It's
so EASY to PROTECT your lien rights BUT even EASIER to LOSE your lien
rights! Unfortunately, many subcontractors are ROUTINELY losing their
mechanics lien rights (and their last chance for payment), and they
don't even know it.
--> Read
on to learn how the California 20-Day Preliminary Notice form works
to protect you and your lien rights.
How
the California 20-Day Preliminary Notice form protects your lien
rights
When
you are hired as a Subcontractor to do work on a project, you don't
have a direct contract with the Owner of the project, you have a
direct contract with the General Contractor on the project.
Because
of this, the Owner of the project does not know that you are present,
until and unless YOU make the Owner aware of your presence (the
General Contractor seldom gives the Owner a list of Subcontractors
and Suppliers on the job).
This
is what the California 20-Day Preliminary Notice form does. It notifies
the Owner of the property that you are present on the job and that
you have lien rights on the Owner's property.
It's
the Owner's responsibility to make sure that everyone on a project
is paid, including all Subcontractors (and all Suppliers). The only
way the Owner can do this is if he knows who the Subcontractors (and
Suppliers) on the project are.
Because
of this, if you do not correctly process the California 20-Day Preliminary
Notice then you will NOT have mechanics lien rights on the property.
This
means that you cannot file a mechanic's lien should you not get paid!
The mechanic's lien is your safety net and without your preliminary
notice, your safety net has a BIG hole in it. :(
Using
the correct wording in your California 20-Day Preliminary Notice
form
The
wording/text of the preliminary notice form is dictated by California
law. If you do your preliminary notice form but it doesn't have the
correct wording then your preliminary notice is not valid and you
don't have lien rights!
In
January 2000 the text on the form was changed due to changes in the
laws. Then in April 2000, changes in the laws caused the text to
be changed again, back to what it was BEFORE it changed in January
2000. Then the text changed AGAIN in 2004, again because of changes
in the laws.
It
bears repeating... If your preliminary notice form does not have
the text as required by law then your form is invalid and your lien
rights are NOT protected.
The
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