San Diego Construction and Business Attorney
Edward Freedman

The exponentially-expanding global marketplace, fostering innovations in everything from technology to management practices to idea processes, brings with it new challenges that make it imperative for businesses of every kind, no matter how large or small, to have a trusted, experienced legal advisor who understands your unique legal circumstances and who knows how to help you navigate the increasingly complex legal climate in business and construction.

Construction projects, from multi-story office buildings to single-family homes, can involve legal implications of extraordinary complexity and far-reaching consequences. My Firm knows the construction business inside and out and has a breadth of experience and expertise representing plaintiffs and defendants in all aspects of construction law, including:
  • Mechanic’s Lien – Foreclosure and Defense
  • Workmanship Issues
  • Scope of Work Issues
  • Collection for Contractors
  • All Construction Contract Disputes
  • Design Deficiencies
  • Poor Workmanship Lawsuits
  • Contractors State License Board Hearings
  • Construction Defect Insurance Coverage Issues
  • Construction Defect Mediation and Arbitration
  • Negotiating, Drafting Construction Contracts and Design Service Agreements
  • Breach of Contract
  • Surety Bond Issues
  • Mediation, Arbitration and Litigation of Construction Disputes
  • Appeals

Construction projects typically involve the interaction of numerous individual parties and legal relationships. One of the essential keys to a successful project is the careful structuring of these legal relationships at the contracting phase. It is crucial for owners and contractors to fully understand all of their rights and obligations under the contract documents.

As an experienced San Diego Business Litigation Lawyer, I also have a comprehensive understanding of the needs of both corporate and individual clients in a wide range of business law practice areas, including:

  • Business Litigation
  • Commercial Litigation
  • Business Law
  • Collection Cases
  • Partnership Issues
  • Covenants Not to Compete
  • Unfair Competition Cases
  • Professional Negligence
When you contact my office, you can be confident that you will receive professional, knowledgeable representation. As a skilled San Diego Business Litigation Lawyer, I understand that disputes arise in every area of human endeavor; business and personal financial affairs are no exception. I work hard to resolve disputes for clients without litigation, but if necessary, I have the experience, ability and training to provide an outstanding level of representation in court.

At the onset of any dispute, I provide the client with detailed and specific information about their chances of success and a true estimate of cost that will be incurred in the matter. My belief is that the client cannot make an intelligent decision about how to proceed with their legal issue unless their attorney is willing to provide detailed and specific information.

If you or someone you know in Southern California needs the assistance of an experienced San Diego Business Litigation Lawyer, call Attorney Edward Freedman today at 866-284-5273, or complete the contact form provided on this site to schedule your free one-hour consultation.







 


Construction Law Practice Areas and Legal Definitions

Landslide and Geotechnical Defects:
Sometimes land consists of expansive soils -- clay soils that contract when dry and expand when wet, resulting in severe damage to foundations and other problems when heavy summer rains saturate the ground. If expansive soil building lots are not properly compacted and prepared for drainage, a variety of serious problems may result, ranging from vertical and horizontal settlement, actual slope failures, flooding and landslides, just to name a few. The end result may be a cracked foundation slab and related damage to the structure itself. Sometimes the damage is so severe that the structure simply becomes uninhabitable.

Design deficiencies:
Sometimes serious construction defects result from fundamental flaws in the design of the structure. Unduly complex roof structures may result in leakage and water damage. The use of inappropriate building materials may have the same effect and many serious construction defects are caused by inadequate or improper provision for drainage.

Poor workmanship:
Of all the potential causes of construction defects, poor workmanship may be the most common, although this may not be immediately apparent. However well-designed the roof structure, and however appropriate the building materials, poor workmanship will often cause the roof to fail. Serious electrical and plumbing problems, termite and other pest infestation, ineffective sound and heating insulation – any one or all of these may be the consequence of shabby construction work.

Construction Defect Insurance Coverage Issues:

Whether you are a general contractor or a consumer, one of the most complicated areas of California construction defect litigation is the identification of available and applicable insurance coverage in force. Insurance carriers are seldom enthusiastic about volunteering to cover a particular claim.

