Construction Law: Final Payment by Owner, Avoiding Lien Claims

Donalt J. Eglinton | Wardand Smith | September 5, 2018 A contractor has finished work on a construction project in North Carolina and submitted a written request for final payment to the owner of the real property that has been improved by the construction. The owner is concerned about having to deal with liens from… Continue reading Construction Law: Final Payment by Owner, Avoiding Lien Claims

California Contractor Spills Coffee on Himself by Failing to Stay Mechanics Lien Action While Pursuing Arbitration

Garret Murai | California Construction Law Blog | July 26, 2018 It bugs the Mrs. that I have a habit of reading the directions. “Just plug the darn thing in!” said the Mrs. when we got a new coffee maker to replace our old one which we’ve had since I think before we were married… Continue reading California Contractor Spills Coffee on Himself by Failing to Stay Mechanics Lien Action While Pursuing Arbitration

Enforcing A Mechanic’s Lien In California? Don’t Waive Your Right To Arbitrate The Dispute

Jeffrey N. Brown | Thompson Coburn LLP | June 13, 2018 On June 6, 2018, the California Court of Appeal held that a contractor waived its right to arbitrate disputes because it recorded a mechanic’s lien and then didn’t follow California Code of Civil Procedure Section 1281.5 in its subsequent lawsuit to foreclose on the… Continue reading Enforcing A Mechanic’s Lien In California? Don’t Waive Your Right To Arbitrate The Dispute

When Does a Mechanics’ Lien Effect?

Kent B. Scott | Babcock Scott & Babcock | March 30, 2018 The Utah Mechanic’s Liens Act needed some clarification on when exactly a mechanic’s lien goes into effect. That clarification came in February 2015 from the Court of Appeals of Utah. In the case Pentalon Construction, Inc. v. Rymark Properties, LLC the court ruled… Continue reading When Does a Mechanics’ Lien Effect?

A Promise to Pay Doesn’t Extend Lien Deadlines

Stan Martin | Commonsense Construction Law | January 24, 2018 Mechanic’s lien rights arise from the laws of each state; there is no common-law right to unilaterally lien someone else’s property. As such, compliance with statutory requirements and deadlines is paramount. Thus, when an owner promised to pay a sub, and the sub elected not… Continue reading A Promise to Pay Doesn’t Extend Lien Deadlines