CONSTRUCTION DEFECT JOURNAL

"News and Information for Construction Defect and Claims Professionals"

CONSTRUCTION DEFECT JOURNAL - ISSUE 242749 - WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 2025

Law courtroom

The opinion marks a significant development in California construction law, aligning procedural fairness with substantive accountability and it is anticipated more oppositions to summary judgment will be generated as a result of this ruling.

No Cross-Complaint Needed: Contractor Can Fight Co-Defendant’s Summary Judgment

October 21, 2025
Keith E. Smith - Wood Smith Henning & Berman LLP

In a decision of first impression, the California Court of Appeal in RND Contractors, Inc. v. WRSE (2025) 112 Cal.App.5th 697, clarified whether a co-defendant may oppose another defendant's motion for summary judgment without having first filed a cross-complaint. The case arose from the collapse of a high school gymnasium during construction, leading to negligence, wrongful death, and premises liability claims against the project participants. The court held that "any adverse party" may oppose another party's motion for summary judgment, even if the Plaintiff does not oppose the motion and there is no cross-complaint filed by the co-defendant opposing summary judgment.

This ruling resolves a novel procedural question which had not been addressed by any Court of Appeal in California to date.

Mr. Smith may be contacted at kesmith@wshblaw.com

Reprinted courtesy of Keith E. Smith, Wood Smith Henning & Berman LLP

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CDJ NEWS THIS WEEK

Home in a flood

Government delays had arguably pushed the contractor’s performance into a period of worse seasonal adverse weather than it would have faced under the original schedule.

The Difference Between Seasonal Adverse Weather and Unusually Severe Weather (and How Contractors Can Protect Against Both)

October 21, 2025 — Matthew DeVries - Best Practices Construction Law

Picture this: A contractor is nearly finished with a major dam stabilization project, but a series of Owner-directed changes pushes the last phase of the work into late fall and early winter. Instead of working through the relatively dry conditions expected in the original schedule, the contractor is suddenly battling weeks of rain and freezing temperatures. Crews are slowed, costs increase, and productivity suffers.

That’s exactly what occurred in the recent decision of Thalle Construction Co., ASBCA Nos. 63685, 63721, 63734 (Aug. 13, 2025). In that case, the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals recognized that government delays had arguably pushed the contractor’s performance into a period of worse seasonal adverse weather than it would have faced under the original schedule. The Board distinguished between two types of weather:

  • Seasonal adverse weather: Normal, recurring patterns like rainy seasons or winter freezes, which are foreseeable and must be built into a contractor’s plan. If government delay extends performance into these months, the contractor may recover additional time and compensation.
  • Unusually severe weather: Extraordinary, unforeseeable events such as record-breaking storms or extreme floods. Under standard clauses, this type of weather typically entitles the contractor to time only (excusable delay), not money.

Mr. DeVries may be contacted at mdevries@buchalter.com

Reprinted courtesy of Matthew DeVries, Buchalter

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Jenga game person holding it up

With the design-build project delivery method, the responsibility for both the design and construction falls under the same umbrella and, naturally, carries more risk.

Risk Associated with Design-Build Project Delivery Method

October 21, 2025 — David Adelstein - Florida Construction Legal Updates

The design-build project delivery method is when the design-builder (typically the contractor) is responsible for both the design and construction of the project. Thus, the responsibility for both the design and construction falls under the same umbrella and, naturally, carries more risk. The discussion below demonstrates risk involved in the design-build project delivery method, particularly in the government contracting arena:

Design-build contracts are common for construction, renovations, and repair projects, where the government provides the contractor with its requirements, but the contractor is free to exercise its ingenuity in achieving that objective or standard of performance and selecting the means to do so. It is not uncommon for issues to arise in design-build contracts. One of the more common issues is when the contract describes a certain requirement, but later during the design process, the contractor will submit in the 35% or 100% design submittal with a lower requirement. The government will unknowingly approve that design, not realizing the contractor may have “slipped in” or made an error on one of the requirements; thus, the approved 100% design has a lower requirement as compared to the contract. In these situations, we have found that the government is justified in demanding the contractor provide the requirements specified in the RFP and resulting contract.

Thus, our long-held rule has been that the government cannot properly be blamed for approving the design when the contractor failed to inform the government that its design deviated from Task Order minimum requirements.

Appeals of - Meltech Corporation, Inc., ASBCA No. 61766, 2025 WL 2166133 (ASBCA 2025) (internal citations omitted).

Mr. Adelstein may be contacted at dma@kirwinnorris.com

Reprinted courtesy of David Adelstein, Kirwin Norris

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Scales of justice law books behind it

After months of requesting plaintiff's counsel to dismiss our client from the lawsuit, San Diego Superior Court Judge Cynthia Freeland granted our client’s motion for summary judgment.

