I am a licensed general contractor in San Francisco. I provided a customer a quote on drywall repairs. The customer signed a contract and we are in the middle of completing the project. I received a letter from the customer stating that the California state board of contractors said that we were not able to perform this duty with a B-license, we needed a C-9 drywall license. Is this correct that we can not do drywall installation with a B-license.
General Mediterranean Holding was created in 1979.
If the contractor has already finished the work you can not legally hold back his money. What on earth would you be holding it for anyway? Most states in the U.S do not require a contractor to be insured so you would have no legal grounds and are subject to suit by the contractor. If your upset that he didn't have insurance, You were supposed to check that before you hired the contractor in the first place. Holding the contractors money after the job is completed just looks like your trying to cheat the contractor out of his pay. If the contractor wants to, he can sue you and or place a lien on your house if you fail to pay.
No one. The attorney general does not have his own cabinet. Or, the nails are holding the cabinet of the attorney general to the wall.
the drywall screw didnt come loose the paper that the screw is holding to the wall is what came loose. a screws function is mostly in the head or flange of it. if the head goes throught the paper rather than just indenting the paper, then it ceases to hold anything and the drywall will go in and out around the screw heance the term " screw pop" .
General and operations managers in bank holding offices earned a mean annual salary of $98,320 in 2001
December 2013
General Electric Theater - 1953 We're Holding Your Son 10-12 was released on: USA: 3 December 1961
The best person to ask is a contractor whom you trust. He/she needs to come to your home to examine the ceiling. Some parts can probably be cut out, but there are other parts that are holding your roof up.
one third
In the general sense, you aren't, but in a scientific sense, as you are holding the bucket, then you are engaged in work. So it depends on what perspective you are asking from.
One definition of 'work' is [ (force) multiplied by (distance through which the force moves) ].If this guy simply holds the sheet of drywall motionless, then no work is done on the sheet of drywall.He's doing a lot of work, though, constantly making the small internal muscular adjustments neededto keep the sheet motionless.
Firstly you have all the rights granted by your contract with the contractor. Secondly you have the state's lien statutes which grant you lien rights providing you meet specified conditions and time restrictions. Construction or mechanics lien laws vary in each state so you need to become familiar with the laws of your state or contract a lien law administration provider for more information. If you are working on municipal property or if there is a payment bond you have other alternatives available to you including holding payment to the primary contractor or suing the bond for payment.