OPINION
Referencing his own inability to forecast the actions of World War II Russia, Winston Churchill once quipped “It is a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma.” 1 Though we candidly admit the legal issues at play in this case do not come close to the terrorism of Stalinist Russia, the ensuing opinion answers the riddle wrapped in the mystery that is the Rhode Island Mechanics’ Lien Law, found at G.L.1956 Chapter 28 of Title 34, as analyzed under the enigma that is the modern procedural due process jurisprudence growing out of both the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and Article 1, Section 2 of the Rhode Island Constitution.
This case came before the Supreme Court on January 19, 2005, on appeal from a Superior Court judgment in favor of the property owners, 2 Robert Y. Rossi and Linda A. Rossi (collectively Rossis), declaring that the Mechanics’ Lien Law was so lean on due process protections that it rendered the statute unconstitutional. We wish to thank the Attorney General, the New England Legal Foundation, the American Subcontractors Association, Inc., the Rhode Island Subcontractors Association, and the Rhode Island Builders Association for their excellent amicus briefs. For the reasons stated herein, we vacate the judgment of the Superior Court.
I
Facts and Travel
In October 2000, the Rossis contracted with claimant, 3 Gem Plumbing & Heating Co., Inc. (Gem), to provide the materials and labor required for water and sewer lines in connection with an office building the Rossis were constructing in Smithfield, Rhode Island. On January 28, 2002, Gem mailed the Rossis a notice of intention to do work or furnish materials in connection with the building and recorded a copy of such notice in the land records in the Town of Smithfield, pursuant to § 34-28-4. As prescribed by statute,, 120 days later, on May 28, 2002, Gem filed a petition to enforce the mechanic’s lien in the Superior Court, claiming $35,500 in unpaid labor and materials. On the same day, Gem recorded a notice of lis pendens.
Subsequently, also in accordance with statutory procedure, the Rossis paid into the court registry $35,860, which equaled the total amount of Gem’s claimed lien, plus costs. Thereafter the Rossis filed an ex parte motion to dissolve, release, and discharge the mechanic’s lien and lis pen-dens, which the Superior Court granted on June 4, 2002, stating in its order that the amount deposited with the court registry *801 was substituted forthwith for the mechanic’s hen and lis pendens in the event that Gem eventually succeeded on the merits.
On August 29, 2000, the Rossis filed a motion to dismiss, alleging that the Mechanics’ Lien Law was unconstitutional because it deprived them of their property without due process of law. 4 As required by Rule 24(d) of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure, the Rossis informed the Attorney General of the constitutional claim, but the State declined to intervene. On October 23, 2002, after a hearing, the motion justice entered an order inviting the Attorney General and any other party to file amicus briefs, and required that notice of such invitation be given to major building and construction trade associations. After the Attorney General and various amici curiae submitted briefs, the court heard arguments on the constitutionality of the Mechanics’ Lien Law. The motion justice then issued a written decision declaring the then-statute unconstitutional. The statute, however, has been amended since that written decision, and it is the amended statute that we ultimately review today.
In that written decision analyzing the pre-amendment statute, the motion justice relied heavily upon the United States Supreme Court’s most recent procedural due process opinion addressing prejudgment remedies,
Connecticut v. Doehr,
On May 30, 2003, the motion justice entered judgment in favor of the Rossis, dismissing the action and ordering that their funds be released from the court registry, with accrued interest. On the same day, the motion justice also issued an order staying the effect of the judgment *802 for thirty days. On- June 5, 2003, Gem filed its notice of appeal, as well as a motion to stay the judgment pending appellate review by this Court. Subsequently, the motion justice declined to make the stay indefinite, instead extending it to July 10, 2003. This Court later stayed the judgment pending further order. At present, the funds deposited by the Rossis remain in the court registry. ,
II
A
The Applicable Statute
After the motion justice declared the Mechanics’ Lien Law unconstitutional, the Legislature amended the statute on July 17, 2003, by adding § 34-28-17.1. 6 Before determining the constitutionality of the Rhode Island Mechanics’ Lien Law, we first must determine whether the pre-amendment statute or the post-amendment statute controls our analysis in this case.
