Title: Con E 221
1Con E 221
- Review graded exams on Monday
- Review presentation guideline for term papers
- Finalize presentation schedule on Monday
2Construction Engineering 221
3RPQ
- 1. A surety bond is a type of insurance.
- A. True B. False
- 2. Approximately ___________ of all construction
firms in operation today will be out of business
in seven years. - A. One-third B. One-half C. Two-thirds
- 3. Surety bonds are required by law on public as
well as private construction jobs. - A. True B. False
4RPQ 1
- 1. A surety bond is a type of insurance.
- A. True B. False
- Correct Answer is B. False
5RPQ 2
- 2. Approximately ___________ of all construction
firms in operation today will be out of business
in seven years. - A. One-third B. One-half C. Two-thirds
- Correct Answer is B. One-half
6RPQ 3
- 3. Surety bonds are required by law on public as
well as private construction jobs. - A. True B. False
- Correct Answer is B. False
7 8What is a Surety?
- Surety a party that assumes liability for the
debt, default or failure in duty of another. - Surety Bond a contract that outlines the
conditions of the assumed liability by a Surety.
9Surety Bond
- Remember A surety bond is not an insurance
policy - Insurance protects from risk of loss
- Surety Bond guarantees the performance of a
defined contractual duty. - Surety Bond an extension of credit that serves
as an endorsement to a contractual relationship
10Parties to a Surety Bond
- Obligee Owner
- Principle Prime Contractor Gen. Contractor
- Surety entity providing the surety bond
- Lending Institution organization that provides
financial loan to obligee for construction and
long term (mortgage)
11Surety Bonds More Definition
- Contract Surety Bonds Surety Bonds Contract
Bonds Construction Contract Bonds - Surety agrees to indemnify the Obligee (Owner),
against any default or failure in duty of the
Principle (Gen. Contractor)
12What does indemnify mean?
- To secure against hurt, loss, or damage
- To make compensation to for incurred hurt, loss,
or damage (hold harmless)
13Failure in Duty
- Failure in duty breach of contract
- i.e. Non-payment of labor (wages, benefits,
payroll taxes), stops work through no fault of
the owner, non-payment of subcontractors and
suppliers after being paid by the owner
14Surety Bonds More Definition
- Contact Bond
- Three-party agreement
- Guarantees
- Work completed in accordance with contract
documents (plans, specifications) - All construction costs will be paid
- Labor, benefits, payroll taxes
- Materials
- Subcontractors
15Surety Coverage?
- Regardless of the reason, if the prime contractor
fails to fulfill its contractual obligations, the
surety must assume the obligations of the
contractor and see that the contract is
completed, paying all costs up to the face amount
of the bond. (in the book) - Not just provide money to get the project
completed but actually responsible for finishing
the contract.
16Why Surety?
- Approximately one half of all construction
contracting firms in operation today will not be
in business seven years from now. - Why Surety? Because construction is a very risky
business. A risk that some owners are not
prepared or able to assume.
17Other Info
- Bond can not be invoked until the contractor is
in formal breach of the contract - Contract bonds are always written documents
- Obligations of the bond provisions of the
contract - Required on public projects by law
- Not required by law on private projects owners
call - The dollar amount in which the bond is written
for is called the penalty amount
18Prime Contractors Three Principle
Responsibilities
19Prime Contractors Three Principle
Responsibilities
- Prime Contractors three principle
responsibilities - Honor its bid and sign all contract documents if
awarded the contract - To perform the objectives of the contract
- Pay all cost associated with the work
20Con E 221 Revised Schedule
- Monday, Nov. 4th
- Change for presentations Must use Power Point
Presentation - Surety Bonds (continued)
- Tuesday, Nov. 5th
- Return EXAM 3
- Presentation Schedule
- Power Point Presentation guidelines and tips
- Wednesday, Nov. 6th
- Construction Insurance
- Thursday, Nov. 7th
- Term Papers are due at beginning of class at
1100 AM - Construction Insurance
- Monday, Nov. 11th
- First day of term paper presentations
- Split classes 11 AM and 4 PM
21Three Types of Bonds
- A Surety covers these responsibilities through
- Bid Bond
- Performance Bond
- Payment Bond
- Public separate bonds
- Private sometimes Performance Payment bond
are combined into one contract bond
22Bid Bond
- Guarantees the owner that the contractor will
honor it bid and will sign all contract documents
if awarded the contact. - Owner is the Obligee
- Obligee may sue principal (prime contractor) and
surety to enforce the bond - What happens if principal refuses to honor its
bid?
