understanding and negotiating contracts for nonprofits

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Eileen Morgan Johnson Partner Whiteford, Taylor & Preston, L.L.P. 3190 Fairview Park Drive, Suite 300 Falls Church, Virginia 22042 Tel: (703) 280-9271 E-Mail: [email protected]

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Nonprofit staff negotiate a lot of contracts, from annual meeting spaces to copier leases and software licenses. This presentation lays out the basics of contracts so they can be smarter negotiators.

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Page 1: Understanding and negotiating contracts for nonprofits

Eileen Morgan JohnsonPartnerWhiteford, Taylor & Preston, L.L.P.3190 Fairview Park Drive, Suite 300Falls Church, Virginia 22042Tel: (703) 280-9271E-Mail: [email protected]

Page 2: Understanding and negotiating contracts for nonprofits

Before we begin - what is a Contract?

It’s not what you call it that

counts

Page 3: Understanding and negotiating contracts for nonprofits

Elements of a Contract

Page 4: Understanding and negotiating contracts for nonprofits

Name the parties to the contract

The subject matter of the contract

Components of a Contract

Remember . . .

Who . . .

What . . .

When . . .

Page 5: Understanding and negotiating contracts for nonprofits

Components (continued)

Where . . .

How . . .

Why . . .

Only include if it matters

• Leases• Hotel and convention contacts

• Special skills or equipment

• The amount of money to be paid

• Each party’s motivation

Page 6: Understanding and negotiating contracts for nonprofits

Basic Terms

TIP: Use checklists when you are reviewing contracts to make sure that essential terms are not omitted.

Identification of Parties Product or Service Price Delivery dates

Breach Termination Notice Warranties

Page 7: Understanding and negotiating contracts for nonprofits

Opportunity . . .

Document . . .

Requirements . . .

to change some of the terms of the contract

agreement of both parties

in writing signed by both parties

Contract Amendments

TIP: Develop and use a template for contract amendments

Page 8: Understanding and negotiating contracts for nonprofits

Renewals and Extensions

BEWARE . . .

EXTENSIONS . . . are really just contract amendments Date for delivery is often only change automatic renewal provisions

Usually only benefit the party being paid

Often require lots of notice to cancel

Easy to forget they’re there

TIP: When presented with a contract that contains an automatic renewal provision, STOP and ask yourself if the auto renewal helps or hurts your organization

Page 9: Understanding and negotiating contracts for nonprofits

Boilerplate

Page 10: Understanding and negotiating contracts for nonprofits

How to change boilerplate

Page 11: Understanding and negotiating contracts for nonprofits

Independent Contractors

Page 12: Understanding and negotiating contracts for nonprofits

Waiver . . . a promise not to sue over any claims that might arise out of the contract

Valid waiver requires knowledge of the rights being waived

• State law may limit ability to waive claims that have not yet occurred

Waivers and Indemnification

Page 13: Understanding and negotiating contracts for nonprofits

Indemnification . . .

Waivers and Indemnification

one party agrees to pay expenses of other party in defending claims filed against them because of the contract

TIP: Indemnification agreements are only as good as the party’s financial condition or insurance coverage

Page 14: Understanding and negotiating contracts for nonprofits

Events . . .

Excuses . . .

are out of the control of either party

the party from performing their part of the contract

Force Majeure

Traditionally “acts of God” – severe weather such as floods, hurricanes or tornados or earthquakes

Page 15: Understanding and negotiating contracts for nonprofits

Modern version . . .

Force Majeure

wars, insurrections, strikes, utility failures, terrorist attacks, transportation shutdown

TIP – get Insurance coverage for force majeure events Event cancellation Business interruption

Page 16: Understanding and negotiating contracts for nonprofits

Use the right contract for the job

TIP: Don’t just download a form contract from the internet without knowing what you’re doing.

Page 17: Understanding and negotiating contracts for nonprofits

Eileen Morgan JohnsonPartner

Whiteford, Taylor & Preston L.L.P.

Phone: 703-280-9271

Email: [email protected] www.wtplaw.com

Contact Information