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You are here: Home1 / Civil Procedure2 / Nature of a “Turn-Key” or “Design-Build” Contract...
Civil Procedure, Contract Law

Nature of a “Turn-Key” or “Design-Build” Contract Explained—Three-Year Statute of Limitations for Malpractice Applied to Defendant Architects Who Were Engaged Solely to Design, Not Build, the Renovations

In a lawsuit stemming from the failure of a building facade, the Third Department determined that the contract between plaintiff property-owner and defendant architects was not a “turn-key” or “design-build” contract, which encompassed the entire construction project, but rather was a professional services contract for the design of building renovations.  Therefore the three-year statute of limitations for professional malpractice applied. The Third Department affirmed the dismissal of the complaint, explaining the nature of a “design-build” contract:

In “turnkey” or “design-build” construction projects, “an owner contracts with one entity to both design and build the project [and t]he turnkey builder is responsible for every phase of the construction from final design through subcontracting, construction, finishing and testing” … . The design-builder generally cannot shift liability and is the “single point [of] responsibility” under a design-build contract, because it is “the [d]esign-[b]uilder [who] has the responsibility of the preliminary and construction design, the responsibility of submitting a fixed sum for the construction of the project and the responsibility for holding the contracts with its trade contractors” … . As plaintiff asserts, it follows that nearly every design-build project involves the existence of two or more contracts — at least one among the members of the design-build team and one between the design-builder and the owner. Here, however, it was not defendant, the purported design-builder, who held the separate contract with the general contractor, but plaintiff as the owner. * * *

…[W]e conclude that plaintiff’s … causes of action — alleging that defendant was negligent and breached the parties’ contract by failing to use reasonable care in rendering its professional services — essentially allege professional malpractice … . Such claims “‘come[] within the purview of CPLR 214 (6),'” which sets forth a three-year statute of limitations for nonmedical malpractice, “‘regardless of whether the theory is based in tort or breach of contract'”… . We note that “‘a claim for professional malpractice against an engineer or architect accrues upon the completion of performance under the contract and the consequent termination of the parties’ professional relationship'” … . 797 Broadway Group LLC v Stracher Roth Gilmore Architects, 2014 NY Slip Op 08689, 3rd Dept 12-11-14

 

December 11, 2014
Tags: Third Department
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