Purpose
Note on JCT editions: JCT has published the 2024 Edition. This guidance cites JCT SBC/Q 2016 clause references; the commercial and payment mechanisms are substantively unchanged in the 2024 edition, but specific clause references should be verified against the contract edition in use on any given project.
Contract document preparation is the process of assembling the formal legal documents that constitute the building contract. The contract documents define the scope of work, contract sum, programme, risk allocation, payment terms, change procedures, dispute resolution mechanisms, and all other rights and obligations of the parties. Once executed, they are legally binding — any error or omission in the contract documents will be governed by the law of contract, not corrected by the parties' intentions.
This note follows the finalisation of the pricing schedule (GN-TD-11), because the contract documents cannot be properly compiled until the contract sum and pricing breakdown are confirmed and agreed. The pricing document — whether a Bill of Quantities, Contract Sum Analysis or Activity Schedule — is a contract document whose figures flow directly into the Articles of Agreement, Contract Particulars and Schedules. Assembling contract documents before the pricing schedule is finalised risks numerical inconsistencies between documents and post-execution disputes about the contract sum.
RICS Appropriate Contract Selection (2nd edition, 2024) emphasises that standard forms of contract should be used with minimal amendment, and that any amendments should be clearly identified, legally reviewed, and understood by both parties before execution. The QS is responsible for coordinating the compilation of contract documents, confirming all contract particulars are complete and accurate, and liaising with the client's solicitor to arrange execution.
Key Principles
- RICS Appropriate Contract Selection (2nd edition, 2024), Sections 4.2–4.5: essential elements of a contract; the contract documents list; amending standard forms; executing a contract and duration of liability.
- JCT Standard Building Contract with Quantities (SBC/Q 2016): contract documents are listed in Article 7: (i) Contract Drawings; (ii) Contract Bills; (iii) the Agreement (JCT Articles and Conditions); (iv) the Employer's Requirements (if CDP used); (v) the Contractor's Proposals (if CDP used); (vi) the BIM Protocol (if applicable).
- Limitation Act 1980: contracts executed as deeds — 12-year limitation period (s.8); contracts executed under hand — 6-year limitation period (s.5). Execution method is a key decision for the client.
- Law of Property (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1989: requirements for valid execution of a deed by an individual (signed, witnessed, delivered); Companies Act 2006: requirements for execution by a company (two authorised signatories, or one director plus company secretary, or one director plus witness).
- Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 (as amended): payment provisions are implied into all qualifying construction contracts (contracts for 45+ days); the contract must provide for adequate payment mechanisms or the Act's default provisions apply.
Practical Application
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Assembling contract documents before the pricing schedule is finalised — the contract sum in the Articles of Agreement must match the agreed pricing schedule; any inconsistency creates a contractual dispute from the outset.
- Leaving blank entries in the Contract Particulars — blanks are interpreted by the courts as the relevant provision not applying, or the default provision applying; either outcome may be commercially disadvantageous to the employer.
- Setting a LAD rate as a round sum without a documented calculation basis — if challenged, an undocumented LAD rate may be deemed a penalty and be unenforceable, leaving the employer without a liquidated remedy for contractor delay.
- Using amendments that were not included in the tender documents — contract conditions that differ from those issued at tender create a counter-offer situation and may mean no binding contract has been formed on the amended terms.
- Executing a contract under hand where a deed is required — for contracts requiring a 12-year limitation period (most construction contracts), execution under hand provides only 6-year protection; this is a significant client risk.
APC Competency & Quick Reference
APC Competencies: Procurement & Tendering (L2) | Legal & Regulatory Compliance (L2) | Contract Administration (L1) | Cost Management (L1)
Contract Document Preparation Checklist
CPD Learning Outcomes
- Compile a complete contract document bundle for a JCT SBC/Q 2016 contract, confirming that the contract sum in the Articles of Agreement is consistent with the finalised pricing schedule, and completing all Contract Particulars entries.
- Advise clients on the distinction between execution as a deed (12-year limitation) and under hand (6-year limitation), and confirm the legal requirements for valid company execution under the Companies Act 2006.
- Confirm a Liquidated and Ascertained Damages rate using a documented genuine pre-estimate methodology, and identify the legal test for distinguishing a valid LAD rate from an unenforceable penalty.
Further Reading
- RICS Appropriate Contract Selection (2nd edition, 2024, RICS) — Sections 4.2–4.5
- JCT Standard Building Contract with Quantities (SBC/Q, 2016 edition, Sweet & Maxwell)
- Limitation Act 1980 (c.58, HMSO) — Sections 5 and 8
- Companies Act 2006 (c.46, HMSO) — Sections 44–46 (execution of documents)
- Housing Grants, Construction and Regeneration Act 1996 (as amended by LDEDCA 2009)
- Cavendish Square Holdings BV v Makdessi; ParkingEye Ltd v Beavis [2015] UKSC 67 — test for penalties
Sections 3–8 are for subscribers
Your subscription unlocks Practical Application steps, Common Mistakes to Avoid, APC Quick Reference, the Stage Checklist, CPD Learning Outcomes, Further Reading, and all production-ready templates.