This guest post comes from friend of the blog, Robert Wise, a construction law attorney in Mississippi (Sharpe & Wise PLLC). Robert was influential in the drafting and passing of Mississippi’s 2014 mechanics lien law re-write, which made substantial changes to the state’s mechanics lien scheme. As this article title indicates, this post provides 4 key important things that Subcontractors & Material Suppliers — who previously did not have traditional notice requirements or lien rights in the state – must know to get protection under the new law. This is part of a series of 3 articles about the Mississippi Lien Law Changes written by Robert Wise that will appear on this blog. Read them all here.
The new April 2014 Mississippi construction lien law requires that a lien claimant meet seven (7) strict procedural requirements. The failure of the lien claimant to follow the enumerated requirements set forth in MISS. CODE ANN. § 85-7-405(1) renders the lien to “not be effective or enforceable.”
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Courts strictly construe the requirements because lien statutes are in derogation of the common law. As Justice Jimmy Robertson has written, “[t]here is no natural law of materialman’s liens” since claimants have lien rights “only to the extent that they have brought themselves within the terms of the statute.” Riley Blg. Suppliers, Inc. v. First Citizens Nat’l Bank, 510 So.2d 506, 508 (Miss.1987).
The procedural requirements apply regardless whether the job is commercial or residential. The seven prerequisites are that the claimant:
In addition there are two starting gate requirements before a Mississippi subcontractor or materialman can qualify for a construction lien under Mississippi’s new construction lien law:
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