Paola Perkins Secures Summary Judgment for Client in Slip and Fall Lawsuit

October 21, 2025 — Lewis Brisbois Newsroom

San Diego, Calif. (September 22, 2025) - San Diego Associate Paola Perkins recently obtained summary judgment for the firm's client in a slip and fall lawsuit involving a public sidewalk adjacent to the client's property.

After months of requesting plaintiff's counsel to dismiss our client from the lawsuit, San Diego Superior Court Judge Cynthia Freeland granted our client’s motion for summary judgment. Plaintiff’s counsel believed he would obtain a $1 million verdict against our client.

After reviewing all the evidence, including the plaintiff’s deposition and discovery from all parties, it was clear the plaintiff had zero evidence against our client. There was no genuine dispute as to any material fact and Judge Freeland held that our client was entitled to judgment as a matter of law.

Reprinted courtesy of Lewis Brisbois

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Hail on roof

Travelers inspected the roof and found no signs of wind or hail damage, but instead observed signs of wear, tear, and deterioration of the roof shingles.

Assignment of Claim not Precluded by Policy’s Anti-Assignment Clause

October 21, 2025 — Tred R. Eyerly - Insurance Law Hawaii

The Supreme Court of Maryland upheld the insured's assignment of a post-loss claim despite the policy's anti-assignment provision. In re Featherfall Restoration, LLC, 2025 Md. LEXIS 294 (Md. July 24, 2025).

The insureds purchased a "High Value' homeowners policy from Travelers Home and Marine Insurance Company for their residence. The policy included an anti-assignment clause: "Assignment of this policy will to be valid unless we give our written consent."

Three months after the policy expired, the insureds notified Travelers of damage to their roof that they contended resulted from a wind and hailstorm that occurred before the policy expired. The insureds hired Featherfall Restoration, LLC to repair their roof.

Mr. Eyerly may be contacted at te@hawaiilawyer.com

Reprinted courtesy of Tred R. Eyerly, Damon Key Leong Kupchak Hastert

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Money bag

The Court found BWB&O’s HOA-client “largely achieved its litigation objectives to defend against Plaintiff’s claims and his requests for damages,” affirming that the HOA was the prevailing party.

Congratulations to San Diego Lawyers JohnPaul Salem and Kaylan Bland-Fetter on a Fantastic Result for their HOA Client!

October 21, 2025 — Dolores Montoya - Bremer Whyte Brown & O'Meara LLP

Partner JohnPaul Salem and Associate Kaylan Bland-Fetters successfully defended their HOA-client in a three-week jury trial in San Diego, California, arising out of a Plaintiff-homeowner bringing six causes of action to enforce the governing documents and seeking at least $63,000 in damages. After prevailing on four of the six causes of action in favor of the HOA and containing Plaintiff’s damages to just $7,200 less than the civil statutory minimum and also beating the HOA’s pre-trial offer to compromise, BWB&O’s client brought a motion for attorney’s fees and costs pursuant to the governing documents and the Davis-Sterling Act (California Civil Code § 5975).

Reprinted courtesy of Bremer Whyte Brown & O'Meara

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Testifying Construction and Building Industry Standard of Care Expert Witness

General Construction Investigation - Licensed General Building Contractor CA, AZ, UT, FL

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Power lines

Legal move in fight for grid management contract against incumbent operator serving 1.2 million customers.

Quanta Asks Judge to Block Award of $400M Long Island, NY Grid Contract to PSEG

October 21, 2025 — Bryan Gottlieb - Engineering News-Record

Power contractor giant Quanta Services seeks to convince a a Nassau County, N.Y., court to block the Long Island Power Authority from awarding a grid management contract it sought to its rival, incumbent PSEG Long Island, after utility trustees approved on Sept. 25 a five-year extension worth nearly $400 million. The new contract was set to take effect on Jan. 1.

Mr. Gottlieb may be contacted at gottliebb@enr.com

Reprinted courtesy of Bryan Gottlieb, Engineering News-Record

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Supreme Court

This post reviews the U.S. Supreme Court’s significant regulatory and administrative law decisions from the Court’s 2024 Term and previews cases on the docket for Fall 2025.

The Supreme Court’s Administrative and Regulatory Law Rulings in the 2024 Term and Preview of Cases to Be Decided in Fall 2025

October 21, 2025 — Anthony B. Cavender & Jillian Marullo - Gravel2Gavel Construction & Real Estate Law Blog

This post reviews the U.S. Supreme Court’s significant regulatory and administrative law decisions from the Court’s 2024 Term and previews cases on the docket for Fall 2025. While the term produced no true “blockbusters,” the Court displayed particular concern with how lower federal courts have been applying the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), and it clarified the already complex judicial review provisions of the Clean Air Act (CAA). At the same time, the Court declined invitations to revisit contentious issues surrounding CAA citizen suits and avoided intervening in the wave of state-law climate change litigation. Consistent with its current composition, the Court continues to take a conservative approach, closely hewing to statutory text and structure.

