Dear Associates:
For the first time in many years the legislature has amended the provisions
of MGL, chapter 254-the Mechanic's Lien Statute. The purpose of this
memorandum is to highlight some of the more significant changes.
The authors of the new statue have attempted to eliminate some of the uncertainty
under the old rules by tying many of the new provisions to the state of the
record title as it stands in the Registry of Deeds.
It also answers several questions which were not specifically addressed in
the old statute. In fact, the new law even defines what a written contract
is. The new law broadly defines it as "any contract in writing enforceable
under the laws of the Commonwealth." Samples of the statutory forms for
both a contractors Notice of Contract (§2) and a Subcontractors Notice
of Contract (§4) are available through the state office in Boston.
Another example which illustrates the difference from the old and the new
mechanisms is the requirement that an attested copy of the complaint to enforce
the lien must be recorded within 30 days of the commencement of the action
or else such lien shall be dissolved. As you will remember under the old law
various legal decisions supplied the requirement that the attested copy had
to be recorded within a "reasonable" time. Was 6 days reasonable?
6 weeks? 6 months? Fortunately we no longer have to speculate.
Another expansion of the new law is that it applies not only to those involved
in work relating solely to a building or structure upon land but also to other "improvements
or alterations to real property". This offers the protection of the statute
to a whole new group of workers. We all knew that bricklayers, plumbers, painters,
and roofers were all covered but now the company that clears the trees, constructs
the road, puts in utilities and paves the road are also entitled to the protection
of the act.
A contract between a lessee and a contractor under the new law gives rise
to a lien on the leasehold estate. It is now not only the fee simple estate
of an "owner" which is subject to a chapter 254 lien. This result
was not certain under the old law.
The new statute also provides a comprehensive list of those who can execute
the various statutory instruments. This resolves the issue of authority and
often eliminates the need for recording votes at the applicable Registry of
Deeds.
And since a mechanic's lien is a creature of statute and since all statutes
have an effective date, the actual date of the new law is February 7, 1997.
The revised statute also introduces several new forms. Among the more important
are the Notice of Substantial Completion and the Notice of Termination. Copies
of these both are available through the state office in Boston.
A brief summation of both follow.
NOTICE OF SUBSTANTIAL COMPLETION
This notice starts the clock running for the time within which a lien may
be filed. It replaces the "completion date" concept under the old
law. Since delays in a project are probably more the rule rather than the exception,
and since completion dates were inevitability advanced, it was difficult to
tell when the window within which instruments must be recorded/filed would
close.
§2 now provides that:
1.The notice must be executed and recorded/filed by owner and contractor.
2.Substantial completion is defined as the point "that work under the
written contract is sufficiently complete so that it can be occupied or utilized
for its intended use."
3.A copy of the notice with recording information is to be provided by owner
to:
a. subcontractors (subs) or suppliers who have recorded a notice of contract
under §4
and
by the general contractor to:
a. subs and suppliers who have a written contact with the general contractor;
and
b. anyone who has been given a notice of identification by certified mail
to the general contractor. A Notice of Identification was created to protect
the one
class of workers who were most vulnerable under the old law-- lower tier
subcontractors
and vendors. Under the old system, by the time the subs/vendors learned that
there was a problem with the funding of a project, it was too late for them
to record/file a Notice of Contract or more correctly a "Notice of Conflict".
Please click on the Forms Reference for a sample Notice of Identification.
NOTICE OF TERMINATION
§2B was inserted to cover those situations where the contract is terminated
by the owner, prior to substantial completion of the project.
§2B now provides that:
1.If the general contract is terminated, the owner shall record/file a Notice
of Termination.
2.A copy of the notice with recording information is to be provided by owner
to:
a. the general contractor;
b. anyone who has recorded a Notice of Contract under §4
and
by the general upon receipt of such notice from the owner to:
a. those with whom he has a written contract;
b. anyone who has given a Notice of Identification.
Now to briefly summarize each type of lien under the new statute.
§1 lien--LIEN FOR LABOR PERFORMED
1.applies to personal labor (not labor pursuant to a written contract).
2.covers 30 days of labor actually performed during the 90 days next prior
to filing a Statement of Account under §8. Please refer to the Forms link
below for viewing.
3.inchoate lien-relates back in time. But, in order for the lien to take priority
over a prior mortgage, the work for which the lien is claimed must have been
begun prior to recording the mortgage.
4.to obtain the lien:
a. record/file a Statement of Account at the Registry of Deeds within said
90 day period.
b. file a complaint to enforce the lien in Superior or District Court within
90 days of filing the Statement of Account.
c. record/file an attested copy of the complaint in the Registry of Deeds within
30 days of commencing the action.
§
2 lien--GENERAL CONTRACTORS LIEN
1.applies to work or materials furnished pursuant to a written contract with
the owner.
