Defendants’ motion to remove the mechanic’s lien; Request for Attorney’s Fees
FCL BUILDERS CALIFORNIA LLC v. PATRIOT PARTNERS; RC WHITTRAM LLC
PROCEDURAL/FACTUAL BACKGROUND
On May 2, 2025, Plaintiff FCL Builders California, LLC, filed a complaint against
Defendants PatriotDevelopmentPartners, LLC (esa Patriot Partners) and RC Whittram, LLC,
alleging causes of action for: (1) breach of contract; (2) goods and services rendered; (3) open
book account; and (4) foreclosure of mechanic’s lien.
Plaintiff alleges it entered into a limited authorization to proceed (LAP) with Defendants
on or about October 23, 2022, for construction activities at the property located at 12987 to 13045
Whittram Avenue in Rancho Cucamonga, which Whittram allegedly owns. Under the LAP,
Defendants allegedly agreed to pay FCL $97,976 for labor, materials, equipment, and services in
connection with work at the property. FCL alleges it performed its obligations under the LAP, but
Defendants breached by failing to pay amounts owed for FCL’s work, causing damages of at least
$285,652.65. (Compl., ¶¶ 7-8, 10-13.)
Plaintiff further alleges that Defendants requested labor, materials, equipment, and services
for the property, FCL provided them, and Defendants failed to pay the reasonable value of those
goods and services, alleged to be at least $285,652.65. (Compl., ¶¶ 15-18.) FCL also alleges that
it and Whittram had financial transactions, FCL kept an account of debits and credits in the regular
course of business, and Whittram owes at least $285,652.65 on that account. (Compl., ¶¶ 20-22.)
For the mechanic’s lien claim, FCL alleges it provided labor, services, equipment, and/or
materials at Patriot’s and/or Whittram’s request and based on their promise to pay; Defendants
failed to pay; and FCL timely served and recorded a mechanic’s lien on or about March 17, 2025,
as Document No. 2025-0056817, for labor, services, equipment, and/or materials used or
consumed in the work of improvement at the property. FCL alleges the full lien amount of
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$285,652.65 remains unpaid. (Compl., ¶¶ 26-29; Exh. A.)
Now before the Court is Defendants’ motion to remove the mechanic’s lien. Plaintiff
opposes and Defendants reply.
DISCUSSION
Legal Standard
A property owner may bring a motion to remove an unjustified mechanic’s lien without
waiting for trial on the lien foreclosure claim. (Lambert v. Superior Court (1991) 228 Cal.App.3d
383, 387-389 (Lambert).)1 The lien claimant bears the burden of establishing the probable validity
of the claim underlying the lien. (Cal Sierra Construction, Inc. v. Comerica Bank (2012) 206
Cal.App.4th 841, 845 (Cal Sierra).) If the claimant fails to meet that burden, the lien may be
released in whole or in part. (Ibid.)
To establish the validity of a mechanic’s lien, the claimant must show that the labor,
services, and/or materials were actually used in the construction, the reasonable value of the work
and/or materials, and the date of completion or cessation of work. (Basic Modular Facilities, Inc.
v. Ehsanipour (1999) 70 Cal.App.4th 1480, 1485 (Basic Modular).)
Defendants’ Request for Judicial Notice
1 A motion seeking pretrial removal of a mechanic’s lien under Lambert is commonly referred to as a “Lambert motion.” (See Cal Sierra Construction, Inc. v. Comerica Bank (2012) 206 Cal.App.4th 841, 845.) 6
Defendants request judicial notice of FCL’s mechanic’s recorded in the Official Records
of San Bernardino County on March 18, 2025, as Document No. 2025-0056817. (RJN, Exh. F.)
There is no opposition to the request.
The Court GRANTS judicial notice of Exhibit F, FCL’s mechanic’s lien recorded in the
Official Records of San Bernardino County as Document No. 2025-0056817. (Evid. Code, §452,
subd. (c).)
Defendants’ Evidentiary Objections
1. Declaration of Nanthalom Darina Sokanthong
Objection No. 1 to paragraph 3 of Sokanthong’s declaration: The Court SUSTAINS. The
June 2025 site observation occurred after FCL recorded the mechanic’s lien and does not establish
whether work ceased during the relevant pre-recording period.
Objection No. 2 to paragraph 4 of Sokanthong’s declaration: The Court SUSTAINS IN
PART and OVERRULE IN PART. The objection is overruled to the extent Ms. Sokanthong states
she personally observed piles of concrete and debris. The objection is sustained to the extent she
opines that those conditions were “consistent with materials commonly found at a project site
undergoing work of improvement or maintenance”, as that conclusion lacks adequate foundation
and is speculative.
