Posts Tagged ‘Construction Law Musings’

Christopher Hill Launches Great Resource for Virginia Mechanic Liens

Our friend at Construction Law Musings, Virginia construction attorney Christopher Hill, just add a really great resource to his top-notch construction law blog for those interested in construction liens.   A Mechanic’s Lien Page.

Before the lien page, Musings was already a great source of  information on Virginia lien laws.   The new page really organizes that data.

Here are a few of the articles you can find within the new section:

A Lien By Any Other Name Can Sound Just As Sweet (written by yours truly)

Q:  What can you lien?  A: What did you bring to the project?

Contracts, Liens and Notices

Enjoy.

(P.S. If you’re looking for information on Virginia’s lien scheme you can just check out the Virginia tag at the Construction Lien Blog.    It even includes a post by Chris Hill).

This article was originally posted on Express Lien’s topic-specific Construction Lien Blog.

Posted in:     From The Experts, Mechanics Lien  /  Tags: , , ,   /   1 Comment

Thanks to Construction Law Musings for the Soapbox to Discuss the EFCA

This morning, Chris Hill graciously allowed me to publish a post on his Construction Law Musings blog about the Employee Free Choice Act.

In the posts’ explanation of the Employee Free Choice Act and how it may impact the construction industry, I quote Dave Seitter of the Midwest Construction Law Blog from a very informative post on the act:

The untold implications of eliminating the secret ballot election are many, and are derived from the protections crafted under the NLRA over the last half-century. Most importantly, employees will be denied access to the normal pre-election debate that shapes informed decision-making, and employers will lose the opportunity to present an alternative point of view.

This radical change will also erode employees’ free choice. Importantly, there are currently no restrictions in the EFCA on the time period during which labor organizations can collect authorization cards. A union that collects a single card each week from a workforce totaling 200 employees could potentially acquire cards from the majority of the workforce over the course of two long years.

Read my post at Construction Law Musings by clicking here.   A big thank you to Chris Hill for giving us the opportunity to speak to his readers.

Posted in:     Around The Web, Construction News  /  Tags: , , , ,   /   1 Comment

Open Accounts and Mechanics Liens

The following post was written by a guest contributor to the Construction Lien Blog, Christopher Hill.    Chris a construction attorney in the state of Virginia, leading the construction practice group at Durrette Bradshaw.  He publishes a construction law blog titled “Construction Law Musings.”   [Chris' profile at Construction Lien Blog]


Scott Wolfe, one of the contributors to this blog asked me for a piece on Virginia Mechanic’s Liens.  Scott has written several good pieces on liens in the Commonwealth of Virginia, and I hope that this one proves as helpful.

In researching liens in the Commonwealth of Virginia, I ran across a question that should be on the minds of construction professionals in Virginia, particularly suppliers of materials.  The question is simply “On an open account (based on a credit agreement or other arrangement), is each delivery to a particular contractor its own “work” such that the 90 day clock runs from the completion of each delivery, or do all deliveries to a particular project constitute the “work” on that project such that the 90 day clock only runs from the last delivery to the job site?” (How’s that for simple!)

The answer to this question is (drum roll please!)- “It depends.” (I know, you are shocked at such a “lawyerly” answer.)

The Virginia Supreme Court weighed in on this question in United Savings Association of Texas, F. S. B. v. Jim Carpenter Company, Record No. 951470 (2006).  The Jim Carpenter case involved three different cases of liens that were filed by material men pursuant to various forms of open account contracts.  You can read the case to see the particular facts of the case but in essence the owners/general contractors on the project argued that the material men could not lien for any materials delivered to a particular project outside of the 90 day lien window and the material men argued that all of the materials were delivered to the same projects and therefore all constituted one continuous contract.

The Virginia Supreme Court held that the intent of the parties controls.  On the one hand, general deliveries to a contractor for general use (i. e. warehousing for use at some time in the future) each constitute a separate contract, each with its own 90 day clock.  On the other, if the material deliveries upon which the lien is based are all delivered for the benefit of a particular project then they all constitute one continuous contract and the 90 day clock does not start to run until the last delivery is completed.

What do you, as a construction professional, take from this case?  Be careful with your open accounts.  Make sure that when delivering materials to a job site based upon an open account you are exceedingly clear with your purchase order or takeoff language that certain materials are to be delivered to a certain project.  Failure to do so may lead a court to decide that the materials were a general delivery and cut off much or all of your recovery.

As with everything else to do with the picky issues with mechanic’s liens, all of the other requirements (150 day look back, notice, etc.) apply and good legal assistance is a must.

If you are interested in more thoughts on Virginia construction law, please check out my Construction Law Musings blog and join the conversation.

Posted in:     Filing Requirements, Mechanics Lien  /  Tags: , , , ,   /   1 Comment

Another Construction Safety Reminder – Fall at Yankee Stadium

Last week, we posted about the collapse of a pedestrian bridge in Atlanta as a reminder to contractors of the importance of construction safety. Another high profile construction accident occurred this week in New York, as a worker on the new Yankee stadium was hospitalized after a fall from a mobile scaffold.

This is just another reminder to contractors, subcontractors and other tradesman who do dangerous business that safety should be taken seriously. One small fall can cost your project bad press, an OSHA investigation, workers compensation claims and rate increases, insurance battles, and more.

Chris Hill, a construction attorney with Durrette & Bradshaw, published an article recently on his “Construction Law Musings” blog titled: Be Ready In Case Of A Construction Disaster.

Chris’ point?

“If you are unlucky enough to be an owner, architect, engineer, or contractor on a project that results in disaster, you need to get legal counsel, immediately contact your insurance company and have an independent third party evaluate the situation. For further steps, please check out this article I wrote for Business Law Bulletin of Virginia.”

His article in the Business Law Bulletin of Virginia is a great resource for contractors all over the country faced with construction accidents or disasters. More resources can be found at our prior post here.


Posted in:     Safety  /  Tags: , ,   /   Leave a comment