Generally, if the Legislature amends or adds a statute relevant to a case that is pending appeal, this Court will apply “the law in effect at the time of the appeal,” even when the statute was not in effect when judgment was entered in the trial court.
O’Reilly v. Town of Glocester,
Statutes are given retroactive effect only when the Legislature clearly expresses such an application.
Pión v. Bess Eaton Donuts Flour Co.,
B
The Mechanics of Mechanics’ Liens
As we have said in the past, the Mechanics’ Lien Law, having its roots in various predecessor statutes going back to 1847, has “never been a model of clarity.”
Faraone v. Faraone,
The statute is in derogation of the common law, and, as such, strict compliance is required.
Art Metal Construction Co.,
Under § 34-28-l(a),
“Whenever any building, canal, turnpike, railroad, or other improvement shall be constructed, erected, altered, or repaired by oral or written contract with or at the oral or written request of the owner, the owner being at the time the owner of the land on which the improvement is located, * * * the building, canal, turnpike, railroad, or other improvement, together with the land, is hereby made liable and shall stand subject to liens for all the work done by any person in the construction, erection, alteration, or reparation of such building, canal, turnpike, railroad, or other improvement, and for the materials used in the construction, erection, alteration, or reparation thereof, which have been furnished by any person.”
As interpreted by this Court, § 34-28-l(a) creates a lien in favor of the claimant “when the work begins or the materials are furnished * * * ‘it accrues as the debt accrues, being incident to the improvement * * ”
Art Metal Construction Co.,
*804 Section 34-28-4(b) requires that the notice of intention be executed under oath and contain: (1) the name of the property-owner; (2) “[a] general description of the land sufficient to identify it”; (3) “[a] general description of the nature of the work done or * * * materials furnished” (or to be done or furnished) and “the approximate value thereof * * * ”; (4) the name and address of the person for whom the work was, or is to be done, or materials furnished; (5) the “name and address of the person mailing the notice” or his or her agent for purposes of the notice and underlying lien claimed; and (6) a statement that the person so mailing “has not been paid for the work done or materials furnished.” Finally, the notice of intention must be mailed by registered or certified mail with return receipt requested. Section 34-28-4(a).
Notwithstanding the foregoing, a properly perfected lien under § 34-28-4(a) becomes “void and wholly lost” unless before 120 days from the recording of the notice of intention, the claimant files a notice of lis pendens 10 in the land records as well as a petition to enforce 11 the lien in Superior Court. Section 34-28-10(a). 12 The petition to enforce must be filed on the same day or within seven days after the filing of the notice of lis pendens, and both must be filed within 120 days of the date on which the notice of intention was recorded. Id.
*805 At the time of the motion justice’s judgment on May 30, 2003, and before the amendment to the statute, the Rossis had precious few avenues for relief from a perfected hen. Pursuant to § 34-28-17, property owners could deposit a bond (or cash) equivalent to the total amount of the notice of intention (plus associated costs) into the court registry and then petition the Superior Court ex parte to discharge the notice of intention and lis pendens, thereby clearing title to the property. Under § 34-28-17, this option is available to the property owner at any time after the recording of the notice of intention or, alternatively, after the filing of a petition to enforce. Of course, the property owner, as respondent to the petition in Superior Court, may contest both the lien itself and the amount claimed on their merits, although the statute is unclear as to exactly when that contest shall be heard. Section 34-28-20. Finally, a property owner prevailing on the merits may be entitled to costs, and, in the court’s discretion, attorneys’ fees. Section 34-28-19.
However, P.L. 2003, ch. 269, § 1 (codified as § 34-28-17.1) enacted on July 17, 2003, significantly enhanced the rights of a property owner facing a mechanic’s lien. In relevant part, § 34-28-17.1(a) provides that any owner, contractor, or other interested party who alleges:
“(1) that any person who has provided labor, materials or equipment or has agreed to provide funding, financing or payment for labor or materials or equipment refuses to continue to provide such funding, financing or payment for labor materials [sic] solely because of the filing or recording of a notice of intention; or (2) it appears from the notice of intention that the claimant has no valid lien by reason of the character of or the contract for the labor, materials or equipment and for which a lien is claimed; or (3) that a notice or other instrument has not been filed or recorded in accordance with the applicable provisions of § 34-28-1 et seq.; or (4) that for any other reason a claimed hen is invalid by reason or [sic] failure to comply with the provisions of § 34-28-1 et seq., then in such event, such person may apply forthwith to the superior court for the county where the land lies for an order to show cause why the hen in question is invalid, or otherwise void, or the basis of the hen is without probability of a judgment rendered in favor of the lienor.” (Emphasis added.)
