What Does a Manufacturing Lawyer Check in a Production Agreement?

Практика:Corporate

Автор : Donghoo Sohn, Esq.



A manufacturing lawyer guides corporations through the negotiation, drafting, and enforcement of manufacturing agreements, addressing critical operational, liability, and supply-chain risks before disputes arise.

Manufacturing agreements define the relationship between a company and its manufacturing partner, specifying production standards, quality control, intellectual property ownership, payment terms, and remedies for breach. These contracts operate across multiple jurisdictions and often involve complex regulatory compliance, making legal review essential to protect your interests. From a practitioner's perspective, most manufacturing disputes stem not from ambiguous legal language but from incomplete specification of performance metrics, unclear allocation of liability for defects, and inadequate termination procedures that leave parties without a clean exit.

Contents


1. What Makes Manufacturing Agreements Legally Complex


Manufacturing agreements blend contract law, product liability, intellectual property, and regulatory compliance into a single document. The stakes are high because performance failures can trigger liability cascading across multiple parties.



Why Do Manufacturing Agreements Require Specialized Legal Attention?


Manufacturing agreements require specialized legal attention because they govern the creation of physical goods, which introduces product liability, regulatory compliance, quality control, and supply-chain continuity issues that standard commercial contracts do not address. A poorly drafted agreement can leave your corporation exposed to liability for defects you did not cause, loss of trade secrets, unexpected termination without remedy, or regulatory penalties if your manufacturer does not meet statutory standards. Courts in New York and federal courts overseeing interstate commerce disputes often examine whether the agreement clearly allocated responsibility for regulatory compliance, quality testing, and defect remediation—and if that allocation is ambiguous, judges may impose liability on both parties or interpret the contract against the drafter, a principle that can work against your corporation if you did not control the document's language.



What Key Risks Should a Corporation Address in a Manufacturing Agreement?


Your corporation should address intellectual property ownership, product liability allocation, quality control standards, payment and delivery terms, regulatory compliance responsibility, and termination rights. Intellectual property ownership is critical: if your design, formula, or process is not explicitly owned by your corporation or licensed back to you with clear restrictions, your manufacturer may use that intellectual property for competitors. Product liability allocation determines whether your corporation or the manufacturer bears the cost of recalls, injuries, or regulatory violations arising from manufacturing defects. Quality control standards must specify inspection protocols, acceptable defect rates, and remedies for non-conforming goods so disputes do not hinge on subjective assessments of acceptable quality. Payment terms should tie disbursement to verified production milestones, not advance payment that leaves you unsecured if the manufacturer fails to deliver. Termination provisions must specify notice periods, wind-down obligations, and return of materials so you can exit without litigation if the relationship breaks down.



2. How Should a Corporation Structure Liability and Indemnification


Liability and indemnification clauses are the operational backbone of manufacturing agreements. They determine who pays for injuries, regulatory fines, and product recalls.



How Can a Manufacturing Agreement Protect Your Corporation from Product Liability?


A manufacturing agreement can protect your corporation from product liability by clearly allocating responsibility for design defects, manufacturing defects, and failure-to-warn claims. Your corporation should require the manufacturer to indemnify you for claims arising from manufacturing defects, contamination, or failure to meet agreed specifications, while your corporation retains responsibility for design defects and warnings related to your product design. The agreement should require the manufacturer to carry product liability insurance naming your corporation as an additional insured, so you have a direct claim against the manufacturer's insurer if a third party is injured. Courts examine whether the indemnification clause is specific enough to cover the actual risk: a vague indemnity for any and all claims may not cover regulatory fines or recall costs, whereas a detailed indemnity specifying manufacturing defects, contamination, and failure to meet quality standards is more likely to be enforced. Your corporation should also require the manufacturer to maintain records of quality testing, material sourcing, and process compliance so that in the event of a product injury or regulatory investigation, you have evidence that the manufacturer met its obligations.



What Happens If a Manufacturer Breaches Quality Standards in New York?


If a manufacturer breaches quality standards, your corporation may pursue a claim for breach of contract in New York state court or federal court if diversity jurisdiction exists. The remedy depends on whether the agreement specifies acceptance criteria, inspection procedures, and remedies for non-conforming goods. If the agreement requires inspection within a stated period (for example, 10 days of delivery) and your corporation fails to inspect or notify the manufacturer of defects within that window, New York courts may bar your claim under the Uniform Commercial Code's requirement that buyers inspect goods and notify sellers of defects within a reasonable time. This procedural timing risk is why manufacturing agreements should require your corporation to document and communicate defects immediately upon discovery, preserving your right to reject goods or demand cure. Damages for breach may include the cost to repair or replace defective goods, lost profits if the defect prevents you from fulfilling your own customer orders, and in some cases, consequential damages if the agreement permits them—though courts are cautious about awarding consequential damages for commercial breaches unless the parties explicitly agreed to that exposure.



3. What Role Does Intellectual Property Play in Manufacturing Agreements


Intellectual property ownership and protection are often the most contested provisions in manufacturing agreements because your manufacturer gains access to proprietary designs, processes, and formulations.



How Should Your Corporation Protect Trade Secrets in a Manufacturing Agreement?