Objection No. 3 to paragraph 5 of Sokanthong’s declaration: The Court SUSTAINS. The
photographs taken after the lien was recorded do not establish whether work occurred during the
relevant pre-recording period and are not material to the timeliness issue.
2. Declaration of Natasha A. Kader
Objection No. 1, to paragraph 32 of Kader’s declaration: The Court SUSTAINS. The
September 2025 Google Maps images post-date the mechanic’s lien and do not establish whether
work occurred during the relevant pre-recording period.
Objection No. 2, to paragraph 4 of Kader’s declaration: The Court SUSTAINS IN PART
and OVERRULES IN PART. The objection is overruled to the extent counsel states FCL seeks
recovery in this action based on Invoice No. 22512-3 and attaches the invoice as Exhibit C. The
objection is sustained to the extent the declaration is offered to prove the truth of the invoice
contents, that the invoiced work was performed, or that the amounts are owed, because counsel
has not established personal knowledge or foundation for those facts.
Objection No. 3, to paragraph 5 of Kader’s declaration: The Court SUSTAINS. Ms. Kader
has not established personal knowledge or foundation for the asserted $8,185.83 Mobile Modular
reimbursement, and no Exhibit D is attached to the declaration.
Analysis
Defendants move to remove the lien on four grounds: (1) the lien was untimely; (2) the lien
is willfully overstated; (3) the lien does not identify qualifying contracted work; and (4) the lien
lacks an adequate general description of the work performed. Defendants also seek $6,560 in
attorney’s fees.
1. The Lien Was Untimely Recorded
Civil Code section 8412 provides that a direct contractor may not enforce a mechanic’s
lien unless the contractor records the claim of lien after completing the direct contract and before
the earlier of: (1) 90 days after completion of the work of improvement; or (2) 60 days after the
2 Misnumbered as paragraph 2. 8
owner records a notice of completion or notice of cessation. Civil Code section 8180 provides that
completion of a work of improvement occurs upon, among other events, cessation of labor for a
continuous period of 60 days. (Civ. Code, § 8180, subd. (a)(3).)
Here, no notice of completion or notice of cessation was recorded. Therefore, the
applicable deadline was 90 days after completion of the work of improvement. Defendants
submitted evidence that FCL was contracted only to perform preliminary work under the LAP,
consisting of demolition, temporary fencing, security, and supervision, for a total of $97,976.
(Rice Decl. ¶¶ 3-4, Exh. A.) Rice declares that Patriot Partners did not execute a final contract and
did not authorize FCL to perform additional work beyond the preliminary work. (Rice Decl. ¶ 5.)
Rice further declares that FCL completed the demolition work on or about April 22, 2024; the
longest-duration item under the LAP was three months of temporary fencing, which expired on or
about July 22, 2024; and no other contractors performed work on the property after that date. (Rice
Decl. ¶ 6.) Rice also declares that no further work was performed on the property after FCL
completed its demolition work, and the project was never fully completed. (Rice Decl. ¶ 7.)
Based on this evidence, there was a continuous cessation of labor beginning July 22, 2024.
The work of improvement was therefore deemed complete 60 days later, on or about September
20, 2024. (Civ. Code, § 8180, subd. (a)(3).) FCL then had 90 days, or until December 19, 2024,
to record its lien. (Civ. Code, § 8412.) FCL did not record its lien until March 18, 2025. The lien
is therefore untimely.
Even if the Court uses the most generous possible date for FCL, the result does not change.
Defendants note that FCL produced an invoice dated September 19, 2024. Even if the Court
treated that invoice date as the last possible date on which FCL performed any work, the 60-day
cessation period would have expired on November 18, 2024, and FCL’s 90-day deadline to record
the lien would have expired on February 16, 2025. The March 18, 2025 lien is still untimely.
2. FCL’s Opposition Does Not Establish Probable Validity as to Timeliness
FCL’s opposition does not create a factual dispute as to timeliness. FCL relies primarily
on photographs and observations from June 2025 and Google Maps images from September 2025
to argue that the property showed signs of ongoing activity. (Sokanthong Decl. ¶¶ 3-5; Kader
Decl. ¶ 3.) As discussed above, Defendants’ objections to that evidence are sustained. In any
event, even if considered, those observations and images post-date the March 18, 2025 lien. They
do not show that any labor occurred during the 60-day no-work period following July 22, 2024,
which Defendants contend triggered completion under Civil Code section 8180, subdivision (a)(3),
or at any time before the lien was recorded.
