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For Industry Professionals, Managers, Trades & Suppliers
J. NORMAN STARK, ATTORNEY and REGISTERED ARCHITECT
JURIS DOCTOR, B. ARCHITECTURE, B.F.A.
17000 St. Clair Avenue . Cleveland, Ohio 44110-2535
Tel.: (216) 531-5310 . Fax: (888) 833-5860 . E-Mail: www.Normstark@aol.com
In Florida . 6500 Midnight Pass Rd. #105 . Sarasota, FL 34242 . (941) 349-2061.
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| Vol. 2007-08 |
August, 2007 |
"Workmanlike Manner", Defined
Construction documents prepared by Architects and Engineers ("A-E-s") most frequently use and refer to the term
"workmanlike manner". This term, an industry standard, refers to the desired and acceptable standard of quality of
work and materials on a construction project.
Where claims have originated because of the application and interpretation of this term, the courts have considered and
provided their determination with a definition:
{¶10} Any contract to perform work imposes on the contractor the duty to perform the work in a
workmanlike manner. Lin v. Gatehouse Constr. Co. (1992), 84 Ohio App.3d 96 101.
`"Workmanlike manner' has been defined as the way work is customarily done by other contractors in the community." Jones
v. Davenport (Jan. 26, 2001), 2nd Dist. No. 18162, at 8, citing Salewsky v. Williams (Sept. 17, 1990), 5th Dist. No.
CA-8131, at 4.
Where a contractor fails to perform in a workmanlike manner, the proper measure of damages is the cost to repair the
damage to the condition contemplated by the parties at the time of the contract. McCray v. Clinton County Home
Improvement (1998), 125 Ohio App.3d 521, 523-524. McKinley v. Brandt Constr., Inc., 2006-Ohio-3290.
The United States Supreme Court considered another important aspect of this requirement of workmanship, involving the
Architect's approval for payment: "A contract which provides for the work on a building to be performed in the best
manner and the materials of the best quality, subject to the acceptance or rejection of an architect, all to be done
in strict accordance with the plans and specifications, does not make the acceptance by the architect final and
conclusive, and will not bind the owner, or relieve the contractor from the agreement to perform according to plans
and specifications. Glacius v. Black, 50 N. Y. 145, 10 Am. Rep. 449; Fontano v. Robbins, 22 App. D. C. 253. There is
also in the contract the provision already mentioned in the statement of facts in regard to payments as the work
progressed, which showed that a certificate was to be obtained from and signed by the architect in charge before the
contractor was entitled to payment, but it was provided that the certificate should
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'in no way lessen the total and final responsibility of the contractor; neither shall it exempt the contractor from
liability to replace work, if it be afterwards discovered to have been done ill, or not according to the drawings and
specifications, either in execution or materials.' There is the further positive agreement of the contractor to execute
and complete all the work as set forth in the specifications in the best and most workmanlike manner, and also that
final payment is to be made only when the houses are completed in accordance with the agreement and the plans and
specifications prepared therefor. The whole contract shows, in our opinion, that the certificate that the houses had
been completed according to the contract and its plans and specifications was not to be conclusive of the question, and
the plaintiff was not thereby precluded from showing that in fact the contractor had not complied with his contract,
and the plaintiff had thereby sustained damage. The cases cited in the opinion of the court below (Fontano v. Robbins,
supra; Bond v. Newark, 19 N. J. Eq. 376; Memphis, C. & L. R. Co. v. Wilcox, 48 Pa. 161; Adlard v. Muldoon, 45 Ill. 193)
are in substance to this effect. To make such a certificate conclusive requires plain language in the contract. It is
not to be implied. Central Trust Co. v. Louisville, St. L. & T. R. Co. 70 Fed. 282. 284. The cases of Sweeney v. United
States, 109 U.S. 618 , -were all cases in which the contract itself provided that the certificate should be final and
conclusive between the parties. MERCANTILE TRUST CO. v. HENSEY, 205 U.S. 298 (1907).
"The pay is good and I can walk to work."
John F. Kennedy on becoming the 35th President of the United States.
AUTHOR / EDITOR: J. NORMAN STARK is an Attorney-at-Law, a Registered Architect, (AIA, NCARB) Registered
Landscape Architect, Interior Designer, Planner and Senior Appraiser (ASA), admitted to practice law before the Bar of
Ohio, the US District Courts, Ohio and Illinois (Central Dist.), the US Court of Appeals, and the United States Supreme
Court. He is a Mediator, Arbitrator and Litigator with experience in Business, Construction Law, and Public Works, and with
additional experience in Real Estate, Construction Attorney (Legal Project and Crisis Management), and as an Expert Witness
(Forensic Architect). His office is in Cleveland, Ohio.
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