Design Professional Liability. Know your rights under California law.
Comprehensive legal information about design professional liability in California commercial and residential construction projects.
Comprehensive legal information about design professional liability in California commercial and residential construction projects.
Overview
Comprehensive legal information about design professional liability in California commercial and residential construction projects.
California construction law gives owners, contractors, and subcontractors structured protections. The statutes, deadlines, and procedures are central whether you’re prosecuting a claim, defending one, or staying compliant with a contract.
Steps for handling design professional liability
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Use the free tool →Your Rights Under California Law
Both property owners and contractors in California hold significant rights under state construction statutes.
Property owner rights
Owners are entitled to work that complies with building codes, approved plans, and the standards in Civil Code § 896. When standards aren’t met, claims for repair cost, diminished value, and additional damages are available.
Contractor rights
Contractors have a right to timely payment. SB 440 attaches 2% monthly interest to late payments and SB 61 caps retention at 5%. Licensed contractors can also use mechanic’s liens, stop notices, and bond claims.
Key statute
How California Law Applies
The legal standards for design professional liability are established by California statute, building codes, and case law. Key statutes include Civil Code §895 et seq. (Right to Repair), Civil Code §8400 et seq. (mechanic's liens), BPC §7031 (contractor licensing), and the new SB 440 and SB 61 provisions effective 2026.
The Legal Process
California construction disputes generally move through pre-litigation notice and inspection, then mediation, and — if needed — litigation or arbitration. The specific procedural path turns on claim type and the contract’s dispute-resolution provisions.
What Documentation Matters
Document priorities: the construction contract, change orders, payment records, inspection reports, correspondence, photographs of defective work, building permits, and expert reports.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long do I have to file a design professional liability claim?
Statutory deadlines depend on claim type. Contract: 4 years. Negligence: 3 years from discovery. Latent defects: 10-year statute of repose. Consult counsel to verify the specific dates for your case.
Do I need a lawyer for design professional liability?
Construction law is procedurally complex and unforgiving on deadlines. An experienced construction attorney can evaluate the claim, manage notice and pre-litigation requirements, and represent you in mediation, arbitration, or litigation.
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