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Drafting Principles
In accordance with its bylaws, The American
Institute of Architects has published, for more than 115 years,
documents that serve as standard forms of agreement in the design
and construction industry. During that time, owners, architects,
contractors, attorneys, insurance experts, and many others have
contributed to the development and revision of the AIA
documents.
The AIA assembled the following Documents Drafting Principles from
various policies adopted by the AIA over the course of many
years:
- To establish and maintain, for nationwide
application, standardized legal forms in order to enhance the
stability and order of design and construction legal
transactions
- To provide assistance to users who otherwise
could not obtain knowledgeable legal counsel in a timely or
economical fashion by:
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- Providing standard documents as an alternative
to expensive, custom-drafted documents.
- Promoting flexible use through the publication
of supplemental guides demonstrating, with model language and
instructions, the adaptability of the standard documents to
particular circumstances.
- To provide continuing education on the proper
use of the documents
- To strive for balanced and fair documents
by:
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- Conforming to common law and statutory precepts
adopted in the majority of jurisdictions.
- Allocating risks and responsibilities to the
party best able to control them; to the party best able to protect
against unexpected cost; or to the owner when no other party can
control the risk or prevent the loss.
- Seeking industry consensus among all parties
whose interests may be significantly impacted by individual
documents
- To publish documents that are subject to
uniform legal interpretations so as to be predictably enforceable
and thus reliable
- To express unambiguous intentions in language
comprehensible to the users and interpreters (courts and lawyers)
of the standard documents
- Where practices are consistent among regions,
to reflect industry customs and practices, rather than to impose
new ones; where practices are inconsistent or no guidelines for
practice exist, to provide a consensus-based model for
practitioners to follow.
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