Even accepting the photographs for the limited purpose of showing the condition of the
property in June or September 2025, they do not rebut Rice’s declaration that no work occurred
for a 60-day period after July 22, 2024. Nor does FCL submit a declaration from any witness with
personal knowledge that labor was performed at the property during the relevant 60-day cessation
period.
FCL’s reliance on cases addressing commencement of a work of improvement is
misplaced. The issue here is not whether limited physical activity can constitute commencement
of a work of improvement. The issue is whether FCL has shown that labor did not cease for a
continuous 60-day period before its lien-recording deadline. It has not. Evidence of alleged post-
lien site conditions does not establish the probable validity of the lien’s timeliness.
3. Equitable Estoppel Does Not Save the Untimely Lien
FCL alternatively argues Defendants should be equitably estopped from asserting
untimeliness because Defendants did not record or serve a notice of cessation and did not otherwise
inform FCL that work had stopped. The argument is unpersuasive.
Civil Code section 8180 expressly recognizes that completion may occur by 60 days of
cessation of labor, even without a recorded notice of cessation. (Civ. Code, § 8180, subd. (a)(3).)
Defendants therefore had no statutory obligation to record a notice of cessation for the 90-day
deadline under Civil Code section 8412 to begin running.
FCL also has not established the elements of equitable estoppel. The requirements for
application of the doctrine of equitable estoppel are: (1) the party to be estopped must be apprised
of the facts; (2) he must intend that his conduct shall be acted upon, or must so act that the party
asserting the estoppel had a right to believe it was so intended; (3) the other party must be ignorant
of the true state of facts; and (4) he must rely upon the conduct to his injury. (Fontana Paving,
Inc. v. Hedley Bros., Inc. (1995) 38 Cal.App.4th 146, 156-157 (Fontana Paving), quoting Driscoll
v. City of Los Angeles (1967) 67 Cal.2d 297, 305.) Here, FCL identifies no affirmative
representation by Defendants that work remained ongoing, no conduct intended to induce FCL to
delay recording its lien, and no reasonable reliance. Defendants’ failure to record a notice of
cessation, standing alone, is insufficient because the statute does not require such a notice before
completion may occur by 60 days of cessation of labor.
FCL’s reliance on Doherty v. Carruthers (1959) 171 Cal.App.2d 214 (Doherty) is also
unpersuasive. In Doherty, the owner recorded a notice of completion with an erroneous date, and
the lien claimants relied on that affirmative act in recording their liens. (Doherty, supra, 171
Cal.App.2d at pp. 216-218; see also Fontana Paving, supra, 38 Cal.App.4th at pp. 155-156
[discussing Doherty].) Here, by contrast, Defendants did not record a misleading notice or
otherwise affirmatively represent that the lien deadline had not begun. Further, FCL could not
have relied on the June 2025 site observations in deciding when to record its lien because those
observations occurred after FCL recorded the lien in March 2025.
Accordingly, FCL has not established a basis to equitably estop Defendants from asserting
the lien was untimely.
4. FCL Has Not Established the Probable Validity of the Lien Amount
The lien amount is also unsupported on the present record. Civil Code section 8430
provides that the amount of a mechanic’s lien is limited to the lesser of the reasonable value of the
work provided by the claimant or the price agreed to by the claimant and the person who contracted
for the work. Civil Code section 8430, subdivision (c), allows a claimant to include work
performed based on a written modification of the contract, or as a result of rescission,
abandonment, or breach; however, if the lien is based on rescission, abandonment, or breach, the
amount may not exceed the reasonable value of the work provided by the claimant. (Civ. Code, §
8430, subds. (a), (c).) On a Lambert motion, the claimant still bears the burden to establish the
probable validity of the claim underlying the lien, including the lien amount. (Cal Sierra, supra,
206 Cal.App.4th at p. 845; Basic Modular, supra, 70 Cal.App.4th at p. 1485.)
Defendants submitted the LAP, which states that if the parties agreed to a stipulated lump
sum, no further work would be performed in excess of that amount unless both parties mutually
agreed in writing to a change order increasing the scope of work and stipulated sum. (Rice Decl.
Exh. A.) Rice declares that no final contract was executed, FCL was not authorized to conduct
additional work beyond the preliminary work, Defendants paid FCL in full for the preliminary
work on October 14, 2024, and he is unaware of any additional agreements expanding the scope
of work. (Rice Decl. ¶¶ 5, 8, 10.)
FCL does not submit evidence from a project manager, employee, or other witness with
personal knowledge establishing that Defendants authorized additional work, that any written
change order was executed, or that the claimed additional work was actually performed for the
property. Instead, FCL relies primarily on counsel’s declaration attaching invoices and asserting
what FCL seeks to recover. That is insufficient to establish probable validity of the lien amount,
particularly in light of the LAP’s written-change-order requirement and Rice’s declaration denying
any authorization for additional work. (Rice Decl. ¶¶ 4, 5, 10; Exh. A.)
