American Buildings Co. v. Bay Commerical Construction, Inc.

121 Cal. Rptr. 2d 539, 99 Cal. App. 4th 1193
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 28, 2002
DocketC039375
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 121 Cal. Rptr. 2d 539 (American Buildings Co. v. Bay Commerical Construction, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Buildings Co. v. Bay Commerical Construction, Inc., 121 Cal. Rptr. 2d 539, 99 Cal. App. 4th 1193 (Cal. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Opinion

BLEASE, Acting P. J.

Defendants Bay Commercial Construction, Inc., and AmWest Surety Insurance Co., appeal from a judgment rendered after the trial court granted plaintiff American Buildings Company’s motion for summary judgment.

Plaintiff brought this action to recover $41,775 on a contractor’s payment bond for materials supplied to a now bankrupt subcontractor on a public works project commissioned by the City of Roseville.

Civil Code section 3098 requires that a person, within 20 days of furnishing labor or materials for a public work, must serve a “preliminary 20-day notice” in order to assert a claim for payment against a payment bond. 1 Section 3252, subdivision (b), provides an exception if notice “was not given as provided in Section 3098,” providing written notice was given the surety and bond principal within 15 days after recordation of the notice of completion.

Plaintiff filed a notice entitled “Preliminary Notice on Payment Bond” more than 20 days after furnishing the materials, except for the minor amount of $625, and was precluded from asserting a claim under section 3098 for the balance of $41,150. However, the trial court ruled the preliminary notice complied with the notice requirements of section 3252 and plaintiff was entitled to enforce payment on the payment bond under that section.

Defendants claim the notice filed by plaintiff cannot serve as a notice under section 3252 because it was labeled “Preliminary Notice on Payment Bond” and complied with the notice requirements of section 3098 in an amount of $625. Accordingly, that was the only sum owing on the bond. We disagree.

The purpose of subdivision (b) of section 3252 is to provide relief to a supplier of material or labor who, through lack of sophistication or inadvertence, fails to comply with the preliminary bond notice requirements of section 3098. The provisions are complimentary. Relief under section 3252 *1196 is not barred by partial compliance with section 3098 and may be sought for the amount of any claim for which the section 3098 notice was not timely given.

We shall affirm the judgment.

Factual and Procedural Background

Defendant Bay Commercial was the prime contractor on a public works project commissioned by the City of Roseville. Bay Commercial entered into a subcontract with McKay Construction, Inc. Plaintiff furnished materials to McKay Construction and McKay Construction used these materials in the performance of its subcontract. AmWest Surety executed a payment bond, with McKay Construction as principal and AmWest as surety.

The total value of the materials plaintiff furnished was $41,775.05. McKay did not pay plaintiff for the materials, and was in bankruptcy at the time this action was filed.

Plaintiff first furnished the materials for the project on August 26, 1999. On January 13, 2000, plaintiff served a written notice, entitled “Preliminary Notice on Payment Bond” by certified mail on AmWest, Bay Commercial and McKay Construction. The notice contained a description of the materials furnished (pre-engineered metal building components), the name of the company for whom the materials were furnished (McKay Construction), and the value of the materials furnished ($41,775.05). On the same date plaintiff served a “Stop Notice” on the City of Roseville on the same claim.

Plaintiff filed an action to recover on the payment bond on September 27, 2000. Defendants demurred, arguing plaintiff’s January 13, 2000, notice was untimely because it was not provided within 20 days of the date plaintiff first supplied materials, as required by section 3098. The trial court overruled the demurrer, finding plaintiff was entitled to rely on section 3252, subdivision (b), which allows recovery on a payment bond in situations where the claimant did not give notice as provided in section 3098.

The parties do not dispute the notice was given the surety and bond principal, as required by section 3227, 2 within 15 days of recordation of the notice of completion of the project and functionally complied with the notice requirements of section 3252, subdivision (b).

*1197 Plaintiff moved for summary judgment. Defendants opposed the motion, again asserting that section 3098, subdivision (d) limits the amount for which a claimant may recover on a payment bond to the material furnished within 20 days prior to service of the preliminary notice or thereafter. Defendants claimed plaintiff supplied materials worth only $625.78 during that period.

The trial court concluded the notice given by plaintiff was not a “Preliminary Notice” pursuant to section 3098, subdivision (a) or (d), but did qualify as a notice to the surety and bond principal pursuant to section 3252, subdivision (b).

We agree with the trial court the notice given was proper pursuant to section 3252, and that plaintiff’s recovery is not limited by section 3098, subdivision (d). We shall therefore affirm the judgment.

Discussion

Before a claimant may recover on a payment bond on a public works project, it must give a notice. The notice may be given either as a 20-day preliminary notice pursuant to section 3098, or as a special notice provided in section 3252, subdivision (b).

Section 3098 provides that a 20-day preliminary notice must be given prior to the “assertion of a claim” against a payment bond. 3 Section 3098 defines a “[pjreliminary 20-day notice” as “a written notice from a claimant that was given prior to the assertion of a claim against a payment bond . . . .” 4 The phrase “assertion of a claim” is given effect in subdivision (d), which states that a claimant is “entitled to assert a claim against a payment *1198 bond” only for “labor, service, equipment or material furnished within 20 days prior to the service of the preliminary notice, and at any time thereafter.” (Italics added.)

Accordingly, to file a notice which “assert[s] a claim,” and thus complies with section 3098, the claimant must be “entitled to assert a claim” and to do so must comply with the 20-day requirement. 5 Thus, not surprisingly, a “preliminary 20-day notice,” as defined by section 3098, is one which complies with the 20-day requirement. As we shall see, that is the section 3098 notice to which section 3252, subdivision (b), refers.

In this case plaintiff complied with the 20-day requirement of section 3098, subdivision (d), only with respect to materials worth $625. Seizing on this partial compliance and the fact plaintiff characterized the notice as a preliminary bond notice, defendants assert plaintiff cannot claim “the 20-day public work preliminary bond notice was not

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
121 Cal. Rptr. 2d 539, 99 Cal. App. 4th 1193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-buildings-co-v-bay-commerical-construction-inc-calctapp-2002.