Tag: virginia construction attorney

Construction Construction Law Contracts

When is a Contract not a Contract?

As I’ve stated numerous times here at Musings, in Virginia the contract is king.  The courts of Virginia will read a contract as written and where there is a contract (read as foreshadowing), the courts will assume the parties knew what they were doing and enforce it by its terms.  However, there has to be […]

Announcements Business of Construction Construction Law Marketing

Thanks for 12 Years of Confidence and Legal Elite Elections

Thank you, for the 12th year running (and all of my years in solo construction practice), to the Virginia legal community that continues to elect me to the Virginia Business Legal Elite.  The 12 years in a row of election to the Legal Elite in the Construction Category spans my time at my prior firm […]

Business of Construction Construction Construction Law Contracts Marketing

Check Out Issue 1 of Virginia’s Construction Voice Magazine

Recently the Associated General Contractors of Virginia published its first print magazine, Virginia’s Construction Voice.  I have always enjoyed my membership in this organization and find the AGC-VA to be a worthwhile expenditure of time and resources for a construction attorney like myself. I recommend that you check out both the organization and the magazine, […]

ADR Business of Construction Construction Construction Law Contracts

Is Arbitration Always the Answer?

Originally posted 2016-04-19 10:50:36. After a long (for me) hiatus due to Spring Break with my wonderful family followed by a crazy last two weeks for both personal and business reasons, I’m back and ready to muse again. This week’s “musings” concern a topic that arises often in construction contracts and construction dispute resolution.  The […]

Construction Construction Law Mechanic's Liens

Where Standing, Mechanic’s Liens, and Bankruptcy Collide

I have spoken often about mechanic’s liens and the implications of such liens as they relate to bankruptcy here at Construction Law Musings.  A recent case out of Loudoun County, Virginia added another wrinkle to this discussion, that of standing and what happens on conveyance of the property and what interest in the property is […]

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