Contractors State License Board Hearings:

Under California law, it is a crime to engage in the construction business unless you are licensed by the state to do so. One of the licensing requirements is that each General Contractor posts a bond. If you are the victim of shoddy workmanship on your construction job, you can bring a civil action against the contractor and you can also make a claim against the bond. Licensed General Contractors are entitled to be represented by a lawyer in any disciplinary hearings, and those who fail to do so risk forfeiture of their licenses.

Construction Defect Mediation and Arbitration:

The litigation of Construction Law civil actions is always complex, and it can be extremely expensive, particularly once it becomes necessary to engage the services of expert witnesses to give testimony at the trial. The litigation process is often lengthy and tedious. The issues are often extremely technical and can be very confusing to a judge or a jury lacking in actual construction experience. For these reasons, it is often advantageous to consider mediation or arbitration of your claim. The court is not involved in the arbitration and/or the mediation process, so there is neither judge nor jury. Instead, a highly experienced and knowledgeable Construction Law attorney (chosen by both sides) acts as mediator or arbitrator.


Business Law Practice Areas and Legal Definitions


Business Contracts:
Business contracts are written agreements spanning a broad range of the business relationships that occur in the life of a typical company.  They can include non-compete agreements, non-piracy agreements, non-disclosure agreements, restrictive covenants, employment agreements, producer agreements, sales representative agreements, consulting agreements, management agreements, franchise agreements, licensing agreements, deferred compensation agreements and independent contractor agreements.

Contracts are the very stuff upon which the marketplace is founded, and they provide the basis for a large share of business litigation.  The remedies for breach of contract include money damages and injunctive relief expressly directing one of the parties to perform a contractual obligation.  This remedy involves a form of injunction called a “specific performance” decree.  The remedy of specific performance is often called an “extraordinary” equitable remedy, in that courts will not grant specific performance except in a sharply limited number of circumstances.  Punitive damages are not an available remedy in a contract lawsuit.

Business Formation:

There really isn’t any need for legal counsel in forming a sole proprietorship, but other forms of business organization are a good deal more complicated and are best accomplished with the assistance of a lawyer.  These include the formation of partnerships, limited liability companies and corporations.

Business and Corporate Services:

Business and corporate services involves advising companies and investors in the purchase, sale and mergers of businesses.  The services provided include forming and funding start-up companies, buying and selling practices, assets, divisions and companies, engaging in private stock offerings and re-sales, structuring venture capital financing, forming off-shore sales and sourcing entities, structuring commercial and partnering transactions and syndicating real property acquisitions.

Business Litigation:

Business litigation is the area of law that provides assistance in the preparation and presentation of a lawsuit or other resort to the courts to determine a legal question or matter in business situations.  Business can be any activity or enterprise entered into for profit, usually a company, a corporation, partnership or any such formal organization.  Business lawyers advise and represent businesses and financial institutions in such areas as business torts, class actions, complex contracts, financial forensics, government investigations, international dispute resolution, professional relations, real estate disputes, securities and antitrust, technology and intellectual property, professional malpractice, shareholder and corporate governance and telecommunications.  Business lawyers place an emphasis on achieving or defending against pre-judgment remedies, including pre-judgment orders for writs of possession, attachments, temporary restraining orders, and injunctions, as well as arbitration or mediation settlements and monetary compensation resulting from lawsuits.  Transactional business lawyers represent clients in matters relating to, but not limited to, organizational, operational and contractual documents for corporations, partnerships and limited liability companies, commercial transactions, mergers, real estate acquisitions, leasing and development and commercial financing.

Franchises and Other Types of Business Marketing:

A great many small businesses in the marketplace today are operated not as purely independent businesses, but as franchises, distributorships, or any of various types of licensing arrangements.  All of these businesses are created through written agreements containing express and implied warranties, and it is not uncommon for issues to arise resulting in litigation.