Section 34-28-17.1(b) provides that such a show-cause order “shall be served upon the necessary parties no later than one week prior to the date of the scheduled hearing.”
Ill
The United States Supreme Court and Procedural Due Process
The United States Supreme Court’s modern procedural due process jurisprudence, as applied to prejudgment remedies, began with
Sniadach v. Family Finance Corp. of Bay View,
Three years later, in
Fuentes v. Shevin,
The United States Supreme Court next reviewed a Louisiana sequestration
17
statute in
Mitchell v. W.T. Grant Co.,
The United States Supreme Court then examined a Georgia garnishment statute in
North Georgia Finishing, Inc. v. DiChem, Inc.,
The United States Supreme Court’s most recent procedural due process ease analyzed a state attachment
18
procedure in
Connecticut v. Doehr,
In holding as it did on the issue of whether the clouding of title affected a significant property interest, the
Doehr
Court limited the precedential value of its own summary affirmance of
Spielman-Fond, Inc. v. Hanson’s, Inc.,
IV
Analysis
In reviewing the constitutionality of statutes, “[t]he Legislature is presumed to have acted within its constitutional power.”
Burrillville Racing Association v. State,
A
State Action
Before reaching the procedural due process issue, we first must address Gem’s argument that mechanics’ liens do not involve state action and, thus, are not subject to the Fourteenth Amendment. “[T]he mere existence of a body of property law in a State, whether decisional or statutory,” does not suffice as state action under the Fourteenth Amendment.
Flagg Bros., Inc. v. Brooks,
“[pjrejudgment remedy statutes ordinarily apply to disputes between private parties rather than between an individual and the government. Such enactments are designed to enable one of the parties to ‘make use of state procedures with the overt, significant assistance of state officials,’ and they undoubtedly involve state action ‘substantial enough to implicate the Due Process Clause.’ ” *809 Doehr,501 U.S. at 10-11 ,111 S.Ct. 2105 (emphases added).
Government officials provide “overt, significant assistance” in almost every step of the mechanics’ hen process. A town official records the notice of intention perfecting the lien. Section 34-28-5. A town official records the notice of lis pendens. Section 34-28-12. Prior to a show-cause hearing to determine whether the lien should be enforced for the amount claimed, a Superior Court clerk has a newspaper advertisement published giving notice to “all persons having a lien, by virtue of this chapter, or any title, claim, lease, mortgage, attachment, or other hen or encumbrance, or any unrecorded claim on ah or any part of the same property” and issues direct citations to each person hsted on the petition to enforce the hen. Section 34-28-14. Finally, the court registry holds the cash payment or bond in the event the property owner wishes to discharge the hen. Section 34-28-17. Thus, the operation of our Mechanics’ Lien Law qualifies as state action within the broad sweep of Doehr.
B
Mathews-Doehr Balancing
The Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution prevents states from depriving “any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.”
22
Article 1, Section 2, of the Rhode Island Constitution similarly provides “[n]o person shall be deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law.” Due process is unlike other legal rules in that it “ ‘is not a technical conception with a fixed content unrelated to time, place and circumstances.’ ”
Cafeteria & Restaurant Workers Union, Local 473, AFL-CIO v. McElroy,
To determine whether a particular state statute, complies with due process, we apply a balancing test first announced in
Mathews v. Eldridge,
1
The Rossis’ Interest
The first step in our
MathewsDoehr
analysis requires us to consider the
*810
significance of the “private interest that will be affected by the prejudgment measure.”
Doehr,
“the property interests that attachment affects are significant. For a property owner like Doehr, attachment ordinarily clouds title; impairs the ability to sell or otherwise alienate the property; taints any credit rating; reduces the chance of obtaining a home equity loan or additional mortgage; and can even place an existing mortgage in technical default where there is an insecurity clause.” Id.
