In Washington D.C., a private Owner sued its Designer alleging professional negligence arising from the construction of $10 million tennis and education facility.  Among other issues, the court held the Owner’s professional negligence claim was late as it was filed more than three years after accrual (D.C. Code § 12-301(3)).

The contract required:

  • a request for mediation before filing a lawsuit and
  • that any lawsuit must be filed within three years.

The Owner unsuccessfully argued that only its request for mediation was necessary within three years.  Yet, a related provision of the contract stated that a mediation request could be made at the same time as the filing of a lawsuit.  If a mediation request tolled the statute, this related provision would be meaningless.

Contract interpretation strives to find the meaning of all parts together.  So, when you think you’ve found the right answer in your contract, keep reading all parts together to be certain.  (Read Related Post.)

Washington Tennis & Education Foundation, Inc. v. Clark Nexsen, Inc., 324 F.Supp.3d 128 (U.S. Dist. Ct., D.C., Aug. 20, 2018)

Published On: February 20, 2019

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Manage the Risk of Construction Changes

August 15, 2018|

Almost any problem on a construction project can be traced to one of two things: changes or delays (even delays are really just changes).  As in life, embrace and manage the change don’t run from it.

Adding Terms to a Government Contract without Saying So

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Imagine an incredulous Contractor asking, “Show me in the Contract where it says I’m supposed to do X?”  The Government Contracting Officer smugly answers, “even though the Contract doesn’t say so, you must do it anyway.”  Is that even possible, when, how?

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Jonathan J. Straw
Best Lawyers® - Jonathan Straw | 2026

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