Our review is organized in three parts: first, environmental and energy law cases; second, administrative law rulings that delineate the boundaries of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA); third, we discuss the environmental, energy and administrative law cases the Court has agreed to hear in its October 2025 Term.

Reprinted courtesy of Anthony B. Cavender, Pillsbury and Jillian Marullo, Pillsbury

Mr. Cavender may be contacted at anthony.cavender@pillsburylaw.com
Ms. Marullo may be contacted at jillian.marullo@pillsburylaw.com

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Mystery puzzle house

Despite similar legal allegations and factual predicates, the outcomes may differ for these two tracts of land.

Shiloh and Vallejo: The DOI Tale of Two Properties

October 20, 2025 — Heidi McNeil Staudenmaier & Caitlin Vanderkarr - Snell & Wilmer

California courts have certainly been busy as of late. In particular, challenges abound as to the Department of the Interior (the DOI) and its decisions to take certain parcels of land into trust for the purpose of rendering such parcels eligible for gaming activities by certain California tribes.

The DOI Shiloh Parcel Dispute
The Shiloh parcel, a tract of land the DOI previously approved as land taken into trust for gaming purposes under the restored lands exception of the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act (IGRA) on behalf of the Koi Nation of Northern California (The Koi), has been the subject of considerable controversy.

Reprinted courtesy of Heidi McNeil Staudenmaier, Snell & Wilmer and Caitlin Vanderkarr, Snell & Wilmer

Ms. Staudenmaier may be contacted at hstaudenmaier@swlaw.com
Ms. Vanderkarr may be contacted at cvanderkarr@swlaw.com

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Two men and one woman wearing superhero capes

Each year, no more than 5 percent of the lawyers in the region (and 2.5 percent for Rising Stars) are selected by the research team at Super Lawyers to receive this honor.

Five Kahana Feld Attorneys Recognized in 2025 Upstate New York Super Lawyers®

October 20, 2025 — Eva Paulson - Kahana Feld

NEW YORK - September 29, 2025 - Kahana Feld is pleased to announce that Eric Bernhardt, Marc Schulz, and Alice A. Trueman were included in the 2025 edition of Upstate New York Super Lawyers, and Adam Amirault and Marina Barci were selected to the 2025 Upstate New York Rising Stars list.

Eric Bernhardt was awarded for his work in the Appellate practice area. Admitted in New York and California, Bernhardt is a partner in the firm’s Buffalo, NY office, and a member of Kahana Feld’s National Appellate Litigation & Consulting Group, as well as the New York general litigation team. His practice encompasses multiple types of litigation including the defense of New York Labor Law, construction, product liability, trucking, automobile accident, and premises liability cases.

Reprinted courtesy of Eva Paulson, Kahana Feld

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Compass

Changes are coming, and contractors and their employees alike should know what lies ahead and understand how to navigate the changes.

Noncompete Agreements: How to Navigate the Changing Landscape

October 20, 2025 — Kellie M. Ros - ConsensusDocs

Contractors who care about protecting proprietary company information and attracting and retaining high-quality employees (all contractors) should consider making noncompete agreements a part of their normal business practices. A recent failed attempt by the federal government to completely ban noncompetes reignited the contentious debate about the balance between freedom of contract versus freedom to work, and states have now put the issue at the forefront of their legislative agendas. Changes are coming, and contractors and their employees alike should know what lies ahead and understand how to navigate the changes.

Implications of Noncompetes in Construction
Noncompetes or noncompetition agreements affect nearly one in five working adults in the United States. A noncompete agreement is just what it sounds like - it’s an agreement between an employer and their employee where the employee agrees not to compete with their employer once their employment ends. In essence, the agreement restricts the employee from immediately joining a competing business or starting a competing business after leaving their employer.

Ms. Ros may be contacted at kros@pecklaw.com

Reprinted courtesy of Kellie M. Ros, Peckar & Abramson, P.C.

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Question marks above woman

When does your contract need a survival clause?

When Is a Survival Clause Absolutely Necessary?

October 20, 2025 — Scott L. Baker - Los Angeles Litigation Blog

Beginnings and endings in the business world are delicate things. Whether initiating a business deal and partnership or terminating an employee, business owners must take great care to secure their business and adhere to California law.

A contract will inform and outline these business relationships, from beginning to end. However, just because a contract ends does not mean the terms included in it should. That is when a survival clause will be critical.

What are the Basics of a Survival Clause?
As discussed above - and in a previous blog post - a survival clause defines what terms of a contract will continue to be enforced even after a contract ends.

Mr. Baker may be contacted at slb@bakerslaw.com

Reprinted courtesy of Scott L. Baker, Baker & Associates

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AI and Human Handshake

At its core, construction technology is about making us more human, not less.

