Legal Question in Business Law in Texas
Fighting Threat of Lien on a house
Summary:
I hired a contractor A to renovate my kitchen beginning in Jan 2005.
Just prior to the start of work, he wrote up a contract which we both signed.
In the contract it stated that electrical work is extra, that is to say, had yet to be determined.
During the project he subcontracted B to do the electrical work. B made several visits and did some work but of poor quality and left major steps incomplete or not even started.
I did not make the contract with B and do not have any written contract with them. The contract for Electrical work is between A and B. I am to pay A and A was to pay B.
Near the end of the project I paid A in advance for the remaining work.
But A disappeared and never completed the work for which he was paid in advance, and also he did not correct mistakes in his work.
B also made serious errors in the work and did not complete major portions. In August suddenly B reappeared demanding payment and threatens putting a lien for $800 if not paid in 10 days. We claim A should pay B. How can I fight/prevent the lien?Should I sue A for $800? What to do? Can B put a lien for unfinished unsatisfactory work?
1 Answer from Attorneys
Re: Fighting Threat of Lien on a house
B can put a lien on your property. While I doubt that it would be valid, the cost of fighting it would far exceed the $800.00. Get a release of lien in return for the payment, then
(1) Sue A for the cost to complete the project; and
(2) Sue B for the cost to complete the electrical portion of the work.
The collectability of the judgments are open to question, but if the costs are under $5,000.00, you can sue in Small Claims without hiring a lawyer.
Related Questions & Answers
-
Bonus not paid after leaving employment While with my last employer I earned a bonus... Asked 11/15/05, 6:51 pm in United States Texas Business Law
-
Lawyer refund mistake what are we to do, legally, if my lawyer over paid us on a... Asked 11/08/05, 1:58 pm in United States Texas Business Law
-
Can emails satisfy Statute of Fraud in Texas? If there was an oral agreement and... Asked 11/08/05, 12:53 am in United States Texas Business Law
-
S corp shareholder I am an S corp shareholder, I own roughly 2 %. I am not involved... Asked 11/07/05, 6:35 pm in United States Texas Business Law
-
Selling a business by falsifying records We bought a business based on sales figures... Asked 11/07/05, 12:56 pm in United States Texas Business Law