2.lien arises on recording/filing of notice of contract.
3.notice of contract may be recorded/filed at any time after execution of
the written contract but it must be recorded/filed not later than the earliest
of
a. 60 days after recording/filing a notice of Substantial Completion.
b. 90 days after recording/filing a Notice of Termination; or
c. 90 days after such person last performed labor/furnished materials.
4.except for 1-4 family residential projects, however, a lender can still fund
the project after a §2 lien if
a. applicable conditions in the loan documents are satisfied.
b. lender gets a partial waiver and subordination of lien form. Please refer
to the Forms link below for viewing. It illustrates how the contractor waives
his lien through the stated payment period except for retainage and subordinates
the lien (again except for retainage) through the 25th day after the end of
the present payment period provided the lender actually funds within said 25
day period.
c. the priority of the contractor's retainage is recognized. Retainage
represents work which the contractor has completed but has not been paid
for.
5.party claiming the lien must record/file a sworn Statement of Account showing
the balance due in the Registry of Deeds not later than the earliest of:
a. 90 days after recording/filing of a notice of Substantial Completion;
b. 120 days after recording/filing of a Notice of Termination; or
c. 120 days after such person last performed labor or furnished material. Note:
Statement of Account may be recorded/filed prior to the recording/filing of
a Notice of Substantial Completion or a Notice of Termination.
6.civil action to enforce the lien must be brought within 90 days after the
recording/filing of a Statement of Account or else the lien is dissolved.
a. attested copy of complaint must be recorded/filed with Registry of Deeds
within 30 days of commencement of the action or such lien shall be dissolved.
§
4 liens--SUBCONTRACTORS/SUPPLIERS
1.subs/suppliers may record/file a notice of contract at any time after the
execution of the written contract....but it must be recorded/filed not later
than the earliest of
a. 60 days after recording/filing a notice of Substantial Completion;
b. 90 days after filing/recording a Notice of Termination; or
c. 90 days after last day a general or anyone claiming by, through, or under
him performed labor or furnished materials or furnished rental equipment,
appliances
or tools.
2.serve copy of notice of contract upon owner by certified mail, return receipt
requested.
3.lender not required to fund over a §4 lien provided loan documents
allow lender to withhold payment.
4.if lender was unconditionally committed to make a disbursement, a §4
lien would be subordinate to such a disbursement. I can't imagine however
loan documents requiring this. Make sure yours don't.
5.party claiming the lien must record/file a sworn Statement of Account showing
the balance due in the Registry of Deeds not later than the earliest of:
a. 90 days after recording/filing a notice of Substantial Completion;
b. 120 days after recording/filing of a Notice of Termination; or
c. 120 days after such person last performed labor or furnished material. Note:
Statement of Account may be recorded/filed prior to the recording/filing of
a Notice of Substantial Completion or a Notice of Termination.
6.civil action to enforce the lien must be brought within 90 days after the
recording/filing of a Statement of Account or else the lien is dissolved.
a. attested copy of complaint must be recorded with Registry of Deeds within
30 days of commencement of the action or such lien shall be dissolved.
Finally the new statute provides for a summary procedure to resolve disputes
which undoubtedly will arise. The forum is either the superior or district
court.
CONCLUSION
The changes to the statute were the result of lengthy efforts by lenders,
owners, general contractors and subcontractors. Since laborers can now claim
for a period of 30 days of labor rather than 18 days under the earlier law,
we might well experience an increase in §1 liens.
Consequently, in order to delete the mechanic's lien exception from
Schedule B of a Residential Loan Policy, the agent must obtain an executed
Mechanic's Lien/Parties-in-Possession Affidavit, the form for which has
been revised and is available through the references at the end of this bulletin.
This form may be photocopied and used in your office. Since a §1 lien
can now include 30 days of labor provided within the previous 90 day time frame,
you can well imagine how quickly such a lien could arise and how expensive
such a lien can become. Therefore, in particular, the agent should take due
care and caution in situations involving new construction or recent home improvements.
In these cases, the legal department should be consulted (prior to your closing,
if at all possible) to review the particulars of your transaction and to determine
if additional requirements will be needed to safely delete the mechanic's
lien exception.
As far as an owner's policy is concerned, the mechanic's lien
exception should remain intact. If a request is made to delete it, please contact
the legal department. The same is true if you are dealing with a Commercial
Transaction. For any Commercial Transaction, we request that you contact the
legal department to discuss the transaction and to determine if additional
requirements will be needed to delete the mechanic's lien exception from
the Commercial Loan Policy to be issued.
Stewart Title Guaranty Company
99 Summer Street, Suite 930
Boston, MA 02110
(617) 737-8241
1-800-628-2988
Fax: (617) 737-8241
Legal Dept. Fax: (617) 737-8247