Suretyship is a
specialized guarantee provided by surety or insurance companies that is
created whenever one party guarantees the performance of an obligation
by another party. Generally, there are three parties to the agreement:
Because they defy classification and are unique in purpose, many bonds fall
under the general description of Commercial or Miscellaneous Bonds. These
Bond Types cover a broad range of industries and obligations.
They may cover obligations under a license; an obligation to perform certain
duties; an obligation to remit monies; an obligation to pay certain taxes,
etc.The ProSure Group handles all kinds of these bond types.
Entities (Contractors) that enter into a contract with a public or private owner are many times required to provide these types of bonds. Bid Bonds accompany their bid or proposal, while Payment and Performance (P&P/Final) Bonds are provided once the contractor is awarded the project. Though public owners are mandated by law to require these bonds of their contractors on projects of certain types over certain dollar amounts, General Contractors commonly require their subcontractors to provide them with P&P bonds to help manage risk. Additionally, lending institutions manage risk by commonly making the securing of P&P bonds by the contractor a condition to the approval of loans that are issued for commercial type construction.
Subdivision bonds are different from the more common Contract/Performance
and Payment Bonds in that, the owner of the project provides bonds to the
public entity to guarantee the completion of improvements that will paid for
by the owner/developer yet ultimately be dedicated to the public entity.
A bond between a supplier and
purchaser which guarantees the supplier will furnish supplies or
materials as contracted. Should the supplier default, the surety will
indemnify the purchaser of the supplies against any loss sustained as a
result.
Fiduciary bonds ensure performance of someone acting on another's behalf. Judicial Bonds ensure that both defendant and plaintiff in a legal proceeding have enough money to pay the other party, should the case be decided against them.
Most Common Fiduciary Bonds: