Gregory J. Spaun is a Partner at Welby, Brady & Greenblatt, LLP, practicing construction and commercial litigation, and real estate and property litigation.
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There are two truisms within the construction industry: there is no such thing as perfect construction; and, like litigation, even the best construction resembles organized chaos. Unfortunately, such chaos—even organized—invariably leads to disputes. While many contract drafters attempt to avoid disputes (a fool’s errand, some say), the best contracts are drafted to manage and resolve the disputes once they arise. So, how does one best protect a construction client from the claims and other issues which are de rigueur on a construction project? This program will examine the types of claims which generally manifest on a construction project, how to best assert (or defend against) those claims, and how a construction dispute generally gets resolved.
Key topics to be discussed:
Closed-captioning available
Gregory J. Spaun | Welby, Brady & Greenblatt, LLP
Gregory J. Spaun is a Partner at Welby, Brady & Greenblatt, LLP, practicing construction and commercial litigation, and real estate and property litigation. Mr. Spaun’s representative work includes cases such as North Star Construction Corp. v MTA Capital Construction Corp., where, on appeal, he rebuffed an owner/designer’s attempt to have a negligent misrepresentation claim dismissed, successfully arguing that the owner/designer, by specifying a sole source supplier and then working with that supplier when issues arose as to the novel product the owner has specified, had a relationship with the subcontractor which was the “functional equivalent of privity” sufficient to maintain such a claim despite that no direct contractual relationship existed between the subcontractor and the owner/designer.
Mr. Spaun’s work also includes 110 Central Park South Corp. v 112 Central Park South, LLC, where he was successful in arguing that the former common law implied housing warranty was subsumed into the recently enacted Section 777 of New York’s General Business Law, which provides a statutory housing warranty on buildings which are five stories or less, thus negating the ability of the owner of a 29 story cooperative building to assert such a claim. Mr. Spaun, in Kamco Supply Corp. v JMT Brothers Realty, LLC, was also successful in rebuffing a claim on appeal by an unlicensed home improvement contractor’s material supplier, thus reminding the construction community of the importance of vetting the licensure status of their upstream contractors so as to preserve their ability to assert claims which are derivative of the general contractor’s claims, such as mechanic’s lien claims. In addition to his work at WB&G, Mr. Spaun serves as General Counsel to the Queens and Bronx Building Association.
I. Types of Claims in Construction Projects | 1:00pm – 1:30pm
II. Managing and Asserting Construction Claims | 1:30pm – 2:00pm
Break | 2:00pm – 2:10pm
III. Defending Against Construction Claims | 2:10pm – 2:40pm
IV. Resolution of Construction Disputes | 2:40pm – 3:10pm
only $395 yearly
only $395 yearly