Come senators, congressmen please heed the call Don’t stand in the doorway don’t block up the hall For he that gets hurt will be he who has stalled There’s a battle outside and it is ragin’. It’ll soon shake your windows and rattle your walls For the times they are a-changin’. -Bob Dylan- A battle is raging in Tennessee as Senator … Read More
BACK TO BASICS: TENNESSEE LIEN LAW PART 4
In a continuing four-part series, LT Construction Lawyer Wally Irvin discusses the Tennessee Lien Law. Wally recently posted Part 1 of 4 on “Speaking the Lien Language,” Part 2 of 4 on “Lien on What?” Wally continues his examination of the Tennessee lien law, and Part 3 of 4 on “”Notice Requirements.” Wally completes his examination of the Tennessee lien … Read More
Back to Basics: Tennessee Lien Law PART 3
In a continuing four-part series, LT Construction Lawyer Wally Irvin discusses the Tennessee Lien Law. Wally recently posted Part 1 of 4 on “Speaking the Lien Language” and Part 2 of 4 on “Lien on What?” Wally continues his examination of the Tennessee lien law. Back to Basics: Tennessee Lien Law POST 3 of 4 (Notice Requirements) In the first two posts in this series, Speaking the Lien … Read More
Back to Basics: Tennessee Lien Law PART 2
In a continuing four-part series, LT Construction Lawyer Wally Irvin discusses the Tennessee lien law. Wally recently posted Part 1 of 4 on “Speaking the Lien Language.” Wally continues his examination of the Tennessee lien law. Back to Basics: Tennessee Lien Law Post 2 of 4 (Lien on What?) Under Tennessee lien law, a lienor may assert a lien when it performs work or furnishes … Read More
Back to Basics: Tennessee Lien Law
Back to Basics: Tennessee Lien Law Post 1 of 4 (Speaking the Lien Language) Arguably, the most important aspect of any construction project is not the construction itself but ensuring the contractor receives payment. If a contractor does not receive payment, the contractor may assert a mechanics’ and materialmen’s lien against the project and sell the underlying property to satisfy … Read More
Failure to Serve Notice of Nonpayment Renders Lien Invalid
The Tennessee Court of Appeals affirmed Tennessee’s requirement that remote contractors (subcontractors, sub-subcontrators, material suppliers to a subcontractor, etc.) must serve notices of nonpayment on both the owner and prime contractor (the General Contractor). In Diaz Construction v. Ind. Dev. Board of Metro. Gov’t of Nashville and Davidson County, a remote contractor appealed the trial court’s dismissal of its lien … Read More