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A subcontract agreement includes a pay-when-paid clause. The general contractor has not been paid by the owner due to the owner's financial difficulties. How does this affect the subcontractor's right to payment?

Correct Answer

D) The clause may be enforceable but cannot indefinitely delay payment

While pay-when-paid clauses may be enforceable in Florida, courts generally will not allow them to indefinitely delay payment to subcontractors. After a reasonable time, payment becomes due regardless of whether the contractor has been paid.

Answer Options
A
The subcontractor must wait indefinitely for the owner to pay
B
The subcontractor can demand immediate payment after 30 days
C
Pay-when-paid clauses are unenforceable in Florida
D
The clause may be enforceable but cannot indefinitely delay payment

Why This Is the Correct Answer

Florida courts recognize that while pay-when-paid clauses can be valid contractual provisions, they cannot create an indefinite delay in payment that would essentially deny subcontractors their right to compensation. The law balances the enforceability of these clauses with fairness principles, requiring payment after a reasonable time period even if the general contractor hasn't been paid by the owner. This prevents subcontractors from being held hostage by payment disputes between the owner and general contractor that are beyond their control.

Why the Other Options Are Wrong

Option A: The subcontractor must wait indefinitely for the owner to pay

This is incorrect because Florida law does not allow pay-when-paid clauses to create indefinite delays in payment. Courts will enforce payment obligations after a reasonable time period, regardless of whether the general contractor has received payment from the owner.

Option B: The subcontractor can demand immediate payment after 30 days

This is incorrect because there is no automatic 30-day rule that triggers immediate payment rights. The timeframe for when payment becomes due despite a pay-when-paid clause depends on what constitutes a 'reasonable time' under the circumstances, which varies case by case.

Option C: Pay-when-paid clauses are unenforceable in Florida

This is incorrect because pay-when-paid clauses are not automatically unenforceable in Florida. They can be valid contractual provisions, but their enforcement is limited by reasonableness standards that prevent indefinite payment delays.

Memory Technique

Think 'PWP = Possible When Practical' - pay-when-paid clauses are possible to enforce, but only when it's practical and reasonable, not indefinitely.

Reference Hint

Florida Statutes Chapter 713 (Construction Liens) and contract law sections dealing with payment provisions and subcontractor rights

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