This article deals with completion on a construction
project. However, it is not intended to be a complete analysis of mechanic's
liens. For that, you need to seek the aid and advice of a competent
construction attorney.
Contractors
are one of the only professions that are allowed to record a lien against
property-and tie up that property-to secure their payment even before a lawsuit
is filed. The right to a mechanic's lien is protected by the California
Constitution. However, the Legislature has tried to balance the rights of the
contractors against the rights of owners, and has set forth a number of
limitations on enforcement of lien rights.
One of those
limitations is that a mechanic's lien must be recorded within a short period of
time after "completion" of a project. If you are the "original
contractor," which means the person under contract with the owner, you
have 90 days from "completion" of the project to record a mechanic's
lien, unless a Notice of Completion has been recorded, at which point, the
original contractor has 60 days. A subcontractor's lien rights are shortened
from 90 days to 30 days by the recording of a Notice of Completion. The Notice
of Completion itself is required to be recorded within ten days of completion.
If it is not recorded within ten days of completion, the statute provides that
it is ineffective to shorten the lien period and then everyone has 90 days.
The
Legislature has passed a law that would require any one who records a Notice of
Completion or a Notice of Cessation of Labor, to send a notice to anyone who
gave that owner a Preliminary Notice. The Notice of Completion must be sent by
certified mail, within 10 days of recording the Notice of Completion.
The rule requiring notification of the recording of a
notice of completion does not apply to a person who occupies the real property
as a personal residence so long as the dwelling contains not more than four
residential units. Thus, the rule essentially does not apply to owner-occupied
homes.
As to
completion, Civil Code section 3086 defines completion to be "actual
completion of the work of improvement." However, the statute also provides
for "equivalents" to completion: (a) the occupation or use of the
work of improvement by the owner, or his agent, accompanied by the cessation of
labor; (b) the acceptance by the owner, or his agent, of the work of
improvement; (c) a cessation of labor for a continuous period of 60 days (or
thirty days if a Notice of Cessation is recorded); or (d) if the work of
improvement is subject to acceptance by a public entity, the date of such
acceptance.
Despite what
appears to be a fairly clear definition, there have been a number of cases on
this subject. In one rather famous case, a contractor was working on a project
and there were four soap dispensers the contract required to be installed. The
soap dispensers, however, were on back-order. The owner had contended that
completion occurred before the soap dishes were installed. The Court of Appeal
held that because there was work required under the contract that needed to be
performed, that the project was not complete. Accordingly, in that case, the
court held that the omission of the four soap dispensers that were part of the
contract meant that the project was not complete, and a mechanic's lien that
was recorded later in time from the date that the owner declared it to be
complete, would be valid. However,
in other cases, the Court of Appeal has declared "trivial" or
"punch list" work does not extend the time for completion. This
becomes a factual question as to whether the work was merely to correct the
work originally performed, or to perform work that was required by the contract
that was never installed.