Basis in ascertaining the amount of liquidated damages

In Malaysian construction industry, one of the conditions in the contract made between the employer and contractor is to complete a project within a specified time. Failure to fulfil the condition will amount to breach of contract. Main remedy available for breach of contract is an award of damages....

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Main Author: Azman, Ili Liyana
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/48929/25/IliLiyanaAzmanFAB2014.pdf
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spelling my-utm-ep.489292020-07-08T02:34:20Z Basis in ascertaining the amount of liquidated damages 2014-06 Azman, Ili Liyana K Law (General) In Malaysian construction industry, one of the conditions in the contract made between the employer and contractor is to complete a project within a specified time. Failure to fulfil the condition will amount to breach of contract. Main remedy available for breach of contract is an award of damages. Damages are a reasonable sum of money awarded as compensation to the innocent party and one of the damages available is liquidated damages. It is a genuine pre-estimate amount and provided not to penalise the party at fault. A building owner will want to claim as much as he can to cover the loss resulted from the delay of completion. The objectives of this research are to identify the basis in ascertaining the amount of liquidated damages and ascertain whether the amount of liquidated damages is a reasonable compensation or not. There are elements of cost from nine articles tabulated in a table to create a basis in ascertaining the liquidated damages amount. Twenty elements of cost found and they were divided into major and minor costs. There are seven elements under the major cost and the rest were classified as minor cost. The major costs are financing interest, loss of profit, professional fee, administrative cost, alternative facilities, supervision fees and overhead. Three public projects and two private projects were analysed to ascertain whether the amount of liquidated damages were reasonable or not. As a result, the amount of liquidated damages in public project appears to be reasonable as it is less than the amount of losses suffered. In private projects, the amount of liquidated damages is unreasonable as the amount is more than the losses suffered and can be challenged as penalty by the contractor. 2014-06 Thesis http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/48929/ http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/48929/25/IliLiyanaAzmanFAB2014.pdf application/pdf en public http://dms.library.utm.my:8080/vital/access/manager/Repository/vital:84944 masters Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, Faculty of Built Environment Faculty of Built Environment
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
collection UTM Institutional Repository
language English
topic K Law (General)
spellingShingle K Law (General)
Azman, Ili Liyana
Basis in ascertaining the amount of liquidated damages
description In Malaysian construction industry, one of the conditions in the contract made between the employer and contractor is to complete a project within a specified time. Failure to fulfil the condition will amount to breach of contract. Main remedy available for breach of contract is an award of damages. Damages are a reasonable sum of money awarded as compensation to the innocent party and one of the damages available is liquidated damages. It is a genuine pre-estimate amount and provided not to penalise the party at fault. A building owner will want to claim as much as he can to cover the loss resulted from the delay of completion. The objectives of this research are to identify the basis in ascertaining the amount of liquidated damages and ascertain whether the amount of liquidated damages is a reasonable compensation or not. There are elements of cost from nine articles tabulated in a table to create a basis in ascertaining the liquidated damages amount. Twenty elements of cost found and they were divided into major and minor costs. There are seven elements under the major cost and the rest were classified as minor cost. The major costs are financing interest, loss of profit, professional fee, administrative cost, alternative facilities, supervision fees and overhead. Three public projects and two private projects were analysed to ascertain whether the amount of liquidated damages were reasonable or not. As a result, the amount of liquidated damages in public project appears to be reasonable as it is less than the amount of losses suffered. In private projects, the amount of liquidated damages is unreasonable as the amount is more than the losses suffered and can be challenged as penalty by the contractor.
format Thesis
qualification_level Master's degree
author Azman, Ili Liyana
author_facet Azman, Ili Liyana
author_sort Azman, Ili Liyana
title Basis in ascertaining the amount of liquidated damages
title_short Basis in ascertaining the amount of liquidated damages
title_full Basis in ascertaining the amount of liquidated damages
title_fullStr Basis in ascertaining the amount of liquidated damages
title_full_unstemmed Basis in ascertaining the amount of liquidated damages
title_sort basis in ascertaining the amount of liquidated damages
granting_institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia, Faculty of Built Environment
granting_department Faculty of Built Environment
publishDate 2014
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/48929/25/IliLiyanaAzmanFAB2014.pdf
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