settlement of a claim, rules a federal appeals court. Settling a CCD does not prohibit the pursuit of a claim.

THE NEW AACEI RECOMMENDED PRACTICE ON FORENSIC SCHEDULE ANALYSIS, PART FOUR: ANALYSIS EVALUATION
By John C. Livengood
Some of the most controversial topics in forensic schedule analysis—excusability and compensability, the Critical Path, concurrency and pacing, and acceleration and mitigation—are the focus of this fourth article on the AACEI’s recently released Recommended Practice.