Legal Expertise for Oklahoma Contractors
What is the Role of the Oklahoma Construction Industries Board?
The Oklahoma Construction Industries Board (CIB) is responsible for regulating the construction industry through licensing, registration, inspection, and enforcement. The CIB issues licenses and registrations to contractors, subcontractors, and tradespeople who meet the state's requirements for education, experience, and competence. The board oversees skilled trade examining committees and ensures that professionals performing construction work meet the statewide minimum competency required by statute. Additionally, the CIB investigates complaints and disciplinary actions against licensees who violate state laws or regulations. Contractors may need legal assistance when working with the CIB, and a Tulsa construction attorney can help navigate the complex regulatory environment of the construction industry and protect their rights and interests. Read more »
Navigating Legal Pitfalls with Competitive Bidding for Construction Projects
Competitive bidding in the construction industry in Oklahoma can be complex and highly regulated, with several legal pitfalls that contractors and project owners should be aware of. To ensure compliance and avoid legal issues, it's crucial to work with experienced legal counsel. Contact an Oklahoma construction attorney at 918-770-9330 for a low-cost initial consultation. Read more »
Understanding Legal Issues in Construction Projects: A Guide for Stakeholders
Construction projects are complex and subject to a variety of legal constraints. From contract law and construction liens to building codes and regulations, compliance with legal requirements is essential. A Tulsa construction attorney can help navigate these complex issues and protect your interests. They can provide guidance on drafting contracts, understanding your rights and obligations with construction liens, resolving disputes, ensuring compliance with occupational safety and health regulations, and addressing environmental law and intellectual property issues. Seeking legal advice early on can help minimize risk and ensure a successful outcome. Read more »
Excusable v. Inexcusable Delay
Essentially the difference between the two of them is foreseeability. An inexcusable delay results from a foreseeable act, whereas an excusable delay is a result of an unforeseeable act. Essentially an excusable delay would be a delay that is caused by one of the parties to the contract, or an event that was foreseeable. An excusable delay, again is an unforeseeable delay, and that would include something like severe weather, or strike, acts of God, to name a few. Within the excusable delay there's delays that are compensated and delays that are uncompensated. Read more »
What Can an Attorney Do to Help Preserve Your Lien Rights?
Filing a mechanics lien can be a complicated task if you're not familiar with the procedure because there's some very specific items that have to be addressed and timing constraints and making sure that all of the necessary information is complete and accurate. And if some of these elements are missing or in error, it can create a defective lien or create a defense to a lien. Read more »
What Is a Design Defect?
A design defect is essentially where a designer could have reduced or avoided a foreseeable risk by adopting a reasonable alternative, and as a result of not doing so, result of having a product or property that is not reasonably safe to third parties. Obviously, it's a fact intensive inquiry and open to interpretation. And a good example of this would be an undersized retention pond that results in damage to adjacent properties when there was available historical data on rain events, which would have been foreseeable as a result of that available data. Read more »
What Is a Manufacturing Defect?
A manufacturing defect is an imperfection in a product that departs from its intended design, even though all possible care was used during assembly. This means it doesn't matter how careful the manufacturer was when designing the product, choosing the materials, creating the assembly line and issuing quality assurance guidelines, the product ended up, for some reason, failing its intended purpose. A good example of this would be, when a contamination or a defective or substandard component gets introduced into the product in the manufacturing process. Read more »