'Time to Be Human': Paul Doherty Talks Tech and Architecture

October 20, 2025 — Maggie Murphy - Construction Executive

Paul Doherty has worn more hats than most in the built environment. Trained as an architect in Manhattan, he detoured into technology early in his career - designing trade show booths for IBM in the late 1980s, back when Apple was still an upstart. That experience sparked a revelation: Computer companies, with their networks of component suppliers, looked a lot like general contractors managing subcontractors.

Today, Doherty is president and CEO of the Digit Group, advising governments and developers worldwide on smart cities and emerging technologies. His work touches everything from blockchain-enabled smart contracts to AI agents, robotics and even the role of cultural anthropology in city design.

In a recent conversation with Construction Executive, Doherty explains why he believes buildings are “computers we can live in,” how blockchain might finally deliver the trust construction contracts need and why small contractors shouldn’t be intimidated by cutting-edge tech. Above all, he stresses, technology should give people time back. Time to walk the site instead of sit in the trailer. Time to have better conversations with clients, coworkers and communities. Time to be human.

Reprinted courtesy of Maggie Murphy, Construction Executive, a publication of Associated Builders and Contractors. All rights reserved.

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Consulting Design and Architecture Expert Witness

Forensic Architect CA, AZ, NV, CO, TX, UT, FL, NM, OK - NCARB - National Council of Architectural Registration Boards

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Hand holding house

Mapping a Way Out of the US Housing Affordability Crisis

October 20, 2025 — Kriston Capps - Bloomberg

Across the US, housing has cemented its status as a top-line issue for state and local lawmakers. Rural, urban and suburban leaders are all wrestling with ways to jump-start new housing, legalize apartment buildings and preserve affordable options. Even at the federal level, where there are fewer tools to directly authorize or obstruct new homes, housing policy is the subject of a robust debate about the government’s capacity for getting things done.

Reprinted courtesy of Kriston Capps, Bloomberg

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Businesspeople in hardhats meeting

McKinsey Finds Rising Infrastructure Appeal Among Private Investors

October 20, 2025 — Aileen Cho - Engineering News-Record

The growth of populations, data centers, AI, electrification, energy transition and urbanization is shaping an estimated $106-trillion infrastructure investment opportunity through 2040 that will increasingly involve private investors, according to researchers at McKinsey and Co.

Ms. Cho may be contacted at choa@enr.com

Reprinted courtesy of Aileen Cho, Engineering News-Record

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Businessperson holding insurance policy

Neat Result for Policyholders - SDNY Sides with Distillery in Collapse Dispute

October 20, 2025 — Michael S. Levine & Evan Warshauer - Hunton Insurance Recovery Blog

Earlier this month, the Southern District of New York issued an opinion in The Vale Fox Distillery LLC v. Central Mutual Insurance Company, No. 24-cv-4169 (S.D.N.Y.), which concerned a catastrophic collapse of storage racks holding whiskey barrels at Vale Fox’s distillery, destroying over $2.5 million worth of aging single malt whiskey. The court determined there was coverage for Vale Fox’s loss but left the issue of valuation to be determined another day.

Reprinted courtesy of Michael S. Levine, Hunton Andrews Kurth LLP and Evan Warshauer, Hunton Andrews Kurth LLP

Mr. Levine may be contacted at mlevine@hunton.com
Mr. Warshauer may be contacted at ewarshauer@hunton.com

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Seminar

2025 Insurance Coverage and Practice Symposium

October 20, 2025 — Beverley BevenFlorez – CDJ Staff

DRI’s three-day Insurance Coverage and Practice Symposium is relevant “for insurance executives, claims professionals, and outside counsel who specialize in insurance coverage.” Attendees of this event will have the “opportunity to engage with a distinguished faculty of insurance industry leaders and coverage lawyers on emerging and relevant issues facing the industry.” The symposium will cover “mass tort litigation to practical tips and strategies for handling excess exposure and reinsurance issues impacting claims.” In addition, the event “will also provide numerous exceptional networking opportunities for attendees to interact with industry and outside counsel colleagues and to build relationships with other professionals.”

December 3rd-5th, 2025
Sheraton New York Times Square
811 7th Ave
New York, NY 10019

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Palisades Fire Suspect Indicted, Faces Up to 45 Years in Prison Due to Additional Charges

Jonathan Rinderknecht, the suspect accused of igniting a fire that eventually led to the deadly Palisades Fire, was officially indicted by a federal grand jury on Wednesday, ABC7 reported.

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CA's First Solar-Covered Water Canal Now Generating Power

From the air, you could mistake it for the world's largest beach umbrella. But this solar canopy near Turlock is not only shading the water flowing underneath it - it's also producing enough clean electricity to power several thousand homes, ABC7 News Bay Area reported.

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