Mechanic’s Liens, Construction Law & Contractor’s Forms
Legal Tools You Can Afford
  
    
 
OREGON Mechanic's Lien Forms,
Construction Law and Construction Forms
 
Free Time Deadlines Table


          
When forms must be filed and served. Includes a discussion of how to legally count the days.      
Free Mechanic's Lien Law With Instructions


          

A detailed and complete lien law summary for Oregon, including the following topics:

     
Section Contents — Pre-lien Notice(s)
  • Name of Notice
  • Who Must Use This Notice
  • When
  • How to Serve
  • Form and Content
  • Verified or notarized?
Section Contents — Mechanic’s Lien
  • Who is Entitled to a Lien?
  • When to File/Record
  • Where to File/Record
  • How to Serve
  • Amount of Lien
  • Property Subject to the Lien
  • Furnishing Information
  • Verified or Notarized
  • Priorities
  • Lien Release Bond
  • Miscellaneous Issues
Section Contents — Lawsuit to Foreclose Lien
  • Introduction
  • When
  • Where to File
  • Arbitration
  • Need a Lawyer?


          
This information can be used by owners, developers, general contractors, subcontractors, material/equipment suppliers, design professionals, and other building industry professionals.

          
Pre-Lien and Mechanic's Lien Forms


    

Includes:
   1) A custom prepared form by an experrienced construction attorney after research of state law
         (no generic or "one-size-fits-all" forms)
   2) Proof of Service
   3) Two pages of instructions and guidelines
   4) (If applicable) a Cover Transmittal Letter to the Court/Recorder



    
If your contract is with the owner
For general contractors, subcontractors, and suppliers dealing directly with the owner.
You are considered a "general" for purposes of the mechanic's lien law, regardless of your license status.
Notice to Owner of Construction Liens
Required for a general on residential projects over $1,000.
$15.00
Notice of Filing a Lien and Notice of Intent to Foreclose Lien
Required pre-lien notice for a general, sub, or supplier.
$15.00
Notice of Intent to File a Lien (general)
Warns the owner that you will be filing a mechanic's lien if payment is not made within 10 days. Hopefully, it will create a serious dialog for settlement. Come up with your bottom line amount to settle and be prepared to offer it if the owner is negotiating in good faith. Remember that the last thing an owner wants is a lien on their property — it jeopardizes title, interfers with their relationship with the construction lender, and prevents refinancing or sale. This notice is worded in a non-threatening manner so as to capitalize on this situation, with the owner knowing that you are required by law to file a lien within a set period of time or lose your lien rights.
$15.00
Claim of Construction Lien
$20.00
General Contractor Discount Package
All forms in this section for a general contractor, plus Lien Law Summary.
$50.00
If your contract is with the prime contractor
For general contractors, subcontractors, and suppliers dealing directly with a prime contractor.
You are considered a "sub/supplier" for purposes of the mechanic's lien law, regardless of your license status.
Request For Lien Information
For a Sub, Sub-Subcontractor, or Supplier. A request to the General to furnish info needed to fill out a pre-lien notice. Asks for the name and address of the owner, lender, and any surety bond company (for payment or performance bonds). Use it if you do not have this data or want to confirm the info you already have. Also used by a Sub-Sub or Supplier who needs the name and address of the general contractor as well as the other information.
$15.00
Notice of Right to a Lien
Required pre-lien notice by subs, suppliers, and laborers who do not have a direct contract with the owner. Residential projects only.
$15.00
Notice of Filing a Lien and Notice of Intent to Foreclose Lien
Required pre-lien notice for a general, sub, or supplier.
$15.00
Notice of Intent to File a Lien (sub)
Warns the owner and general that you will be filing a mechanic's lien if payment is not made within 10 days. Hopefully, it will create a serious dialog for settlement. Come up with your bottom line settlement amount and be prepared to offer it if there is negotiation in good faith. Remember that the last thing an owner wants is a lien on their property — it jeopardizes title, interfers with their relationship with the construction lender, and prevents refinancing or sale. This notice is worded in a non-threatening manner so as to capitalize on this situation, with the owner and general knowing that you are required by law to file a lien within a set period of time or lose your lien rights.
$15.00
Claim of Construction Lien
$20.00
Sub/Supplier Discount Package
All forms in this section for a subcontractor or supplier, plus Lien Law Summary.
$50.00
Lien Releases and Lien Waivers (General, Sub, or Supplier)
What are they and is there a difference between them?
Release of Lien? Waiver of Lien? These forms can be confusing and hard to define, especially since they are called by so many different names. But there is a big difference between a CONSTRUCTION LIEN RELEASE and a CONSTRUCTION LIEN WAIVER and it is important to know the distinction. Here are some of the rules:

