A dispute arises over the quality of concrete work. The contract specifies that disputes must first go to mediation, then arbitration. The owner wants to file a lawsuit immediately. What is the likely outcome?
Correct Answer
B) The court will likely stay the lawsuit pending completion of the contractual dispute resolution process
Courts generally enforce contractual dispute resolution clauses and will stay litigation pending completion of required mediation and arbitration processes. The lawsuit is not dismissed permanently but must wait until contractual procedures are exhausted.
Why This Is the Correct Answer
Courts have a strong policy of enforcing contractual dispute resolution clauses and will typically stay (temporarily halt) litigation when parties have agreed to follow a specific dispute resolution process. The contract creates a binding obligation to attempt mediation first, then arbitration before litigation. A stay preserves the owner's right to eventually litigate if the contractual processes fail to resolve the dispute, while ensuring the agreed-upon procedures are followed first. This approach respects freedom of contract while maintaining judicial efficiency.
Why the Other Options Are Wrong
Option A: The lawsuit will proceed as the owner has the right to choose the dispute resolution method
This is incorrect because parties cannot unilaterally ignore contractual dispute resolution clauses they previously agreed to. When a contract specifies a particular dispute resolution sequence, both parties are bound by those terms regardless of their later preferences. Courts will not allow one party to bypass agreed-upon procedures simply because they prefer a different method.
Option C: The lawsuit will be dismissed permanently
This is incorrect because a stay is temporary, not a permanent dismissal. The lawsuit is paused pending completion of the required mediation and arbitration processes, but if those methods fail to resolve the dispute, the owner can return to court. A permanent dismissal would deny the owner's ultimate right to judicial resolution if other methods prove unsuccessful.
Option D: The contractor must agree to litigation before it can proceed
This is incorrect because the contractor's agreement is not required for litigation to eventually proceed. The dispute resolution process is governed by the contract terms both parties already agreed to, not by additional consent from either party. Once the contractual mediation and arbitration requirements are satisfied, litigation can proceed regardless of the contractor's preferences.
Memory Technique
Think 'STAY before PLAY' - courts will STAY litigation until parties PLAY by their contractual dispute resolution rules first.
Reference Hint
Florida Building Code - Chapter 1, Administration and Enforcement sections on dispute resolution; Construction contract law references on alternative dispute resolution clauses
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