A lawsuit against the original developer of Dunkin’ Donuts Park will go back before a trial judge later this month, following a decision by the Connecticut Supreme Court.
In the suit, filed by Centerplan Construction against the city of Hartford, the North Haven-based contractor accused the city of breaching its contract and sought more $90 million in damages. The city terminated Centerplan from the project in May 2016 amid contractual disputes and construction delays.
A Boston construction firm's failure to fire a subcontractor for defectively installing windows on a 171-unit apartment building doomed its efforts to have an insurer pay to fix the shoddy work, the First Circuit said Wednesday.
The state Supreme Court has ordered a new trial in a lawsuit filed by Centerplan Construction, the original developer of Dunkin’ Donuts Park, against the city of Hartford, concerning the company’s termination from the project following a dispute over alleged construction delays.
The legal question before the state’s high court was whether the plaintiffs – Middletown-based Centerplan and DoNo Hartford LLC – "controlled" the architect and were therefore responsible for any mistakes in, and changes to, the stadium design.
On March 16, the Supreme Court of Delaware rejected the "fundamentally identical" standard for assessing related claims. Instead of applying a uniform test for relatedness, Delaware.
This edition of International People Moves details appointments at Lockton, Arch Insurance International and AXA XL. A summary of these new hires follows