Utah Code § 38-11-107

Restrictions upon maintaining a lien against residence or owner's interest in the
Open in Lexace · Ask the AI about this section
residence.
(1)
(a) A person qualified to file a lien upon an owner-occupied residence and the real property
associated with that residence under Chapter 1a, Preconstruction and Construction Liens,
who provides qualified services under an agreement, other than directly with the owner, is
barred from maintaining a lien upon that residence and real property or recovering a judgment
in any civil action against the owner or the owner-occupied residence to recover money owed
for qualified services provided by that person if:
(i) an owner meets the conditions described in Subsections 38-11-204(4)(a) and (b); or
(ii)
(A) a subsequent owner purchases a residence from an owner;
(B) the subsequent owner who purchased the residence under Subsection (1)(a)(ii)(A)
occupies the residence as a primary or secondary residence within 180 days from the date
of transfer or the residence is occupied by the subsequent owner's tenant or lessee as a
primary or secondary residence within 180 days from the date of transfer; and
(C) the owner from whom the subsequent owner purchased the residence met the conditions
described in Subsections 38-11-204(4)(a) and (b).
(b)
(i) As used in this Subsection (1)(b):
(A) "Contract residence":
(I) means the owner-occupied residence for which a subcontractor provides service, labor,
or materials; and
(II) includes the real property associated with that owner-occupied residence.
(B) "General contract" means an oral or written contract between an owner and an original
contractor for providing service, labor, or materials for construction on an owner-occupied
residence.
(C) "Subcontractor" means a person who provides service, labor, or materials for construction
on an owner-occupied residence under an agreement other than directly with the owner.
(ii) A subcontractor qualified to file a lien upon a contract residence under Chapter 1a,
Preconstruction and Construction Liens, is barred from maintaining a lien upon that contract
residence or from recovering a judgment in a civil action against the owner, the contract
residence, or, as provided in Subsection (1)(b)(iii), a subsequent owner to recover for
service, labor, or materials provided by the subcontractor:
(A) if the amount of the general contract under which the subcontractor provides service,
labor, or materials totals no more than $5,000; and
(B) whether or not the original contractor is licensed under Title 58, Chapter 55, Utah
Construction Trades Licensing Act.
(iii) A subsequent owner is protected under Subsection (1)(b)(ii) to the same extent as an owner
if:
(A) the subsequent owner purchases the contract residence from the owner; and
(B)
(I) the subsequent owner occupies the residence as a primary or secondary residence
within 180 days after the date of transfer; or
(II) the subsequent owner's tenant or lessee occupies the residence as a primary or
secondary residence within 180 days after the date of the transfer.

(2) If a residence is constructed under conditions that do not meet all of the provisions of
Subsection (1)(a) or (b), that residence and the real property associated with that residence as
provided in Section 38-1a-302 is subject to any lien as provided in Section 38-1a-301.
(3) A lien claimant who files a preconstruction or construction lien under Chapter 1a,
Preconstruction and Construction Liens, or a foreclosure action upon an owner-occupied
residence is not liable for costs and attorney fees under Sections 38-1a-706 and 38-1a-707
or for any damages arising from a civil action related to the lien filing or foreclosure action if
the lien claimant removes the lien within 15 days from the date the owner obtains a certificate
of compliance and mails a copy of the certificate of compliance by certified mail to the lien
claimant at the address provided for by Subsection 38-1a-502(2)(e). The 15-day period begins
accruing from the date postmarked on the certificate of compliance sent to the lien claimant.

‹ Prev All Utah 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.