What was known as paper contracting in the last century has morphed into construction management (CM) contracting in the 21st century. CM contracting is replacing traditional construction contract practice on many types of projects -- from the largest public and private jobs to small home improvement projects. Traditional construction practice (prime contractor and subcontractor) has disadvantages that every traditional prime contractor knows all too well: risk of loss, oppressive state regulation, warranty problems, construction claims and callbacks. Modern construction managers avoid most of these hazards by limiting their responsibility to what they do best -- construction management. CM contracts leave the construction headaches to others -- liens, trade disputes, slow payment, code compliance, inspections and government regulation.
What is a construction manager (a paper contractor)? That’s easy. A construction manager earns a fee as a consultant:
Reviewing the plans and specs.
Preparing bid packages and evaluating bids.
Checking insurance coverage.
Approving the proposed contracts.
Communicating with contractors and suppliers.
Monitoring day-to-day construction.
Keeping the owner informed of progress.
Approving payment requests.
Assisting with change orders.
Protecting the owner from construction claims.
Directing project closeout.
What's NOT included in a construction manager’s portfolio? That’s easy too. The construction manager earns a fee for consulting services -- period. The construction manager neither buys nor installs materials, has no contracts with the trades and pays no bills. The owner signs contracts with trade contractors, pays all the bills and holds installing contractors responsible for their work.
Most of a construction manager’s task will come as second nature to an experienced general contractor. What won’t come easy is the construction management contract itself. CM contracts are very different from traditional prime contracts -- and have to be drawn precisely to avoid problems with property owners, trade contractors, suppliers and state regulators.
The recent case of Thurber Lumber Co. v Marcario underscores my point. Joe Marcario agreed to manage construction of a new home for Don Nenninger in Suffolk County, NY. Marcario ordered materials from Thurber Lumber and recommended trade contractors for the job. Marcario forwarded bills from subs and suppliers to Nenninger and Nenninger paid those bills directly. That worked fine until Nenninger ran into trouble with financing and stopped making payments. Thurber Lumber sued both the contractor (Marcario) and the owner (Nenninger) for $59,391.51.
The court didn't accept Marcario's claim that he was working as a paper contractor (consultant), not a general contractor. Marcario could have made his CM status clear by giving Thurber a summary of his CM (consulting) contract before placing the first order. A CM contract would have left no doubt that Nenninger alone was liable for materials delivered to the Nenninger job. But Marcario didn’t have a written CM contract. And that was Marcario's $59,391.51 mistake.
The court found Marcario liable for materials Thurber Lumber delivered to the Nenninger job -- just as if Marcario had been the general contractor, not a consultant.
Moral to the Story
Don’t try CM contracting without a good CM contract. Construction Contract Writer drafts CM contracts legal in any state and for any type of work. The trial version is free. And if you need a good "hands on" guide to CM contracting, have a look at the book Paper Contracting. A PDF download is available for less than $30.
Don’t try CM contracting without a good CM contract. Construction Contract Writer drafts CM contracts legal in any state and for any type of work. The trial version is free. And if you need a good "hands on" guide to CM contracting, have a look at the book Paper Contracting. A PDF download is available for less than $30.