Real Estate Financing and Transactional Services:

Typically, as they expand, growing businesses become more and more involved in real estate transactions, ranging from office space to retail store properties to warehouses and shopping mall syndication.  A qualified business lawyer can provide valuable assistance in traditional real estate purchase, sale and leasing transactions, and in dealing with environmental and various other issues arising out of industrial and agricultural redevelopment projects.

Securities Litigation:

In the course of financing their expansion, businesses commonly turn to one or more activities involving the sale of securities, ranging from the funding and formation of start-up companies to buying and selling professional practices, assets, divisions and companies, and engaging in private stock offerings and re-sales.  Businesses may also get involved with such things as structuring venture capital financing, forming off-shore sales and sourcing entities, structuring commercial and partnering transactions and syndicating real property acquisitions.

Intellectual Property:

The term "intellectual property" refers to a "creation of the intellect" that has commercial value, such as copyrighted literary or artistic works, and ideational property, such as patents, appellations of origin, business methods, names, images, and designs used in commerce and in industrial processes.

Mergers and Acquisitions:

The phrase "Mergers and Acquisitions" refers to corporate finance strategy and management dealing with the merging and acquiring of different companies as well as other assets.  Usually mergers occur in a friendly setting where executives from the respective companies participate in a due diligence process to ensure a successful combination of all parts.  Corporate mergers are often aimed at reducing market competition.  On other occasions, acquisitions can occur through hostile takeover by a "corporate raider" purchasing the majority of outstanding shares of a company in the open market.  In the United States, business laws vary from state to state whereby some companies have limited protection against hostile takeovers.

Technically, what differentiates a merger from an acquisition is how it is financed.  Simply put, a merger is a combination of two companies into one larger company.  A "merger" or "merger of equals" is often financed by an all-stock deal (a stock swap).  An all-stock deal occurs when all of the owners of stocks of either company get the same amount of stock in the new combined company.  The term "demerger" is sometimes used to indicate the effective opposite of a merger, where one company splits into two, the second often being a separately listed stock company if the parent was a stock company.  An acquisition (a larger company buying out a smaller company) can involve a cash and debt combination, or just cash, or a combination of cash and stock of the purchasing entity, or just stock.  In addition, the acquisition can take the form of a purchase of the stock or other equity interests of the target entity, or the acquisition of all or substantially all of its assets.

Succession Planning:

Succession planning is the process of identifying and grooming suitable replacements, through mentoring and training, for such key company employees as a CEO upon the expiration of his or her term of office.

Government Regulation:

Businesses often find themselves at odds with one governmental agency or another, whether it be the local zoning commission, the federal Environmental Protection Agency, the Federal Trade Commission, or any one of several hundred other federal, state and local agencies.  Conflicts with governmental agencies are usually covered under state and federal statutes, and also under state and federal regulations and local ordinances.  As a general rule such conflicts are litigated before administrative tribunals under administrative law.  This usually imposes fewer formal requirements on the parties and produces a quicker result, but sometimes it does so at the expense of someone’s rights.  If you feel that your rights have been violated in an administrative hearing that has gone against you, the judicial system will consider an application for relief, based upon allegations that there was an abuse of discretion in the holding against you.

Breach of Fiduciary Duty:

The formation of a "fiduciary relationship" begins when someone places special confidence and trust in another who has substantially superior knowledge and training, and also relies on that person to act in his or her best interest.  If this trust is knowingly and voluntarily accepted, a “fiduciary” relationship is said to exist.  This places a legal duty on the stronger of the two to act diligently in the best interest of the weaker party and never, under any circumstances to secure any advantage at the weaker party’s expense.  There are a limited number of circumstances in business transactions where a fiduciary relationship comes into play.  Courts tend to rigorously enforce fiduciary duties, and in the event of a willful breach often award punitive damages as well as compensatory damages.  Some common examples of fiduciary relationships are a trustee-beneficiary relationship, a doctor-patient relationship, a lawyer-client relationship and a corporate officer-stockholder relationship.

