Texas Construction Arbitration and Mediation

Texas construction projects generate disputes at every phase — from contract execution through final payment — and two primary alternatives to litigation exist for resolving them: arbitration and mediation. This page covers how both processes function under Texas law, what triggers their use in construction contexts, and how they differ in outcome, enforceability, and cost. Understanding these mechanisms matters because unresolved disputes halt project progress, trigger lien filings, and can escalate into protracted litigation affecting all parties in the contract chain.

Definition and scope

Arbitration in Texas construction is a binding or non-binding private adjudication process in which a neutral arbitrator (or panel) hears evidence and issues a decision called an award. Binding arbitration awards are enforceable as court judgments under the Texas General Arbitration Act (Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code, Chapter 171) and, for disputes meeting the interstate commerce threshold, under the Federal Arbitration Act (9 U.S.C. §§ 1–16).

Mediation is a facilitated negotiation in which a neutral mediator assists disputing parties in reaching a voluntary settlement. Unlike arbitration, mediation produces no binding decision unless the parties execute a written settlement agreement. Texas courts routinely order mediation under Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code § 154.021 before allowing construction disputes to proceed to trial.

Both processes are classified under the broader category of alternative dispute resolution (ADR), which Texas codifies in Chapter 154 of the Civil Practice & Remedies Code. The Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR) and the Texas Facilities Commission (TFC) each incorporate ADR requirements into public construction contracts administered under their oversight. Disputes governed by Texas construction contract requirements frequently specify ADR as a condition precedent to litigation.

Scope and coverage limitations: This page addresses dispute resolution in the context of Texas-governed construction contracts. It does not cover federal procurement disputes adjudicated under the Contract Disputes Act, tribal construction projects on sovereign land, or disputes arising exclusively under another state's law. International construction arbitration under UNCITRAL or ICC rules is outside the scope of this discussion. Licensing enforcement actions conducted by TDLR — including those affecting licensed trades covered under Texas construction licensing requirements — are administrative proceedings, not ADR, and are not covered here.

How it works

Mediation process — 5 discrete phases:

  1. Initiation: A party requests mediation per the contract clause or a court order. In privately agreed mediation, both parties select a mediator, often a retired judge or construction attorney certified by the Texas Mediator Credentialing Association (TMCA).
  2. Pre-mediation submission: Each party submits a confidential brief (typically 5–15 pages) summarizing their position, evidence, and settlement range.
  3. Joint session: The mediator opens with ground rules and each side presents a summary. Sessions commonly run 6–8 hours for mid-size construction disputes.
  4. Caucus: The mediator meets separately with each party to explore interests, evaluate risk, and probe settlement ranges. Caucus content is confidential and cannot be disclosed in later litigation without consent.
  5. Resolution or impasse: If parties agree, a written settlement agreement is executed on the same day and is enforceable as a contract. If no agreement is reached, the mediator issues a declaration of impasse and the dispute may proceed to arbitration or litigation.

Arbitration process follows a more formal track. After filing a demand with the agreed arbitration body — the American Arbitration Association (AAA) and its Construction Industry Arbitration Rules being the most commonly specified in Texas commercial contracts — the parties exchange claims, conduct document discovery, and attend hearings. The AAA's Construction Industry Rules set specific timelines: for claims under $75,000, the Fast Track Procedures target an award within 60 days of arbitrator appointment. For larger disputes, standard procedures apply with no fixed ceiling on duration.

Common scenarios

Construction ADR in Texas most frequently arises in four categories:

Decision boundaries

Arbitration vs. mediation — key distinctions:

Feature Mediation Arbitration
Outcome Voluntary settlement only Binding award (if binding arbitration)
Enforceability Written agreement = contract Enforceable as court judgment
Decision-maker Parties themselves Arbitrator(s)
Confidentiality Fully confidential Limited — awards can be filed in court
Average cost (mid-size dispute) Lower; typically single mediator day rate Higher; AAA filing fees plus arbitrator fees
Appeal rights Standard contract remedy Extremely narrow under Chapter 171

When a contract is silent on dispute resolution, Texas courts default to litigation. When a contract mandates arbitration but one party claims the clause is unconscionable or was procured by fraud, Texas Civil Practice & Remedies Code § 171.088 provides grounds to vacate an award on those bases — but courts apply a strong presumption in favor of enforcing arbitration agreements.

Parties with disputes touching Texas construction bonding requirements or surety bonds face an additional boundary: surety obligations under a payment or performance bond are governed separately and the surety's participation in ADR depends on the bond's terms, not solely the construction contract's arbitration clause.

References

📜 5 regulatory citations referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log

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