Change Clause
Started by subbby2005 · Oct 9, 2013 · 1 replies
- sOriginal post
subbby2005
Oct 9, 2013 · 12y ago
The ‘Changes Clause’ in a Government Contract allows changes to the Contract ‘within’ the Scope-of-the Contract. Such changes may be either bilateral or unilateral depending upon the circumstances. First, what do we mean by “within the Scope-of-the Contract?” When does a change constitute a ‘Cardinal Change’ and what do we mean by ‘Cardinal Change?’ If a Change is deemed a Cardinal Change, what must the government do to actually implement that change? Second, does a contract change instituted unilaterally have the same force and effect as a bilateral change? What happens if the Government issues a unilateral modification and the contractor refuses to perform the work claiming Cardinal Change?
- j
joel hoffman
Oct 9, 2013 · 12y ago
You are essentially asking for a dissertation on the legal ramifications of changes. I would highly suggest obtaining a copy of either "Government Contract Changes" By Prof. Ralph Nash or "Administration of Government Contracts" by Professors Nash and Cibinic (or by Nash and whoever his latest collaborator is). I found the latter at Amazon.com for as little as $68. The former seems to be more expensive.
I have versions of both books. I think that the amount of coverage of Changes in "Administration of Government Contracts" will answer your questions, plus it has a wealth of coverage of other contract formation and contract admin issues.