CONTRACTS: TERMINATING FOR CAUSE
Study Unit
CONTRACTS: TERMINATING FOR CAUSE ~18 min
(A) Disputes can easily arise between the parties to construction contracts where one party does ‘extra work’ that it alleges was not covered by the original agreement and the party who requested the construction work insists that this so-called extra work is not ‘extra’ at all. This was the situation in a costly and distressing case that had its origins in the attacks that took place in New York on 11 September 2001.
When the Twin Towers collapsed the resulting debris caused catastrophic damage to many neighbouring buildings, including the Deutsche Bank building in nearby Liberty Street. Following the 9/11 attacks, the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation (LMDC) was set up to rebuild the area and (1) ….. the Deutsche Bank building in 2004 as part of this project. However, the building was so badly damaged it was decided to demolish it and rebuild. The LMDC, a joint State-City corporation (2) ….. by an eight-member Board of Directors, put the demolition work out to (3) ….. . Under this process businesses are invited to (4) ….. a bid to carry out the required work at a certain price.
The successful contractor was a company named Bovis Lend Lease (Bovis), which was always aware that extremely hazardous materials, and asbestos in particular, were present in large quantities in the building. In October 2005, the parties entered into a contract under which LMDC would pay Bovis a (5) ….. price of $81 million to carry out the work, agreeing to make additional payments for what was termed any “Extra Work”. This was defined very precisely in the agreement as any work which went beyond the initial (6) ….. of the project, including dealing with additional hazardous materials that may be discovered as the work progressed. Bovis agreed a (7) ….. date of “on or before 1 March 2007”.
Bovis then subcontracted much of the work to a third party, the John Galt Corporation, which it was entitled to do under its agreement with LMDC. Almost immediately, both Bovis and the John Galt Corporation (8) ….. into huge problems with hazardous materials, most of which Bovis claimed were unforeseen and therefore not covered by the provisions of its contract with LMDC. However, LMDC declined to make any additional payments stating that all of the alleged extra work was clearly covered by the existing contract. The long-running dispute was only resolved with an extra payment of $10 million.
In August 2007, some John Galt Corporation workers were smoking in the building in direct violation of Health and Safety law. The resulting fire was much worse than it should have been because employees of Bovis had dismantled the water supply, also in violation of the law. Two firemen died as a result. Bovis then terminated its contract with the John Galt Corporation, (9) ….. a clause that allowed it to do so “for cause” without any additional payment. Bovis also approached LMDC claiming that the work caused by the fire amounted to “Extra Work” and (10) ….. a further additional payment. LMDC refused and a fresh dispute arose between the parties. The job of demolishing the Deutsche Bank building was finally accomplished in January 2011 at nearly twice the agreed price and four years late.
Read A opposite and decide which of the following options, A ,B, C or D, best fits each space.
| # | Phrase | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| (1) | A. obtained B. gained | C. procured D. acquired |
| (2) | A. administered B. governed | C. directed D. controlled |
| (3) | A. proposal B. offer | C. application D. tender |
| (4) | A. render B. submit | C. offer D. propose |
| (5) | A. fixed B. settled | C. firm D. precise |
| (6) | A. range B. scope | C. span D. scale |
| (7) | A. concluding B. finishing | C. completion D. cessation |
| (8) | A. entered B. ran | C. proceeded D. went |
| (9) | A. quoting B. naming | C. referring D. citing |
(10) A. wanted B. sought C. asked D. pursued
Refer back to A opposite and match the highlighted word or words with the definitions below.
1. offer a fixed amount of money in a public contest to win a contract to do certain work 2. not expected or planned; could not have been predicted 3. says that someone has done something wrong before presenting the relevant proof 4. terminate a contract because the other party has not done work or has done it incorrectly 5. dangerous and involving a substantial risk to a person’s health or safety 6. completely destroy a building, usually to use the land for something else 7. included in; dealt with 8. entered into a contract with a third party to carry out a job that you have agreed to do
Read the following contract clause which deals with a company’s right to terminate an agreement ‘for cause’, then complete the clause with a word from the box below.
(a) determination (c) occurrence (e) adversely (g) conviction (b) discretion (d) remedy (f) render (h) hereinafter In addition to any other rights or remedies available to the Company during the Term, in its sole (1) ….. the Company may terminate the Contractor’s engagement for “Cause” (as (2) ….. defined) effective immediately upon delivery of written notice to the Contractor. As used herein, “Cause” means the (3) ….. during the Term of any of the following events: (i) the Board’s (4) ….. that the Contractor has materially neglected, failed or refused to (5) ….. the Services or perform any other of his duties or obligations under this Agreement; (ii) the Contractor’s material violation of any provision of or obligation under this Agreement (after thirty days following written notice from the Company specifying such material violation in reasonable detail, and the Contractor’s failure to (6) ….. such material violation within such thirty-day period); (iii) the Contractor’s (7) ….. for, or entry of a guilty plea with respect to a crime that (8) ….. affects the ability of the Contractor to provide the Services.
Speaking & Writing for this topic
Two short tasks scored against TOEFL rubrics. The prompt is generated for this topic — use the vocabulary you have just studied.
Suggested structure (TOEFL iBT iSpeak)click to expand
- In my view, …
- I firmly believe that …
- Without hesitation, I would say that …
- Firstly, …
- The first reason is that …
- To begin with, contracts demands that …
- Secondly, …
- Equally important, …
- A real case that illustrates this is …
- When terminating meets cause, the consequence is …
- For these reasons, I maintain that …
- Taken together, this is why I support …
- Hence, the principle of this concept is indispensable.
- Plan for 15 sec on each of the 4 blocks. Don't over-explain block 1.
- Use ≥5 keywords from the prompt list — score 'Content' depends on it.
- Use TOEFL-grade linkers: "Furthermore", "Consequently", "In contrast", "As a result".
- Avoid restarting sentences — TOEFL graders penalise self-correction loops.
Suggested structure (TOEFL iBT Independent Writing)click to expand
- In contemporary legal practice, the question of … remains pivotal.
- I strongly agree/disagree with the proposition that …
- My thesis is that …
- Firstly, …
- The foremost consideration is that contracts …
- A salient example is …
- Consequently, …
- Secondly, …
- Equally significant is the fact that …
- To illustrate, …
- Furthermore, terminating …
- Admittedly, opponents would argue that …
- Nevertheless, this view overlooks …
- In summary, …
- Hence, …
- For these reasons, the position is clear: …
- Use ≥6 keywords across the essay.
- Use 5+ varied linkers (Furthermore, Consequently, Nevertheless, To illustrate, In summary).
- Mix simple, compound, and complex sentences for syntactic variety.
- Avoid repeating the prompt sentence verbatim in your intro.