Your corporation should protect trade secrets by explicitly stating that all designs, formulas, processes, and materials remain your sole property and that the manufacturer may use them only to fulfill the specific manufacturing contract. The agreement should prohibit the manufacturer from reverse-engineering, disclosing, or using your intellectual property for any other purpose, including manufacturing for competitors. Your corporation should require the manufacturer to implement physical and digital security measures (locked storage, password-protected access, limited employee access) and to return or destroy all materials and documentation upon termination. Under New York law and the federal Defend Trade Secrets Act, a trade secret loses protection if the owner does not take reasonable steps to maintain secrecy, so a manufacturing agreement that lacks confidentiality obligations and security requirements may waive your corporation's legal remedies if the manufacturer leaks your intellectual property. Your corporation should also require the manufacturer to indemnify you for any unauthorized disclosure or use of your intellectual property and to cooperate with your investigation if you discover unauthorized use.



4. What Should a Corporation Evaluate before Signing a Manufacturing Agreement


Before signing a manufacturing agreement, your corporation should assess regulatory compliance obligations, termination flexibility, dispute resolution procedures, and financial exposure.



What Regulatory Compliance Obligations Should Be Specified?


Your corporation should clearly specify which party is responsible for compliance with FDA, EPA, OSHA, industry-specific standards, and local regulations. If your manufacturer operates in multiple jurisdictions, the agreement should identify which laws apply to each production facility and which party bears the cost of compliance audits, certifications, and remediation if violations are discovered. Many manufacturing agreements fail to address regulatory responsibility, leaving your corporation exposed to fines and recalls if the manufacturer cuts corners on compliance. Your agreement should require the manufacturer to maintain certifications (ISO 9001, FDA registration, etc.) and to notify your corporation immediately of any regulatory inspection, warning letter, or violation. This allocation prevents your corporation from discovering mid-production that the manufacturer lacks required certifications or has pending regulatory violations.



How Should Termination Rights and Exit Procedures Be Structured?


Termination rights should specify notice periods (typically 30 to 90 days), grounds for immediate termination (material breach, regulatory violation, insolvency), and wind-down obligations. Your corporation should retain the right to terminate for convenience with reasonable notice, so you are not locked into a relationship with an underperforming manufacturer. Upon termination, the agreement should require the manufacturer to complete in-process orders, return all materials and documentation, deliver inventory to your specified location, and cooperate with the transition to a new manufacturer. A weak termination clause can trap your corporation in a failing relationship and delay your ability to source from an alternative manufacturer. When evaluating a contract manufacturing agreement, confirm that termination procedures do not require your corporation to accept defective goods as a condition of exit or to waive claims for breach.



5. How Do Dispute Resolution and Governing Law Provisions Affect Your Interests


Dispute resolution and governing law provisions determine where and how disagreements are resolved, affecting cost, speed, and enforceability of judgments.



Should Your Corporation Choose Arbitration or Litigation?


Your corporation should evaluate whether arbitration or litigation better protects your interests. Arbitration is faster and more confidential than litigation, but arbitrators' awards are difficult to appeal and may be less predictable than court decisions. If your manufacturer is located outside the United States, arbitration under the United Nations Convention on the Recognition and Enforcement of Foreign Arbitral Awards may be more enforceable than a U.S. .ourt judgment. Litigation in New York state or federal court offers appellate review and discovery rights, but is slower and more expensive. Your corporation should also consider whether the agreement permits you to seek injunctive relief (a court order stopping the manufacturer from using your intellectual property or delivering defective goods) because arbitration clauses sometimes limit a party's ability to obtain emergency court orders. If intellectual property protection is critical, your corporation should reserve the right to pursue injunctive relief in court despite an arbitration clause.

ProvisionKey Consideration for Your Corporation
Intellectual Property OwnershipEnsure all designs, formulas, and processes remain your sole property; manufacturer has limited license only for contract performance.
Product Liability IndemnityManufacturer indemnifies you for manufacturing defects; you retain responsibility for design defects and warnings.
Quality Standards and InspectionDefine acceptance criteria, inspection timelines, and remedies for non-conforming goods to avoid disputes over acceptable quality.
Regulatory ComplianceAllocate responsibility for FDA, EPA, and industry certifications; require manufacturer to maintain current certifications and report violations.
Termination and ExitRetain termination for convenience with reasonable notice; specify wind-down obligations and return of materials.

As your corporation moves forward, prioritize documentation of performance metrics, quality testing results, and regulatory compliance records from the outset. Before finalizing any manufacturing agreement, confirm that intellectual property provisions explicitly protect your designs and processes, that liability allocation covers product recalls and regulatory fines, and that termination procedures allow you to exit if performance fails. When evaluating potential manufacturers, request evidence of regulatory certifications, quality management systems, and insurance coverage, and verify that the agreement requires the manufacturer to maintain those standards throughout the relationship. If you are acquiring a manufacturing operation or integrating a new supplier, an asset purchase agreement should address the transfer of manufacturing contracts, regulatory licenses, and employee obligations so your corporation does not inherit unexpected liabilities. Finally, establish a protocol for addressing defects and disputes promptly: delayed notice or failure to document breaches can waive your corporation's remedies under New York law, so formalize concerns in writing and preserve evidence before any disposition or settlement discussion.


22 Apr, 2026


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