Lower v. Cranch

32 Va. Cir. 110, 1993 Va. Cir. LEXIS 741
CourtLoudoun County Circuit Court
DecidedSeptember 29, 1993
DocketCase No (Chancery) 14826
StatusPublished

This text of 32 Va. Cir. 110 (Lower v. Cranch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Loudoun County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lower v. Cranch, 32 Va. Cir. 110, 1993 Va. Cir. LEXIS 741 (Va. Super. Ct. 1993).

Opinion

By Judge Thomas D. Horne

Petitioners seek to have the Court determine the validity of certain mechanics liens recorded against their property in conjunction with the construction of their home. Defendant Cranch, d/b/a Quaker Homes, is alleged to have acted as general contractor in conjunction with the project. The instant hearing was set to receive evidence regarding the assertion of the Petitioners that the liens of Cranch and of the subcontractors filing liens for work done or materials furnished are unenforceable by reason of Cranch’s lack of licensure pursuant to Chapter 11 of Title 54.1 of the Code of Virginia, as amended. At the conclusion of Petitioners’ evidence with respect to this matter, the various subcontractors and Cranch moved to strike the evidence of the Petitioners regarding the applicability of the provisions of § 54.1-1115 to the instant case. For the reasons set forth hereinafter, the Court will deny the motion of Cranch but grant the motion as to the Defendant subcontractors.

It is first to be noted that the subcontractors have each filed liens against the property which they seek to enforce. The Defendant subcontractors do not assert derivative claims through the general contractor. § 43-18, Code of Virginia, as amended. Petitioners seek to bar [111]*111recovery as to such subcontractors based upon the general principle that:

the amount for which a subcontractor may perfect a lien under this section shall not exceed the amount in which the owner is indebted to the general contract at the time the notice [to the owner] is given, or shall hereafter become indebted to the general contractor upon his contract with the general contractor for such structure or building ....

§ 43-7, Code of Virginia.

Thus, the Petitioners argue that as the general contractor, Cranch/ Quaker Homes, had not obtained a Class A contractor’s license at the time the contract was executed and work done, his lien is unenforceable. Being unenforceable, no amount would be owed by the owner to the general contractor. Therefore, the argument continues, no amount would be due the subcontractors by the owner because the subcontractors are limited in the amount in which they might perfect their liens to those amounts due the general contractor by the owners, which in this case would be $0.00.

Pursuant to § 54.1-1115(C), it is further provided that:

[n]o person shall be entitled to assert the lack of licensure as required by this chapter as a defense to any action at law or suit in equity if the party who seeks to recover from such person gives substantial performance within the terms of the contract in good faith and without actual knowledge of the licensure requirement of this chapter.

With respect to Cranch and Quaker Homes, the Court finds sufficient evidence, when looked at in a light most favorable to the Petitioners, from which it may reasonably conclude that Cranch was aware of the licensing requirements and was not acting for and on behalf of a properly licensed contractor. However, the evidence is devoid of any evidence that any of the subcontractors failed to give substantial performance, lacked good faith, were improperly licensed, or had actual knowledge of the licensing requirements of Chapter 11 of Title 54.1. There is no evidence from which the Court might conclude that the Petitioners were actually aware of any lack of licensure by Cranch or of the licensing requirements as applied to him.

Statutes should be harmonized with one another. Thus, where the provisions of one statute are of a general nature when contrasted with [112]*112those of another which are more specific, the more specific prevails. Huddler v. Cole, 236 Va. 389 (1988). In this case, a “person” (the owner) seeking to assert the protection of § 54.1-1115(A) as a defense to a claim for damages need not contract directly with the “party” (the subcontractor) who seeks to recover. Conversely, the innocent “party” (the subcontractor) whose claims are allowed under § 54.1-1115(C) need not contract directly with the “person” (the owner) in order to avoid the impact of a failure by either the contractor or the subcontractor “party” to obtain a license.

On the other hand, § 43-7 specifically relates to amounts owed to the owner by the general contractor. Under § 43-1, a general contractor is defined:

to include contractors, laborers, mechanics, and persons furnishing materials, who contract directly with the owner ....

A subcontractor is defined so as to:

include all such contractors, laborers, mechanics, and persons furnishing materials, who do not contract with the owner but with the general contractor.

To the extent an ambiguity exists in attempting to reconcile the liability limiting provisions of § 43-18 with savings provisions of § 54.1-1115(C), as applied to innocent subcontractors seeking enforcement of properly perfected liens, where amounts due the subcontractors by the owners do not exceed the amount owed the general contractor by the owners at the time notice is given by the subcontractors to the owners, the Court must be guided by the specific limitations of the provisions relating to licensure. The public policy considerations expressed in the licensing statutes are not the same as those contained in the mechanics’ lien law. In the former, the legislature has sought to protect the public by penalizing contractors who knowingly ignore the requirements of licensure. J. W. Woolard Mech. & Plumbing, Inc. v. Jones Dev. Corp., 235 Va. 333 (1988). In the case of the latter, the General Assembly has sought to allocate the risk of nonpayment to the subcontractor rather than an owner who has satisfied his financial obligations to contractor. Nicholas v. Miller, 182 Va. 831 (1944).

The Court agrees with many of those policy considerations discussed by the Court in Butler v. Creative Design Builders, Inc., 24 Va. Cir. 362 (1991). Were the evidence to demonstrate that the subcontrac[113]*113tors were not properly licensed, and if not properly licensed, they failed to render substantial performance, lacked good faith, or had knowledge of the licensing requirements (either their own or those of the general contractor), the result might well be different in this case. Thus, were the subcontractors shown (which has not been) to have actual knowledge that the contractor was not properly licensed, even were they to be properly licensed themselves, such knowledge, coupled with actual knowledge of the requirements of licensure as applied to the general contractor would bar recovery. Petitioners have alluded to no common law duty or duty imposed by statute upon a subcontractor to determine whether a contractor is properly licensed prior to commencing work in order to recover for work done by them under their contract with the general contractor. It is important to keep in mind the unique procedural posture in which this challenge to a legal defense to a failure of licensure is raised by the owner in a challenge to the validity of the liens. This action seeks to test the ability of the lien claimants to recover prior to the initiation of enforcement proceedings.

Accordingly, the motions to strike by the various subcontractors (Refrigeration Systems, Inc., Masonry Design, Inc., T. O.

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Related

Bacigalupo v. Fleming
102 S.E.2d 321 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1958)
J. W. Woolard Mechanical & Plumbing, Inc. v. Jones Development Corp.
367 S.E.2d 501 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1988)
Hudler v. Cole
374 S.E.2d 39 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1988)
Nicholas v. Miller
30 S.E.2d 696 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1944)
Butler v. Creative Design Builders, Inc.
24 Va. Cir. 362 (Louisa County Circuit Court, 1991)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 Va. Cir. 110, 1993 Va. Cir. LEXIS 741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lower-v-cranch-vaccloudoun-1993.