5. The Overstatement Issue Provides Additional Support for Removal
FCL also appears to concede that the lien amount includes charges attributable to a separate
project. FCL states the lien inadvertently included $26,683.82 in charges for another Patriot
Partners project and asks the Court to reduce the lien to $258,968.83. (Opp. at p. 11:7-26.)
That admission does not necessarily establish willful overstatement by itself. Erroneous
information does not invalidate a lien unless the requirements of Civil Code section 8422 3 are met,
and Basic Modular recognizes that an excessive lien may be reduced to the proper amount in
appropriate circumstances. (Basic Modular, supra, 70 Cal.App.4th at p. 1485.)
Although an excessive lien may be reduced to the proper amount, FCL has not provided a
competent evidentiary basis for doing so here. FCL concedes the lien includes amounts
attributable to another project, but does not provide admissible evidence from a witness with
personal knowledge identifying the authorized scope of any additional work, which charges were
3 Civil Code section 8422 provides that erroneous information in a claim of lien relating to the claimant’s demand, credits and offsets, work provided, or description of the site does not invalidate the lien unless the court determines either that the claim was made with intent to defraud or that an innocent third party, without notice, became a bona fide owner after recordation and the lien was so deficient it did not put the party on inquiry. A claimant forfeits the lien if it willfully includes labor, services, equipment, or materials not furnished for the property described in the lien. (Civ. Code, § 8422, subds. (a)-(c).) 13
actually furnished to this property, or how the proposed reduced lien amount was calculated.
Because FCL bears the burden on this motion to establish the probable validity of the lien,
including the amount claimed, there is no basis on this record to reform the lien to a lesser amount.
6. The Lien Description Provides Additional Support for Removal
Civil Code section 8416, subdivision (a)(3), requires a claim of lien to include a general
statement of the kind of labor, services, equipment, or materials furnished by the claimant.
FCL’s recorded lien describes the work as “Building materials and labor for demolition
work.” That description may satisfy the statute if the lien were limited to demolition-related work.
However, the invoice FCL relies on to support the lien includes line items for security/watchmen,
utility/site-maintenance work, a site trailer, temporary fencing, portable restrooms, dumpsters,
SWPPP installation, material purchases, and supervision, not merely demolition. (Patel Decl., ¶
3, Exh. E; Kader Decl. ¶ 4, Exh. C.) The lien itself describes the work only as “Building materials
and labor for demolition work.” (RJN, Exh. F.). This discrepancy further supports the conclusion
that FCL has not established the probable validity of the lien as recorded.
7. Attorney’s Fees
Defendants request $6,560 in attorney’s fees under Civil Code section 8488.
Civil Code section 8488, subdivision (c), provides that the prevailing party is entitled to
reasonable attorney’s fees in connection with the statutory release-order procedure set forth in
Civil Code sections 8480 through 8488. That procedure applies where the lien claimant has not
commenced an action to enforce the lien within the time provided by Civil Code section 8460.
(Civ. Code, § 8480, subd. (a).)
Here, Defendants’ motion is brought as a Lambert motion challenging the probable validity
of the lien on the grounds that the lien was untimely recorded, overstated, unsupported by
qualifying work, and inadequately described. FCL commenced this action to foreclose the lien
within 90 days after the lien was recorded. Defendants therefore have not shown that section 8488
applies to this motion, and they have not identified any other basis for a fee award.
Therefore, the Court DENIES Defendants’ attorney’s fee request.
CONCLUSION
Based on the foregoing, the Court:
GRANTS Defendants’ motion to remove FCL’s mechanic’s lien recorded on March 18,
2025, as Document No. 2025-0056817, in the Official Records of San Bernardino County.
DENIES Defendants’ request for attorney’s fees.
GRANTS Defendants’ request for judicial notice of Exhibit F, FCL’s mechanic’s lien
recorded in the Official Records of San Bernardino County on March 18, 2025, as Document No.
2025-0056817.
SUSTAINS Defendants’ Objection Nos. 1 and 3 to the Declaration of Nanthalom Darina
Sokanthong; SUSTAIN IN PART and OVERRULE IN PART Objection No.
2.
SUSTAINS Defendants’ Objection Nos. 1 and 3 to the Declaration of Natasha A. Kader;
SUSTAIN IN PART and OVERRULE IN PART Objection No.
2.
Counsel for Defendants is ordered to Provide Notice.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
15