Thoughts on construction law from Christopher G. Hill, Virginia construction lawyer, LEED AP, mediator, and member of the Virginia Legal Elite in Construction Law

Category Archives: Construction Law

Preventing Acts of God: Construction Accidents Caused by Outside Factors

For this week’s Guest Post Friday here at Musings, we welcome back Seth Smiley. Seth, a native of Baton Rouge, is the owner of Smiley Law Firm. He is admitted to practice in all state and federal courts in Louisiana and California. Seth Smiley is the son of a general contractor, and acquired valuable work experience

Reminder: Your Accounting and Other Records Matter

Recently, I’ve posted on mechanic’s lien changes, mediation and other more “legal” topics here at Construction Law Musings.  Today’s post is a practical one and one that will help your friendly neighborhood construction attorney greatly should a dispute arise. The tip for this week?  Keep clean accounting and other records by construction job and in

Be Sure to Dot All of the “I’s” and Cross the “T’s” in Virginia

As a construction company from outside of Virginia that wants to work here in the Commonwealth, there are numerous “hoops” that you need to jump through to be able to perform work and most importantly get paid.  Among these are obtaining a Virginia contractors license, find a registered agent here in Virginia, hopefully find a

Resolve to Say “No” This Year

We hear all of the time how to “get to ‘yes’” and how doing so can lead to more business and of course more business leads to more profits.  Purely logical, right?  Without construction owners with work for general contractors to perform and general contractors hiring subcontractors to perform that work, construction grinds to a

Sometimes Adjustments are in Fact Equitable- A Story of Differing Site Conditions

Remember the one about differing site conditions? (just kidding, that was never a joke).  However, any site contractor knows that these differing conditions can be the bane of its existence.  Recently, the Danville, Virginia Division of the Federal District Court for the Western District of Virginia weighed in on the differing site conditions debate. In