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THE 'LIEN-ABILITY' OF FIELD CHANGE
DIRECTIVES UNDER TYPICAL
CONSTRUCTION LIEN LAWS?
7/06/2016
AUTHORS
Jonathan M. Preziosi
Partner | 609.951.4153
Stephanie L. Jonaitis
Senior Attorney | 609.951.4212
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PUBLICATIONS
This article was published in the June 2016 issue of ConsensusDocs (Vol. 2, No. 3).
It is reprinted here with permission.
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Materiality Is the New Condition of Payment:
The Implied False Certification Theory After
.
Consider this scenario taken from an actual project dispute: The contractor has
entered into an agreement with the owner for a project of any size. During the course
of the project, the owner directs the contractor to perform additional work under a
1
written “field change directive,” pending execution of a formal change order. 1 The
written field change directive sets forth the scope of the additional work to be
performed by the contractor and states that payment will be calculated on a time and
materials basis. The original contract documents contain a schedule assigning unit
price values to particular categories of labor and materials.
The contract also states,
however, that the stipulated contract price shall not be amended until there is a fully
executed change order.
The Implied False Certification Theory After
Escobar
Prior to the written field change directive being embodied into a final, formal change
order, the owner becomes insolvent and does not have the funding to pay for work
already completed. The contractor, now being owed some or all of the original contract
price plus payment for work performed under the field change directive, wants to file a
lien under the construction lien law of the state where the project is located (the Lien
Law). Because construction lien laws in some states provide that a lien can only be
filed for the unpaid portion of the stipulated contract price or amended contract price,
however, a very legitimate question arises: Is the unpaid portion of the work
performed under the written field change directive “lien-able” under the Lien Law?
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Owners might answer this question in the negative.
They would argue that, until the
work performed under the field change directive is finalized and perfected into a final
change order pursuant to the terms of the contract, there is no amended contract
price and the work cannot form the basis for a lien. Contractors, on the other hand,
would answer the question in the affirmative, arguing that the written field change
directive constitutes a written amendment to the contract price and therefore will
support a lien. To resolve the obvious disagreement and differing of interests of the
owner, contractor and, in most cases, subcontractors, one needs to the turn to the
express language of the applicable Lien Law and the policy behind it.
New Jersey’s Construction Lien Law, for example, is typical in limiting lien claims to
the unpaid portion of the contract price or amended contract price.
The law permits
contractors or subcontractors to lien property for the value of the work or services
performed “in accordance with [a] contract and based upon the contract price.” The
law defines “contract” as “any agreement, or amendment thereto, in writing, signed by
the party against whom the lien claim is asserted and evidencing the respective
responsibilities of the contracting parties[.]” Therefore, in order to support a lien, a lien
claimant must demonstrate that there is a contract or amendment thereto that (i) is in
writing, (ii) sets forth the parties’ respective obligations and (iii) evidences a contract
or adjusted contract price.
Thus, to the extent that the field change directive is in writing and sets forth (i) the
parties’ obligations (e.g., scope of work to be performed) and (ii) the manner by which
the extra work will be priced, the argument may be made that the additional work
should be lien-able. Provided that these elements are present, the contractor would
argue that it should be entitled to assert a lien related to the unpaid portion of the
written field directive in accordance with the typical Lien Law.
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. The policies behind the typical Lien Law, it could be argued, also support the
conclusion that written field directives are lien-able. The purpose of the “written
contract” requirement of the New Jersey Construction Lien Law, for example, is to
“provide ‘tangible evidence that will reduce the factual proof problems in litigated
matters and provide a sound basis for third parties to evaluate the merits of the lien
claim.’”2 That legislative purpose of the “written contract” requirement, the contractor
could assert, is fully satisfied by field change directives that are in writing and set
forth the respective responsibilities of the parties and the applicable pricing terms for
the extra work.
