ABSTRACT

The Construction Contracts Act 2013 introduces adjudication for the construction industry in Ireland for the first time. The essence of adjudication is in providing a means whereby disputes as to payment under a construction contract are resolved quickly and cheaply. The key feature distinguishing adjudication from other processes is that the money found due by the adjudicator must be paid pending the outcome of arbitration or litigation. Its primary function, therefore, is to ensure cash flow for contractors and sub-contractors.

Leading construction lawyer Anthony Hussey’s new book is the first to provide a section by section analysis of the Act itself, an analysis of the Code of Practice, and a discussion of the likely constitutional issues to which the legislation will give rise.

This practical legal reference is aimed at all those involved in construction contract disputes, be they lawyers, architects, engineers, quantity surveyors, contractors and sub-contractors.

chapter 1|7 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|8 pages

The scope of the Act

chapter 3|8 pages

Exclusions from the scope of the Act

chapter 4|12 pages

Payment entitlements

chapter 5|14 pages

Payment claim notices

chapter 6|37 pages

The adjudication process

chapter 7|7 pages

Selection of panel of adjudicators

chapter 9|13 pages

Enforcement

chapter 10|6 pages

Right to suspend work

chapter 11|9 pages

Fees, costs and expenses

chapter 12|37 pages

Code of Practice

chapter 13|19 pages

Constitutional issues

chapter 14|2 pages

Miscellaneous matters