Existing law, the Contractors’ State License Law, provides for licensure and regulation of contractors by the Contractors’ State License Board. That law authorizes the registrar of contractors to take disciplinary action against those contractors, including, but not limited to, the issuance of citations imposing civil penalties.
Existing law provides that specified persons, including, but not limited to, contractors, who contribute labor, skill, or services to a work of improvement, shall have a lien on the improved property. Existing law requires certain of those persons to give a preliminary 20-day notice (private work), as defined, containing specified information prior to recording a claim of lien and conditions enforcement of
the lien upon compliance with that requirement and making proof of service, as specified.
This bill would specify that a subcontractor, as defined, must comply with that requirement, would specify that enforcement of the lien is conditioned upon that compliance and making proof of service, as specified, and would provide that a subcontractor, as defined, who fails to give that notice before recording a claim of lien is failure to comply is subject to disciplinary action. Under the bill, a civil penalty imposed through that disciplinary action would be required to comply with a specified schedule.
Existing
law provides that if the claimant of a lien fails to commence an action to foreclose the lien within 90 days of recording the lien or fails to extend credit, as specified, the lien shall be automatically null and void.
This bill would require a contractor, who fails to timely commence that action or extend credit, to execute and record a release of the lien within 15 calendar days of the date that the lien becomes null and void. Under the bill, a contractor who fails to comply with that provision would be subject to disciplinary action. The bill would require that the board, before taking that disciplinary action, provide a written notice to the contractor, as specified. In addition, the bill would require that a civil penalty imposed through that disciplinary action comply with a specified schedule.
Existing law requires a contractor to retain specified records relating to his or her transactions as a contractor and to make those documents available for a period of not less than 5 years after completing a project. Existing law subjects the contractor to disciplinary action for failing to comply with that requirement.
This bill would require a contractor who records a claim of lien to retain all documents related to that claim for 5 years and to make those documents available to the registrar within 30 calendar days of receiving a written request. This bill would also provide that failure to comply with that provision would constitute cause for disciplinary action.
Existing law provides that a person who willfully includes in a claim of lien labor, services, equipment, or materials not furnished for the property
described in the claim shall thereby forfeit the lien.
This bill would provide that a contractor who performs that act is also subject to disciplinary action, unless the contractor made an error in good faith and records a corrected claim of lien, as specified. This bill would also provide that if a contractor includes labor, services, equipment, or materials not furnished for the property, there is a rebuttable presumption that the contractor performed that act willfully if the contractor also fails to retain or timely provide documents to the registrar, as specified.
Existing law requires an original contractor, as defined, to defend an action on a claim of lien at his or her own expense where the claim is recorded for labor, services, equipment, or materials furnished to that contractor.
This bill would provide that the
failure of an original contractor to comply with that provision constitutes cause for disciplinary action, provided that the owner of the property, or the owner of an interest in the property, has fully paid for the portion of the work of improvement that is the subject of the claim of lien.
Existing law provides that where no action has been brought to enforce a claim of lien, the owner of the property or the owner of an interest therein may petition the court for a decree to release the property from the lien and, if successful in obtaining that decree, shall be entitled to $2,000 in attorneys’ fees.
This bill would provide that a contractor’s failure to pay those attorneys’ fees shall constitute both an willful and deliberate
injury to the petitioner, if specified conditions are met, and cause for disciplinary action.