Additionally, the contractor could argue that the “written contract” requirement should
also be construed in a manner consistent with the broader underlying policies of the
typical Lien Law. The New Jersey Lien Law, like many others, was primarily enacted
to “guarantee effective security to those who furnish labor or materials to enhance the
3
value of the property of others [.]”3 The statute is to be read “sensibly” and “with an
4
understanding of the policies underlying the Lien Law.”4 Accordingly, so long as the
written field change directive and the associated contract price change are readily
quantifiable and verifiable, the field change directive is enforceable, the contractor
would maintain, because it satisfies both the letter and the spirit of the common Lien
Law’s “written contract” requirement.
There is another policy consideration to be explored. If field change directives are not
lien-able until they are processed into “final” change orders, the ability of construction
projects to continue without interruption and delay would be severely impeded.
Field
change directives are not only customary in the industry, but are also integral to the
industry’s ability to ensure that projects do not come to a halt every time a change is
encountered or extra work is assigned, until a final change order can be issued.
Owners need the ability to direct the performance of extra work while the total cost of
that work is still being quantified, and contractors who dutifully perform that work on a
lump sum or time and materials basis pending issuance of a formal change order
need to know that their work is protected by the Lien Law. The vital role of the field
change directive or “construction change directive” is well-established in the
construction industry and “common practice … to get the work rolling when the owner,
contractor and architect are unable to agree on the price or time adjustments for the
5
change.”5 Consequently, contractors engaging in the customary industry practices of
performing additional work pursuant to a field change directive should most certainly
be afforded a Lien Law’s protections. The use of field change directives would be
severely chilled, and the progress of construction projects throughout the industry
would be obstructed, if the courts were to adopt a rule that extra work performed on a
time and materials basis pursuant to a field change directive cannot be liened, no
matter how well documented, if the party who issued the field change directive goes
defunct while that work is midstream and issuance of a final change order is still
pending.
These arguments would weigh in favor of the contractor’s position that written field
change directives are lien-able.
Accordingly, and absent other countervailing
circumstances, a contractor could credibly argue that it should not be considered a
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. violation of a Lien Law for the contractor to file a construction lien that includes unpaid
amounts billed pursuant to a written field change directive that sets forth a method for
calculating the changed price.
Endnotes Example
1 Field change directives are also often referred to as construction change directives,
field change authorizations or other nomenclature defined by contract. The
ConsensusDocs® 200 refers to them as “Interim Directed Changes.”
2 Patock Const. v. GVK Enters.
, 372 N.J. Super. 380, 386 (App.
Div. 2004) (quoting
Legge Indus. v.
Joseph Kushner Hebrew Acad./JKHA , 333 N.J. Super. 537, 562 (App.
Div.
2000)).
3 Craft v. Stevenson Lumber Yard, 179 N.J. Super.
56, 67 (2004) (quoting Thomas
Group, Inc. v. Wharton Senior Citizen Hous., Inc.
, 163 N.J. 507, 517 (2000)).
4 Id. at 68.
See also Thomas Group, 163 N.J. at 517-19 (stating that the lien statutes
“are designed to guarantee effective security to those who furnish labor or materials
used to enhance the value of property of others and, where the terms of the statute
reasonably permit, the law should be construed to effect this remedial purpose”)
(emphasis added).
5 J. Charles Sheak & Timothy J.
Korzun, Old Game, New Rules: A Brief Guide to
1987 Changes in the A.I.A. A201, General Conditions of the Contract for Construction,
8-AUG Construction Law 3, 5 (1988) (noting the amendment to A.I.A. Form A201,
which incorporated a construction change directive provision, is in accord with the
industry standard to use such directives during the course of a project).
The material in this publication was created as of the date set forth above and is
based on laws, court decisions, administrative rulings and congressional materials
that existed at that time, and should not be construed as legal advice or legal opinions
on specific facts.
The information in this publication is not intended to create, and the
transmission and receipt of it does not constitute, a lawyer-client relationship.
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