Nevada Code § 608.152

Claim to indebtedness for labor incurred by subcontractor or contractor: Written notice of claim; written request for notice of claim; substantially similar claims prohibited
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
1. Any potential claimant to indebtedness
for labor under NRS 608.150 shall,
within 90 days after receiving the written request described in subsection 2,
provide to the original contractor, subcontractor or other contractor who
submitted the written request a written notice that includes, without
limitation:
(a) Any claim that is asserted under this
section;
(b) The basis for any such claim; and
(c) Either:
(1) The amount of any such claim;
(2) An explanation of what data is needed
to calculate the amount of any such claim; or
(3) A statement that no amount is due
under any such claim.
2. The written request required pursuant
to subsection 1 must:
(a) Be submitted by an original contractor,
subcontractor or other contractor;
(b) Be directed to the claimant described in
subsection 1; and
(c) Identify the:
(1) Original contractor, subcontractor or
other contractor;
(2) Dates that work commenced and ended or
is expected to end; and
(3) Nature and location of any project to
which the contract applies.
3. If the written notice that the claimant
is required to provide pursuant to subsection 1 indicates that no amount is due
under any such claim or if the claimant fails to respond within 90 days after
receiving the written request described in subsection 2, the claimant shall be
prohibited from bringing any substantially similar claim that is related to the
project and the original contractor, subcontractor or other contractor that
accrued before the claimants receipt of such written notice.
4. As used in this section:
(a) Contractor has the meaning ascribed to it
in NRS 624.020 .
(b) Original contractor includes a contractor
or any other person who enters into a contract described in subsection 1 of NRS 608.150 .

‹ Prev All Nevada sections Next ›


Lexace provides legal information, not legal advice, and no attorney–client relationship is created. Statute text is provided for general information and may not reflect the most recent amendments; verify against the official state code.