Florida’s Statute Of Repose – Elimination Of Stale Claims

Anthony S. Wong and Lee H Jeansonne | Wood, Smith, Henning & Berman Big changes may be on the horizon for Florida statute of repose for construction claims. Florida SB 2022-736 proposes to amend Fla. Stat. §95.11(3)(c) to eliminate the distinction between patent and latent claims and apply a uniform four year statute of repose… Continue reading Florida’s Statute Of Repose – Elimination Of Stale Claims

Florida Legislature Proposes Significant Revisions to Construction Defect Statute

Ralf R. Rodriguez | Cozen O’Connor PROPOSED AMENDMENT TO STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS ELIMINATING THE 10-YEAR STATUTE OF REPOSE A new bill has recently been submitted to the Florida Senate (SB 2022-736) that proposes to amend Fla. Stat. § 95.11(3)(c) by eliminating the current statute of repose for latent claims, which requires an action be commenced… Continue reading Florida Legislature Proposes Significant Revisions to Construction Defect Statute

Nevada Supreme Court Clarifies Retroactive Nature of 10-Year Statute of Repose for Construction and Design Defects

Brian K. Walters | Gordon Rees Scully Mansukhani Does a legislative extension of a statute of repose for construction and design defect claims allow a claim to proceed even if the repose period in effect when the claim was filed barred that claim? On October 28, 2021, the Nevada Supreme Court answered this question in… Continue reading Nevada Supreme Court Clarifies Retroactive Nature of 10-Year Statute of Repose for Construction and Design Defects

Commencing of the Statute of Repose for Construction Defects

David Adelstein | Florida Construction Legal Updates Florida has a ten-year statute of repose which applies predominantly to construction defect claims.   This can be found in Florida Statute s. 95.11(3)(c).  After ten years, any rights relative to a construction defect claim are time-barred.  However, the statute of repose date has been watered down and can be made… Continue reading Commencing of the Statute of Repose for Construction Defects

Nevada’s Common Law Meaning of the Term “Substantial Completion” in the Statute of Repose

William Doerler | The Subrogation Strategist Statutes of repose establish a legislature’s determination of when defendants should be free from liability. As set forth in Nevada Revised Statute (NRS) 11.202, the statute of repose for construction improvements in Nevada is six years after “substantial completion.” In Somersett Owners Ass’n v. Somersett Dev. Co., 492 P.3d 534… Continue reading Nevada’s Common Law Meaning of the Term “Substantial Completion” in the Statute of Repose

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