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An indemnification clause in a construction contract typically requires the contractor to:

Correct Answer

C) Hold harmless and defend the owner against certain claims

Indemnification clauses require one party (typically the contractor) to protect, defend, and hold harmless another party (typically the owner) from certain claims, damages, or losses arising from the work.

Answer Options
A
Provide performance and payment bonds
B
Complete work within the specified time
C
Hold harmless and defend the owner against certain claims
D
Maintain specified insurance coverage

Why This Is the Correct Answer

Indemnification clauses are contractual provisions that transfer risk from one party to another, typically requiring the contractor to protect and defend the owner against claims arising from the contractor's work. The phrase 'hold harmless and defend' is the standard legal language used in indemnification clauses. These clauses essentially make the contractor responsible for legal costs and damages related to certain types of claims, even if the owner is sued directly.

Why the Other Options Are Wrong

Option A: Provide performance and payment bonds

Performance and payment bonds are separate contractual requirements that provide financial security for project completion and payment to subcontractors/suppliers, not indemnification protection against claims.

Option B: Complete work within the specified time

Time completion requirements are scheduling provisions in contracts, completely separate from indemnification clauses which deal with risk transfer and legal protection.

Option D: Maintain specified insurance coverage

Insurance coverage requirements are separate contractual provisions that mandate specific insurance policies, while indemnification clauses create direct contractual obligations to defend and protect against claims regardless of insurance.

Memory Technique

Remember 'I DEFEND' - Indemnification = Defend the owner from claims. The contractor becomes the owner's shield against lawsuits.

Reference Hint

Florida Building Code Chapter 1, Section 105 - Permits, or construction law reference materials covering contract provisions and risk allocation

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