Ambiguity found

August 5, 2024

Examples of contract ambiguity don’t come along every day, so they deserve careful study when they do. Keiland Construction v. Weeks Marine found ambiguity because of tension in a contract between Section 5, titled “COMPENSATION”:

This language was followed by a schedule of lump-sum prices for various services. The other clause was Section 9, titled “TERMINATION FOR CONVENIENCE, which said in relevant part:The Fifth Circuit agreed with the district court that the combination of these two provisions produced ambiguity: “Keiland’s reading, that the sections required compensation for pre-termination work on a lump-sum basis and post-termination work on a cost-plus basis, is plausible. But so is Weeks’s, namely that Section 9 operated to convert all compensation due Keiland to cost-plus upon termination—particularly given that Section 9 specifies payment for 21% of costs “for overhead and profit associated with Work through the date of termination.”  No. 23-30357 (July 25, 2024).

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