Lien Waiver Forms: Defined as purposely giving up a known right to file/record a mechanic's lien in the future, based on receiving a progress draw or final payment. Often required by an owner or general to "close out" a project and insure a lien-free job. You are giving up the right to later file a lien only for the amount of the payment. The mechanics lien waivers on this site preserve important legal rights and will not prevent claims for contested change orders, retention, or breach of contract damages (for example — delay damages, impeded productivity, and other consequential damages). These waiver of lien forms are of two types:
  • Partial Lien Waiver Form. This is used for progress draws or a partial payment. It waives lien rights through a certain date (and not future unpaid bills) and only to the extent of the payment. Many general contractors and owners require these forms to be signed by the person receiving payment before a check is issued.
  • Final Lien Waiver Form. This is used after final payment and means just that: fully and finally releases all future lien rights with no later recourse to file a mechanic's lien — sign this final waiver of lien only if you are assured you have been paid and are satisfied with the amount received.
How These Forms Work

Who Should Use These Forms?
  1. Owners: Request the prime contractor to sign.
  2. Prime Contractors: Request all subs to sign who are receiving your payment. There is no need to get waivers from sub-subs or suppliers of a sub because the sub signing the form represents that such persons have/will be paid.
  3. Subs: Request all lower tier subs you have a contract with and your material/equipment suppliers to sign.
What is Their Purpose? Lien waivers prevent: 1) paying twice for the same work, 2) making sure that once paid (except for contested items), someone will never be able to file a mechanic's lien for the work covered by the payment, and 3) insuring the payment is applied to a specific project.

Should I Sign Before Getting Paid? Yes. These forms are contingent and state the waiver takes effect only if the check clears.

When Should They be Sent Out? The common practice is to fax/send the wavier, get the original back signed, and then cut the check. Alternatively, you can exchange the check for the wavier in person.

Do I Need to Serve Anyone? No. There is no requirement of recording, filing, or serving the forms. Keep a copy and send/hand the original to the maker of the check.


Release of Lien: Defined as giving up your rights and striking from the record a mechanic's lien you have already filed. This lien release form applies to a final payment or full settlement which satisfies all obligations. You may not file or record a mechanic's lien again.


Beware of other forms

Do not sign a waiver form unless you understand the wording and agree to its terms. Many forms in circulation require you to waive rights you shouldn't have to give up. For example, you might be giving away: 1) lien rights even if a check bounces or is payment stopped, 2) contract rights (breach of contract, delay damages, lost profits, abandonment, liquidated damages, extended overhead, and similar rights), 3) disputed change orders, or 4) requiring you to "indemnify" or "hold harmless" and pay judgments, court costs, and attorney's fees of another party. The forms on this site do not waive these important rights and provide a fair balance of the interests of a general, sub, and owner.


Free Law Summary of Lien Waivers, Releases, and Joint Checks
           Detailed discussion of how these forms work and the legal consequences of their use.      
Partial Lien Waiver
Signed after receiving a progress draw and before the check clears. Lien rights waived only if the check clears. Waives/releases the right to file a lien in the future to the extent of the payment only (not giving up rights to retention, unpaid work after the release date, unpaid or contested extras, or breach of contract damages — such as damages due to delay, lack of productivity, etc.). One lien waiver form applies to all—worded so generals, subs, and suppliers can use and sign. Can be used over and over for each progress draw.
$15.00
Final Lien Waiver
Signed after receiving final payment. Lien rights waived only if the check clears. This final waiver of lien form waives/releases the right to file a mechanic's lien in the future, except disputed claims for additional work (for example, contested change orders). One lien waiver form applies to all — worded so generals, subs, and suppliers can sign.
$15.00
Lien Waivers and Release Discount and Bonus Package
Includes: 1) all lien waivers as PDF "fillable" forms (may be used over and over for different projects), 2) all waivers as Word documents, 3) two extra PDF back-up waiver forms (alternate forms used if the other party refuses to sign the regular forms), 4) a Waiver Form Kit with various clauses you can "cut and paste" to create your own custom waiver forms, and 5) the lien release form in PDF.
$35.00
Change Orders
Change Order Forms
Includes eight (8) separate change orders, a law summary, and instructions in a kit format. Includes a change order if the terms have been agreed upon (full size and pocket field size); confirmation you have been told to do a change — to make sure you are later paid extra, (full size and field size); a notice that additional work is being performed under protest because someone refuses to pay as an extra (two forms); a request for a change order quote; change order log; and a statement you will not be responsible for paying for an extra.

Will I get paid if the change order is not signed?
Should I go ahead and do the work anyway?


These forms are formulated to help your chances of being paid extra in such circumstances. See Free Law of Change Orders for details.
$45.00