At least so far as its effect on the Ros-sis’ property is concerned, we discern no meaningful difference between the attachment statute at issue in
Doehr
and the mechanic’s lien in the present case. In both cases the property owner maintains physical possession of the property and has the option of clearing title by posting bond. In both cases, however, the deprivation is significantly less than the “temporary total deprivation[s]” in
Sniadach
(garnishment),
Fuentes
(replevin), and
Mitchell
(sequestration).
See Doehr,
Gem urges application of the United States Supreme Court’s summary affir-mance of
Spielman-Fond, Inc.,
2
The Risk of Erroneous Deprivation
The second prong of the
Matheius-Doehr
balancing test examines “the risk of erroneous deprivation through the procedures under attack and the probable value of additional or alternative safeguards.”
Doehr,
“Many times, a contractor or material-man has been paid a substantial majority portion of the total amount contracted for and then a problem arises whereby there is a dispute as to the remaining amount owed or even as to the performance under the contract. Oftentimes the dispute arises where there are allegations of misfeasance, malfeasance or simply nonfeasance as to duties of performance under the contract of construction and the owner claims he/she has been damaged in an amount exceeding any amounts due and remaining to be paid under the contract price.”
i
Hearing Pursuant to § 34-28-17.1
A prompt post-deprivation hearing is an important factor in determin
*811
ing whether the procedural safeguards adequately limit erroneous deprivation; it allows the property owner to immediately challenge the deprivation. The fact that a property owner could move immediately to dissolve the writ weighed in favor of constitutionality in
Mitchell,
“When the language of a statute is clear and unambiguous, we must enforce the statute as written by giving the words of the statute their plain and ordinary meaning.”
Harvard Pilgrim Health Care of New England, Inc. v. Gelati,
The language of § 34-28-17.1 clearly affords a property owner a hearing “for an order to show cause why the lien in question is invalid, or otherwise void, or the basis of the lien is without probability of a judgment rendered in favor of the lienor.” The question of when that hearing is to take place is critical in limiting the risk of erroneous deprivation: the more prompt the hearing, the less the risk of erroneous deprivation.
At least as to subsections (2)-(4) of § 34-28-17.1(a), 23 the statute demonstrates clear legislative intent to grant a property owner a prompt post-deprivation hearing based on “the notice of intention,” § 34-28-17.1(a)(2), which is the initial step in the process, § 34-28-4. Furthermore, the Legislature designated such hearings as expedited show-cause proceedings. See Black’s Law Dictionary 1413 (8th ed. 1999) (defining “show-cause proceeding” as an “expedited proceeding on a show-cause order”). In addition, the statute provides a *812 service timeline that is faster than for a run-of-the-mill motion hearing. Compare § 34-28-17.1(b) (seven days prior to a hearing) with Super.R.Civ.P. 6(c) (ten days prior to a hearing). Finally, the Legislature’s selection of the word “forthwith” in conjunction with its choice of the show-cause procedures and expedited return date indicates a clear intention that the Superior Court fast-track such hearings. Section 34-28-17.1(a). Thus, consistent with our rules of construction, we interpret this remedial statute to provide a property owner (as well as a contractor or other person of interest), at any time after the mailing of the notice of intention — and, significantly, potentially before the lien is perfected — the opportunity to challenge the claimed lien on a number of grounds, including its substantive invalidity, or for some other procedural defect under the statute. 24 We further conclude the Legislature intended for such actions to be given priority on the Superior Court calendar so that property owners indeed may bring their challenges “forthwith” and be heard “forthwith.”
Even when the notice of intention is mailed and recorded in the land evidence records on the same day, a property owner’s right to a prompt post-deprivation hearing, pursuant to § 34-28-17.1, affords him or her considerable due process protection. 25 Thus, the prompt post-deprivation hearing weighs in favor of a finding of constitutionality.
Finally, we pause to acknowledge an especially peculiar facet of this case. Although our caselaw clearly establishes that we must apply the amended statute on appeal, we note that § 34-28-17.1 did not exist at the time the motion justice analyzed the constitutional question we address today.
ii
Other Procedural Safeguards Afforded
Among the other procedural safeguards analyzed under this prong is the
*813
so-called “detailed affidavit.” Certain sworn affidavits have been held insufficient to support constitutionality of prejudgment remedy statutes on multiple occasions.
