We have written other articles and
discussed several cases in our book California Construction Law,
regarding California License Law, and more specifically Business and
Professions Code section 7031. In the MW Erectors case, which we
discussed in our book, we filed an Amicus Brief in opposition citing other
options. Unfortunately we did not prevail. We believe the laws in this
area are extremely harsh. The case discussed below continues that
harshness.
A new case, Great West Contractors,
Inc. v. WSS Industrial Construction, Inc., has upheld the decisions in
the above referenced cases. In this case, a subcontractor, (WSS Industrial
Construction (“WSS”), was barred from bringing a suit against Great West
Contractors because WSS was not licensed at all times. WSS is a corporation
that had applied for, but not yet obtained, their corporate contractor’s
license at the time it submitted its bid. WSS had entered into the
contract, ordered parts, and submitted plans before the corporation was
actually licensed. However, it had not started actual construction of the
site. The RMO of WSS was licensed as an individual and a partnership, but
not on behalf of the corporation. The MW Erectors case we have
discussed showed that MW Erectors was unlicensed for only a few days, but
not “at all times during construction,” and since that case, the law states
that “…except as expressly otherwise provided, a contractor may not sue to
collect compensation for performance of ‘any act or contract’ requiring a
license without alleging that he or she was duly licensed ‘at all times
during the performance of that act or contract.’ ”
Business and Professions Code
section 7031(e) gives the only exception to the contractor’s licensure
requirements. It states that the courts can find there is substantial
compliance with the license requirements, “if it is shown at an evidentiary
hearing that the person who engaged in the business or acted in the capacity
of a contractor (1) had been duly licensed as a contractor in this state
prior to the performance of the act or contract, (2) acted reasonably and in
good faith to maintain proper licensure, (3) and did not know or reasonably
should not have known that he or she was not duly licensed.” This was not
the case with WSS, just at it was not with the MW Erectors case, because the
corporation was not licensed.
Therefore, the Appellate Court denied
WSS’s case, even though the Appellate Court itself agreed that they “are
cognizant of the harshness of this result. But the law is clear.”