Texas
This is crazy to me. With a previous O&G company, we had a vendor shut their doors after finishing a job for us. Obviously, a lot their vendors came after us for money they weren't paid. I worked closely with our lawyers on it, and the laws were pretty clear. If we paid our vendor what we were obligated to pay, the liens weren't valid. They also had to inform us they were going to file a lien to trigger a waiting period before they could actually file it. But if we had already paid our vendor, they had to go after them for their owed money. If we hadn't paid the vendor, the lien was valid, so we payed the subs, then paid the balance of our original invoice to our vendor.cevans_40 said:Because they did all of the work at said property and presumable their work and materials are still there. Should a subcontractor just have to eat the labor and material costs?TxAG#2011 said:
There has to be some logic behind allowing someone to file a lien on a property all because some other entity didn't pay them. That sounds really dumb.
I wouldn't be too hard on yourself. Sometimes this kind of thing just happens. Material prices caused a lot of this and you obviously have no control over that. Lots of construction companies run kind of fast and loose with their leveraging but even if a company was relatively conservative they could get upside down on jobs that were sold before the spike. After that, they kind of have to mismanage things and/or take on way too much work.arrow said:
I self-contracted my barndo and while it was a good experience, I wanted to push the easy button on our home. The barndo was a simple design and relatively inexpensive compared to the custom home.
I'm frustrated at myself. I do meticulous research in most interests and pursuits in my life. I thought I did adequate research for my home build, but clearly I did not. I put a lot of misplaced trust in the "system". i.e. Builder, Lender, Title Company, Insurance, Texas Law, etc.
So for the largest purchase I'll ever make, I failed to protect myself. Hopefully for anyone aspiring to build a home that stumbles upon this thread will learn something.
htxag09 said:This is crazy to me. With a previous O&G company, we had a vendor shut their doors after finishing a job for us. Obviously, a lot their vendors came after us for money they weren't paid. I worked closely with our lawyers on it, and the laws were pretty clear. If we paid our vendor what we were obligated to pay, the liens weren't valid. They also had to inform us they were going to file a lien to trigger a waiting period before they could actually file it. But if we had already paid our vendor, they had to go after them for their owed money. If we hadn't paid the vendor, the lien was valid, so we payed the subs, then paid the balance of our original invoice to our vendor.cevans_40 said:Because they did all of the work at said property and presumable their work and materials are still there. Should a subcontractor just have to eat the labor and material costs?TxAG#2011 said:
There has to be some logic behind allowing someone to file a lien on a property all because some other entity didn't pay them. That sounds really dumb.
This was specific to liens on wells/material rights and I don't expect it to be exact to residential homes, but crazy that it's basically the opposite. Honestly, I'd have guessed laws would be even more protective to the end home owner in these cases.
I mean I get that it sucks that the subcontractor should have to eat the costs. But the OP paid the builder for it. What's more fair/aka less ****ty? 1)That the home owner has to pay the builder, then pay the sub, then fight to get any money back from the builder or 2) that the sub has to fight to get their money from the builder? You can just as easily turn this back on the sub, they should have done better credit checks, had better payment terms, etc.
I said the bank has no duty to the customer to vet their contractor for them, which is the only way borrowing party could be successful in suing the bank.jja79 said:
Your comment about the bank not vetting a contractor is interesting. Not sure if you mean subctractor or the GC/builder. I cannot imagine a transaction where the bank doesn't vet the GC/builder and require lien waivers where appropriate.
We vet every builder we have any business with every two years as if we've never heard of them before.
Your would make much more money and reduce your risks if you lent to the builder. Are you indicating an approved list of builders? That is what could land you in a pickle as I mentioned above.jja79 said:
The builder isn't our client. The borrower is our client. We feel it's prudent to review each builder every two years as things can change.
Have a credible link or cite for this? Cause otherwise, that's an internet myth just like the old "Stella Awards" frivolous lawsuits emails that used to be so popular (and totally made up). There is such a thing as "negligent security" where premises can be held liable for not providing adequate security under certain circumstances - but I'll believe this only if I see an actual credible source. Otherwise, aint no way that's true.Quote:
Have a credible link or cite for this? Cause otherwise, that's an internet myth just like the old "Stella Awards" frivolous lawsuits emails that used to be so popular (and totally made up). There is such a thing as "negligent security" where premises can be held liable for not providing adequate security under certain circumstances - but I'll believe this only if I see an actual credible source. Otherwise, aint no way that's true.
This occurred in my professional experience so I can assure you there is "internet rumor". You are correct in that there will need to be additional circumstances to create a liability, but the basic premise if that the area is a known security risk and that the victim relied on the "this area under 24/7 video surveillance" which results in the victim relying on the video monitoring in deciding to proceed into the area.MAS444 said:Have a credible link or cite for this? Cause otherwise, that's an internet myth just like the old "Stella Awards" frivolous lawsuits emails that used to be so popular (and totally made up). There is such a thing as "negligent security" where premises can be held liable for not providing adequate security under certain circumstances - but I'll believe this only if I see an actual credible source. Otherwise, aint no way that's true.Quote:
Have a credible link or cite for this? Cause otherwise, that's an internet myth just like the old "Stella Awards" frivolous lawsuits emails that used to be so popular (and totally made up). There is such a thing as "negligent security" where premises can be held liable for not providing adequate security under certain circumstances - but I'll believe this only if I see an actual credible source. Otherwise, aint no way that's true.
So if they settled knowing they had a risk of not prevailing with a jury / judge then that means they did no wrong or had no liability? Du represent Harvey Weinstein as well?MAS444 said:
If they settled, they weren't "held" anything. That's not the way it works at all. The claim was negligent security under the timberwalk line of cases - not false sense of security. I've actually handled these kinds of cases for the last 23 years.
Well that's a relief!Quote:
Not going to keep going back and forth with you