Home Legal Projects Florida Draft a Collaboration Agreement in Florida | 17 Proposals

How a Hospitality Business Hired a Lawyer to Draft a Collaboration Agreement in Florida

See real project results from ContractsCounsel's legal marketplace — this project was posted by a Hospitality business in Florida seeking help to draft a Collaboration Agreement. The client received 17 lawyer proposals with flat fee bids ranging from $450 to $2,000.

Service type
Draft
Document type
Collaboration Agreement
Location
Florida
Client type
Business
Client industry
Hospitality
Deadline
A week
Pricing Range
$450 - $2,000 (Flat fee)
Number of Bids
17 bids

How much does it cost to Draft a Collaboration Agreement in Florida?

For this project, the client received 17 proposals from lawyers to draft a Collaboration Agreement in Florida, with flat fee bids ranging from $450 to $2,000 on a flat fee. Pricing may vary based on the complexity of the legal terms, the type of service requested, and the required turnaround time.

Project Description

In 2026, a business in Florida sought assistance with drafting a collaboration agreement to facilitate contracts for its unique services throughout the hospitality industry. The client aimed to develop a boilerplate contract that could be tailored for different hotels and restaurants, allowing for easy adjustments of names and terms while maintaining consistent language. This contract would streamline negotiations for offering services and coupon deals as part of their business operations. As a result, the client received 17 proposals from licensed lawyers, with flat fee bids ranging from $450 to $2,000, all submitted to complete the work within the requested deadline of one week.

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Lawyers that Bid on this Collaboration Agreement Project

Managing Attorney

(2)

23 years practicing

Free consultation

Collaboration Agreement
Get Free Proposal
$300/h

Contracts Attorney & Legal Counsel

(2)

14 years practicing

Free consultation

Collaboration Agreement
Get Free Proposal
$250/h

Managing Partner

(41)

2 years practicing

Free consultation

Collaboration Agreement
Get Free Proposal
$300/h

Business Lawyer

(56)

30 years practicing

Free consultation

Collaboration Agreement
Get Free Proposal
$400/h

Other Lawyers that Help with Florida Projects

Attorney

(2)

6 years practicing

Free consultation

Get Free Proposal
$250/h

Attorney-at-Law

(1)

12 years practicing

Free consultation

Get Free Proposal
$300/h

General Counsel

(1)

17 years practicing

Free consultation

Get Free Proposal
$150/h

Owner

(3)

10 years practicing

Free consultation

Get Free Proposal
$400/h

Other Lawyers that Help with Collaboration Agreement Projects

Business Lawyer

(1)

8 years practicing

Free consultation

Collaboration Agreement
Get Free Proposal
$350/h

Attorney

(2)

28 years practicing

Free consultation

Collaboration Agreement
Get Free Proposal
$100/h

Attorney

(10)

31 years practicing

Free consultation

Collaboration Agreement
Get Free Proposal
$250/h

Attorney, EMBA

(12)

14 years practicing

Free consultation

Collaboration Agreement
Get Free Proposal
$500/h

Other Collaboration Agreement Postings

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Forum Questions About Collaboration Agreement

Collaboration Agreement

California

Asked on Sep 22, 2024

Can a collaboration agreement be terminated if one party fails to meet their obligations?

I am currently in a collaboration agreement with another individual for a joint business venture, where we agreed to share resources, responsibilities, and profits. However, it has come to my attention that the other party has consistently failed to fulfill their obligations as outlined in the agreement, such as not contributing their fair share of financial resources and not meeting project deadlines. This has caused significant delays and financial losses for me. I would like to know if I have the legal right to terminate the collaboration agreement due to their breach of contract and seek compensation for the damages incurred.

Dolan W.

Answered Oct 29, 2024

I'm so sorry about this situation! The answer is yes. Under California law, a breach of contract occurs when one party fails to fulfill a legal duty the contract created and causes damages for the plaintiff. (California Civil Jury Instructions Number 303.) The measure of damages is the amount that will compensate the aggrieved party for all the detriment caused thereby or likely to result therefrom. (Cal. Civ. Code § 3300.) The law generally allows you to suspend your performance, much like if you stop paying your cell phone bill, your account is cut off. Also, any contract entered into after January 1, 1986 that does not stipulate the legal rate of interest, the obligation shall bear an interest rate of 10% per year after the breach. (Cal. Civ. Code § 3289.) This applies regardless of whether the agreement was written or done orally. Typically, the aggrieved party is entitled to be returned to the same position they were in before the breach. You have some options you can explore: You may want to consider just writing a formal demand letter. You can find it here - https://www.contractscounsel.com/t/document-form-checkout/119 You can file a lawsuit in your local court. If you’ve already sent a bunch of letters, then the truth is this is the only way to compel them to do anything. Best of luck! Dolan

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