Licensing and Commercial Contracts:

Business services attorneys counsel clients in a wide range of commercial and intellectual property (IP) transactions.  They provide assistance in structuring, drafting, reviewing and negotiating commercial and IP agreements related to the development, acquisition and commercialization of technology, IP, goods or services.  The types of agreements involved in these transactions include:

  • Software license, maintenance and support, source code escrow, end user license, patent and other technology license agreements
  • Development agreements
  • Purchase and supply agreements
  • Manufacturing agreements
  • Distribution, reseller, value-added reseller (VAR) and original equipment manufacturer (OEM) agreements
  • Referral, marketing agreements
  • Employment, consulting, technical services and outsourcing agreements
  • Joint venture, strategic partner, technology transfer agreements
  • E-commerce and Internet-related agreements (including web-based hosting agreements, application service provider (ASP) agreements, web site development, privacy policies and website terms of use)
  • Non-disclosure agreements

Sales Commission Disputes:
In avoiding sales commission litigation there is no substitute for an artfully drafted agreement spelling out precisely how and at what rate sales representatives are to receive commissions.  Common usage and custom are also taken into consideration by courts in determining the issues, even where there is a written agreement.

Trade Secrets:

A trade secret is any information that can be used in the operation of a business or other enterprise and that is sufficiently valuable and secret to afford an actual or potential economic advantage over others.  Trade secret difficulties can be eliminated or, at least, minimized by effective legal language in employment and/or severance agreements, but situations will still arise from time to time where litigation presents the only viable solution.

Litigation and Dispute Resolution:

Commercial disputes often become legal disputes, the resolution of which typically proceeds along an escalating scale of confrontation ranging from informal settlement negotiation to hardball litigation.  An effective business litigation attorney must have complete mastery of this complex and challenging field of law, but more than that, he or she must also have the patience and personal skills to operate on an informal level, and the aggressive forensic ability and tenacity to claim victory in the courtroom.

Alternative Dispute Resolution:

Business disputes can be resolved traditionally, by way of litigation.  This involves the filing of a lawsuit in court that is then answered by the defendant.  Over a period of months and sometimes even years, a lawsuit makes its way through the system, ultimately to be decided by a judge sitting alone, or by a jury, presided over by a judge.  It is an expensive, tedious and time-consuming process.  The modern trend in the economic world is away from the courthouse in favor of one or the other of two less formal, less expensive, faster and more efficient methods of conflict resolution, called "mediation" and "arbitration".

Mediation:

Mediation is one form of Alternative Dispute Resolution that is gaining in popularity in business litigation matters.  In this process the parties jointly select a mediator, usually a lawyer known by both sides to be honest and fair and, more importantly, known to have experience with the type of issues involved in the mediation. Each side submits written factual summaries to the mediator, together with any legal citations that seem appropriate. 

There is a meeting, usually at the mediator's office.  The mediator meets first with both sides, inquiring whether or not there has been any progress toward settlement, and if so, he or she may invite the parties to use his office to discuss the matter further.  If they decide to do that the mediator usually leaves the room for a time, to give both sides a chance to communicate freely. 
Upon returning, if the parties have not reached any agreement, the mediator will meet with one side separately, commenting on that side's factual summary and legal citations, expressing an opinion as to the probable outcome if the issues are litigated, and finally, making a recommendation with regard to settlement.  Then the mediator meets with the other side, separately, and repeats the process.  The mediator gives both sides an opportunity to meet with their respective attorneys and discuss the mediator's interpretation of the case and settlement recommendations.  Then all come together again and the mediator attempts to urge both sides toward a common ground of settlement approximating the recommendation he or she has made.  Frequently, the parties will reach a settlement agreement, either on the terms recommended or upon some other and different terms.  The mediator has no authority to impose a settlement, so the parties remain free to resolve their dispute in court.


Arbitration:

Arbitration is a method of Alternative Dispute Resolution.  In this process, the parties jointly select a lawyer to act as arbitrator.  The idea is to choose someone with an outstanding reputation for personal and professional integrity, with heavy litigation experience involving cases similar to the one in which the parties are currently involved.  The parties may select either "binding" or "non-binding" arbitration.  Some lawyers discourage their clients from participating in "non-binding" arbitration, seeing futility in the expense and inconvenience of a process that may prove a waste of time.  Other attorneys discourage their clients from participating in "binding" arbitration, so that their options are preserved in the event of an unreasonable adverse ruling by the arbitrator.

Arbitration is more like a trial than is Mediation.  For one thing, in binding arbitration the arbitrator's decision is virtually the same as a judgment.  In both types, however, the arbitrator actually renders a decision, as opposed to simply making a recommendation.  Each side submits an arbitration brief, containing a summary of relevant facts, a list of the legal issues thought relevant, and reference to the applicable law.  There is a hearing in the nature of a trial, but much less formal.  It is usually held at the arbitrator's office.  Sworn testimony may be offered, subject to cross-examination.  The attorneys usually join in a stipulation agreeing that certain specified facts are not in dispute.

The rules of evidence are less rigorously applied in arbitration hearings than in trials.  Sometimes the arbitrator announces a decision at the end of the hearing, but more often, the case is taken under submission by the arbitrator, the decision being communicated by letter to both sides within a week or two.  The arbitration process takes a lot of pressure off the court system, and it has proven itself as an effective alternative method for the resolution of disputes.

Employment Law:

Employment law is a growing and ever-changing body of state and federal statutes, rules, regulations, ordinances, judicial precedents and administrative rulings touching on the legal rights and obligations of employers and employees, and of their respective affiliated organizations.  One or another aspect of employment law affects virtually every facet of commercial activity in the modern marketplace.

Software:
Computer software issues are among today’s fastest growing areas of business litigation.  This burgeoning commercial field is broad-based, spanning many levels, including software licensing, maintenance and support, source code escrow, as well as end user licensing, patent and other technology license agreements.  High-tech business litigation also involves software development agreements, purchase and supply agreements, manufacturing agreements and non-disclosure agreements.

If you or someone you know in Southern California needs the assistance of an experienced San Diego Business Litigation Lawyer, call Attorney Edward Freedman today at 866-284-5273, or complete the contact form provided on this site to schedule your free one-hour consultation.


















Professional Profile

If you or someone you know in Southern California needs the assistance of an experienced San Diego Business Litigation Lawyer, call Attorney Edward Freedman today at 866-284-5273, or complete the contact form provided on this site to schedule your free one-hour consultation.

ADDRESS OF THE FIRM:

Law Office of Edward Freedman
4225 Executive Square, Suite 490
San Diego, CA 92037
Telephone: 866-284-5273
Fax: 858-550-0499

MEMBERS OF THE FIRM:

Edward Freedman

JURISDICTIONS:

  • California






Additional Questions or need further information?

Edward Freedman
Law Office of Edward Freedman
4225 Executive Square, Suite 490
San Diego, CA 92037
Telephone: 866-284-5273
Fax: 858-550-0499

Remember, the more information you provide, the easier it is for us to help you.

* Denotes required field

Please state your legal problem:


* Please enter the security code shown below:


 

Experience, Ethics, Reputation.
Choose With Confidence.

Lawyers featured on LawInfo.com must be Lead Counsel Rated

Why Choose a Lead Counsel Rated Attorney?

  1. Professional Experience: Lead Counsel Attorneys average 21.6 years experience practicing law.
  2. Relevant Experience: Lead Counsel Attorneys devote at least 30% of their practices to the area of law in which they're listed.
  3. Reputation: LawInfo conducts peer reference checks to verify status and reputation in the legal community.
  4. Spotless Record: All Lead Counsel Attorneys are verified to be in good standing with their state bar associations and have no client related disciplinary action.

The information contained in this web site is intended to convey general information. It should not be construed as legal advice or opinion. It is not an offer to represent you, nor is it intended to create an attorney-client relationship.

Attorney Advertising
Lawyer Marketing by Lawinfo.com
Copyright © 2008 LawInfo.com, Inc. All rights are reserved.
No portion of this site may be reproduced in any manner in any medium without the express written consent of LawInfo.com, Inc.
close

Get Help Now!
866-284-5273