23Contractor Does Not Honor Their Bid
- Principal and surety are liable on the bond for
any additional costs the owner incurs in
reletting the contract. - This usually is the difference in dollar amount
between the low bid and the second low bid. - The penalty sum of a bid bond often is ten to
twenty percent of the bid amount.
24Performance Bond
- Guarantees
- Contract performed
- Owner receives its structure
- Build in accordance with contract
- Covers warranty period (normally one year)
- Premium includes warranty period coverage
- If the principal defaults what are the options
for the surety?
25Three Choices
- If principal defaults, or is terminated for
default by the owner the surety has three
choices - Complete the contract itself through a completion
contractor - Select a new contractor to contract directly with
the owner - Allow the owner to complete the work with the
surety paying the costs
26Payment Bond
- Protection of third parties to contract
- Guarantees payment of labor and materials used or
supplied in the performance of construction - Not required on privately financed work few
state statutes - Protects against liens
- What are liens?
27What are liens?
- Right created by law to secure payment for work
performed and material furnished in the
improvement of land - A lien is recorded (with county recorders office)
against the title or deed for a property (land
and/or building) - A Title to your new car will have a lien
holder, your bank, if you have a car loan
28Statutory vs Common Law Bonds
- Payment Bonds are either statutory or common-law
- Public statutory (prescribed by law)
- Private common law (the bond instrument)
- Bond Forms
- Public standard by federal government written
in accordance with Miller Act - Private AIA form
29The Miller Act
- Enacted in 1935
- All federal projects greater than 25,000
performance and payment bond required - 100 percent of the contract amount
- Protects first and second tier subcontractors
only - Cannot sue on the payment bond until 90 days
after the last day labor was performed on job
30Bond Premiums
- To compute contract bond premiums construction
contracts are divided up into four
classifications (see pg 183) - A-1
- A
- B
- Miscellaneous
- More than one classification high premium rate
controls
31The Surety
- Subject to public regulation same as insurance
industry - Approved by the U.S. Treasury Department for
government projects - A. M. Best Insurance Reports financial ratings
for insurance and surety companies - Owners can require a minimum Best Rating for the
surety
32M. Bests Ratings of Surety http//www.ambest.com/
- Secure Bests Ratings
- A and A (Superior)
- A and A- (Excellent)
- B and B (Very Good)
- Vulnerable Bests Ratings
- B and B- (Fair)
- C and C (Marginal)
- C and C- (Weak)
- D (Poor)
- E (Under Regulatory Supervision)
- F (In Liquidation)
- S (Rating Suspended)
The rating symbols "A", "A", "A", "A-", "B",
and "B" are registered certification marks of
the A.M. Best Company, Inc.
33The Surety
- Owners may name the surety company for the
contractor to use NOT RECOMMENDED PRACTICE, but
is LEGAL for private work - Contractor typically have one surety (bonding
company) that has pre-approved contractor - Surety pre-approval takes time and involves a
review of audited financial statements and other
records - Co-sureties large project one surety does not
have the financial capacity for large risks
34Indemnity of Surety
- Surety indemnifies the owner against default by
the contractor - Contractor indemnifies the surety against claims
and damages due to contractors failure to
perform - Surety is not legally obligated to provide
payment and performance bond if they provided bid
bond but always do
35Bonding Capacity
- Maximum dollar value of uncompleted work the
surety will allow the contractor to have on going - Based on contractors net worth and cash
liquidity - Surety may also limit dollar value of one project
- Example total bonding capacity of 5 million
- maximum project bond of 1 million
36Surety Agent
- Local representative for surety
- Many agents are independent and sell contract
bonds by multiple surety companies - In reality, Bid Bonds cost the contractor nothing
no cost, as a professional courtesy - If contractor is the low bidder the surety agent
wants the opportunity to sell the contract bonds
37Subcontractor Bonds
- Contract bond that covers the performance of
subcontractors - Common on private projects
- Requested by and paid by owner
- Cost 0.5 to 1 for excellent subcontractors
- 1 to 2 for good subcontractors
- gt2 for average to marginal subs
- (cost is a percentage of subcontract value)
38Miscellaneous Surety Bonds
- Bonds to Release Retainage
- Bonds to Discharge Liens or Claims
- Commonly called bonding over a lien
- Bonds to Indemnify Owner Against Liens
- License Bonds
- Self-Insurers Workers Compensation Bond
- Union Wage Bond