Doehr,
As stated previously, § 34-28-4(b) requires that the notice of intention must be executed under oath and contain: (1) the name of the property owner; (2) “[a] general description of the land sufficient to identify it”; (3) “[a] general description of the nature of the work done or * * * materials furnished” (or to be done or furnished) and “the approximate value thereof * * * ”; (4) the name and address of the person for whom the work was, or is to be done, or materials furnished; (5) the “name and address of the person mailing the notice” or his or her agent for purposes of the notice and underlying hen claimed; and (6) a statement that the person so mailing “has not been paid for the work done or materials furnished.” A review of the notice of intention form provided in the statute leads us to conclude it is a detailed, but mostly conclusory, sworn affidavit. See § 34-28-4(c) (form). Even so, this factor weighs slightly in favor of constitutionality.
The statute offers two ancillary procedural safeguards further limiting the risk of erroneous deprivation. First, § 34-28-19 grants the Superior Court the express power to grant a prevailing party “reasonable expenses” including “legal interest, costs of advertising” and “attorneys’ fees.” Thus, claimants who use the statute for reasons other than to secure payment for work done should be dissuaded from doing so by the threat of pecuniary loss.
Second, § 34-28-17 allows the property owner to pay cash into or post a bond with the court registry to release the lien and regain clear title to the property. Although we agree with the motion justice that the release of the hen in this way does not render the property owner’s deprivation insignificant, we do not think the provision is irrelevant to our inquiry; the possibility of promptly clearing title does minimize the risk of erroneous deprivation. The effect of a clouded title during a time-sensitive sale of real property is much more coercive than a cash payment or the posting of a bond. A property owner, by unilaterally clearing title with a bond or cash payment, can thwart those potentially coercive effects. The claimant’s knowledge of § 34-28-17 limits erroneous deprivation.
iii
Procedural Safeguards Afforded by Other Prejudgment Remedy Statutes
The prejudgment remedy statutes analyzed by the United States Supreme Court have afforded other procedural safeguards not included in the amended Mechanics’ Lien Law: a showing of extraordinary circumstances and ex parte judicial scrutiny of an affidavit before the hen is perfected. We briefly discuss these safeguards to determine the probable value of additional due process protection.
The United States Supreme Court’s caselaw on extraordinary circumstances (sometimes referred to as exigent cireum-
*814
stances) is without a doubt the most confusing aspect of the law in this area.
26
In any case, this Court’s interpretation of the procedural due process cases is that under the current
Mathews-Doehr
balancing test, extraordinary circumstances is simply a factor, and thus, not required, or, in the alternative, the particulars of the situation giving rise to mechanics’ liens is a per se extraordinary circumstance.
27
The first
*815
interpretation is based on the fact that the
Mitchell
case upheld a Louisiana sequestration statute that did
not require extraordinary circumstances. See generally Mitchell v. W.T. Grant Co.,
Ex parte
judicial scrutiny of the affidavit before the hen is filed has been treated differently at different times by the United States Supreme Court. The
Mitchell
Court placed significant rebanee on that safeguard in upholding the sequestration statute.
Mitchell,
To summarize our analysis of the second Mathews-Doehr prong, despite the lack of a showing of extraordinary circumstances and ex parte judicial review of the affidavit, the procedural safeguards that the statute employs, primarily the prompt post-deprivation hearing, limits the risk of erroneous deprivation.
3
Gem’s Interest and “Due Regard” for Rhode Island’s Interest
The third prong of the
MathewsDoehr
test examines Gem’s interests, with due regard given to any ancillary interest the government may have in providing or forgoing additional protections.
Doehr,
In his Doehr concurrence, Chief Justice Rehnquist compellingly distinguished the Doehr situation from one involving a mechanic’s lien, while stressing the importance of the claimant’s preexisting interest in the real property subject to lien.
