Commercial Contractor Dispute Resolution in Broward County
Dispute resolution in commercial construction is a structured field governed by Florida statutes, contractual provisions, and county-level administrative procedures that determine how conflicts between contractors, owners, subcontractors, and public agencies are formally addressed. In Broward County, these mechanisms range from informal negotiation to binding arbitration and civil litigation, each carrying distinct cost profiles, timelines, and enforceability standards. Understanding the landscape of available pathways matters because the choice of mechanism — often locked in at contract execution — directly affects both the outcome and the time to resolution. This reference covers the classification of dispute resolution types, their procedural mechanics, common commercial construction scenarios that trigger them, and the decision boundaries that separate one pathway from another.
Definition and scope
Commercial contractor dispute resolution refers to the body of formal and quasi-formal processes through which parties to a commercial construction contract in Broward County resolve claims arising from project performance, payment, scope changes, defective work, scheduling delays, or contract termination. The applicable legal framework is grounded primarily in Florida Statutes Chapter 558 (Construction Defects), Chapter 713 (Construction Liens), and the Florida Construction Lien Law, which collectively define pre-suit notice obligations, lien rights, and claimant standing.
Dispute resolution as a category does not include internal project management disagreements resolved informally through project documentation. It applies specifically to contested claims with legal consequences — unpaid invoices, lien filings, license complaint proceedings, and breach of contract allegations. For a broader map of how contractor services are structured in this market, the Broward County Contractor Services overview situates dispute resolution within the full professional landscape.
Scope and geographic coverage: This page applies to commercial construction disputes arising within Broward County, Florida, under Florida law and Broward County administrative jurisdiction. Disputes involving projects in Miami-Dade County, Palm Beach County, or federal enclaves within Broward are not covered here, as they fall under separate jurisdictional frameworks. Residential construction disputes, while sharing some statutory tools, operate under different notice and standing requirements and are not the subject of this reference.
How it works
Florida Statutes Chapter 558 establishes a mandatory pre-suit process for construction defect claims. Before filing suit, a claimant must serve written notice on the contractor, subcontractor, or supplier, providing a minimum of 60 days for the recipient to inspect, respond, and offer remediation or monetary settlement. Failure to follow this sequence can result in dismissal of the underlying civil action.
Beyond the statutory pre-suit process, dispute resolution in Broward County commercial projects operates through four primary pathways:
- Negotiation and mediation — Voluntary, non-binding (unless the parties execute a settlement agreement), typically required by American Institute of Architects (AIA) contract forms as a prerequisite to arbitration or litigation. The American Arbitration Association (AAA) maintains construction mediation rules widely referenced in Florida commercial contracts.
- Arbitration — Binding if specified in the contract. The AAA Construction Industry Arbitration Rules govern most commercial arbitration proceedings in Florida. Arbitration awards are enforceable through Florida courts under Florida Statutes Chapter 682, the Florida Arbitration Code. Arbitration limits discovery and appeals, making it faster but less reversible than litigation.
- Litigation in Broward County Circuit Court — For claims exceeding $50,000 in value (the jurisdictional threshold for circuit court in Florida), parties may file in the Seventeenth Judicial Circuit Court of Florida, which covers Broward County. Claims below $50,000 fall within county court jurisdiction. Litigation allows full discovery and appellate review but typically extends resolution timelines by 18 to 36 months for contested commercial cases.
- Administrative proceedings — License complaints filed with the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR) or the Broward County Central Examining Board can result in license discipline, fines, or suspension independent of civil outcomes.
Details on how contractor licensing intersects with dispute standing are covered at Broward County Commercial Contractor Licensing Requirements.
Common scenarios
Dispute resolution mechanisms are activated most frequently in the following commercial construction contexts in Broward County:
- Non-payment disputes: A general contractor or subcontractor records a construction lien under Chapter 713 when an owner fails to pay for completed work. Lien enforcement requires filing suit within 1 year of the lien's recording date. See Broward County Contractor Lien Laws for the procedural framework.
- Construction defect claims: An owner alleges that completed work fails to conform to contract specifications, applicable codes under the Florida Building Code, or the standard of care. Chapter 558 notice is mandatory before litigation.
- Change order disputes: Disagreements over whether additional work was authorized and at what price. These frequently arise in commercial renovation and tenant improvement projects where scope evolves during construction.
- Delay claims and liquidated damages: An owner seeks to enforce contract penalties for project overruns; a contractor counterclaims for owner-caused delays. These disputes often involve schedules maintained through contractor technology and project management tools.
- Subcontractor pass-through claims: A general contractor passes a subcontractor's claim against an owner, or vice versa, under contractual flow-down provisions. Subcontractor management practices that affect these disputes are addressed at Broward County Contractor Workforce and Subcontractor Management.
- License and compliance enforcement: DBPR or Broward County enforcement actions following inspection findings. Related enforcement patterns are documented at Broward County Contractor Penalty and Enforcement Actions and Broward County Contractor Compliance Inspections.
Decision boundaries
The choice between mediation, arbitration, and litigation is not purely discretionary — it is largely determined by the contract language executed at project inception and by Florida statutory requirements. Key decision boundaries:
Arbitration vs. litigation: If a commercial contract contains a binding arbitration clause, Florida courts will enforce it under Chapter 682, and a party that files suit despite such a clause faces dismissal or a court order compelling arbitration. AIA A201 General Conditions (2017 edition) default to requiring mediation first, then arbitration unless the parties opt out in writing.
Mediation as prerequisite: AAA Construction Industry Rules require mediation before arbitration in contracts adopting those rules. Skipping mediation can expose a party to fee-shifting sanctions.
Lien vs. contract claim: A lien under Chapter 713 is a property remedy, not a contract remedy. A contractor may simultaneously pursue both a lien foreclosure action and a breach-of-contract claim, but the lien operates on the property's title regardless of whether a contract dispute is pending.
Public vs. private projects: On public works contracts administered by Broward County agencies, dispute resolution follows Florida Statutes Chapter 255 and agency-specific procurement dispute procedures rather than standard commercial arbitration clauses. The Broward County Public Works and Government Contracts reference covers that framework separately.
Licensing board proceedings: DBPR administrative proceedings run independently of civil litigation. A contractor may prevail in civil court on a payment dispute while simultaneously losing a license disciplinary case arising from the same project — or vice versa. The two forums apply different standards of proof and different remedies.
For contractors operating across specialty trades, the dispute landscape varies by trade scope. Broward County Commercial Electrical Contractors, Commercial Plumbing Contractors, and Commercial HVAC Contractors each carry trade-specific licensing conditions that affect standing in dispute proceedings.
References
- Florida Statutes Chapter 558 — Construction Defects
- Florida Statutes Chapter 713 — Construction Liens
- Florida Statutes Chapter 682 — Florida Arbitration Code
- Florida Statutes Chapter 255 — Public Property and Publicly Owned Buildings
- Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR)
- Seventeenth Judicial Circuit Court of Florida — Broward County
- American Arbitration Association — Construction Dispute Resolution
- Florida Building Code — Florida Building Commission