DownloadThe Portobello Bookshop Gift Guide 2024

Extra-Contractual Recoveries for Construction and Engineering Work

Robert Fenwick Elliott author

Format:Set / collection

Publisher:London Publishing Partnership

Published:12th May '22

Should be back in stock very soon

Extra-Contractual Recoveries for Construction and Engineering Work cover

This book of construction law contains a unique in-depth analysis of legal routes to payment for construction and engineering work that are not evident from the express words of the contract. These extra-contractual remedies are of great importance, but are frequently underused. This book brings them together in a unified way for the first time. They include claims in damages for breach of implied terms, quantum meruit, negligence, statutory recoveries, and other legal principles that may be in invoked - including prevention, impossibility, and relief from forfeiture to circumvent contractual obstacles to payment, and the impact of fraud and unconscionability. Particularly useful are the book's checklists, prompting the reader to explore possible causes of action that may not otherwise present themselves as available. The first volume contains the main text, and the second volume reproduces the key passages from decided cases and legislation in England, Australia and other common law jurisdictions around the world, which underpin these extra-contractual remedies. The book is an incisive and compelling practical guide by one of the most successful construction litigators of his generation.

"This text, the magnum opus of an already impressive oeuvre, will make a formidable contribution to the domain of construction law and provide great value to counsel, arbitrators, judges and construction industry participants at all levels of the industry." From the Foreword by Douglas Jones, international commercial and investor/state arbitrator and an International Judge of the Singapore International Commercial Court.

ISBN: 9781913019570

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

1280 pages