“[I]n Spielman-Fond, Inc., * * * there was * * * an alternative basis available to this Court for affirmance of that decision. Arizona recognized a pre-existing lien in favor of unpaid mechanics and materialmen who had contributed labor or supplies which were incorporated in improvements to real property. The existence of such a lien upon the very property ultimately posted or noticed distinguishes those eases from the present one, where the plaintiff had no preexisting interest in the real property which he sought to attach. Material-men’s and mechanic’s lien statutes award an interest in real property to workers who have contributed their labor, and to suppliers who have furnished material, for the improvement of the real property. Since neither the labor nor the material can be reclaimed once it has become a part of the realty, this is the only method by which workmen or small businessmen who have contributed to the improvement of the property may be given a remedy against a property owner who has defaulted on his promise to pay for the labor and the materials. To require any sort of a contested court hearing or bond before the notice of lien takes effect would largely defeat the purpose of these statutes.” Doehr,501 U.S. at 28 ,111 S.Ct. 2105 (emphasis added).
Like the Arizona statute referenced by Chief Justice Rehnquist, the Rhode Island Mechanics’ Lien Law recognizes a preexisting interest in claimants who, through their hard work and materials, increase the value of an owner’s property while having no means later to undo the improvement. • As noted above, 28 § 34-28-1(a) makes any improvement and the land upon which the improvement sits “liable and * * * subject to liens for all the work done by any person * * * [as well as] for the materials used” in the doing of any such improvement.
This Court’s interpretation of the statute (and its predecessors) — for more than a century — has been that the mechanic’s lien “comes into existence when the work begins or the materials are furnished.”
Art Metal Construction Co.,
The First, Second and Tenth Circuits have acknowledged the preexisting interest theory in
post-Doehr
cases.
See Shaumyan v. O’Neill,
Finally, we address the State’s interest in the Mechanics’ Lien Law. In
Doehr,
the United States Supreme Court noted that “[n]o interest the government may have affects the analysis. The State’s interest in protecting any rights of the plaintiff cannot be any more weighty than those rights themselves.”
Doehr,
In terms of forgoing additional procedures,
31
the State has an additional interest in putting potential purchasers on notice of all claims to prevent the type of complex third-party disputes that inevitably would result from transfers of such property.
Cf. New Destiny Development Corp. v. Piccione,
*818 Accordingly, we hold that Gem’s preexisting interest in the property and the State of Rhode Island’s ancillary interest weigh strongly in favor of constitutionality.
Conclusion
Giving due consideration to all three prongs of the Mathews-Doehr balancing test, we conclude that the Mechanics’ Lien Law, as amended by § 34-28-17.1, does not violate the Due Process Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution or Article 1, Section 2 of the Rhode Island Constitution. Tipping the scales in favor of constitutionality is the combination of the claimant’s statutory preexisting interest in the property and the availability of a prompt post-deprivation hearing. The claimant’s preexisting interest is especially weighty when compared with the property owner’s interest in a clear title, the deprivation of which was not a “temporary total deprivation.” Also, the property owner’s access to a prompt post-deprivation hearing pursuant to § 34-28-17.1, when combined with the other procedural safeguards afforded by the statute, limits the risk of erroneous deprivation. In light of the presumption of constitutionality required by the applicable standard of review, we hold that the Rhode Island Mechanics’ Lien Law, chapter 28 of title 34, is constitutional. 33
Once again, it is necessary to restate our more than seventy-year-old concerns about the Rhode Island Mechanics’ Lien Law. This Court consistently has noted that the statute lacks clarity, not merely to empathize with local practitioners and judges who struggle with its complexity, but rather with the hope that our Legislature would rewrite the statute so that all could read it, comprehend it and apply it without continually turning to this Court. Our descriptions of provisions of the statute as “a single sentence of gargantuan [and now Brobdingnagian] length” have fallen on deaf ears.
Faraone,
For the reasons stated herein and because the motion justice did not have an opportunity to review the Mechanics’ Lien Law as amended by § 34-28-17.1, we vacate the judgment of the Superior Court. The record shall be remanded to the Superior Court.
Notes
. John Bartlett, Familiar Quotations 743 (15th ed. 1980).
. In the interest of clarity, we will use the general term "property owner” to characterize the person or entity whose property interest has been affected by the prejudgment remedy, except when quoted authority has used a different term. The property owner otherwise would be known as the respondent, lien-ee, landowner, debtor, buyer or consumer.
.Also in the interest of clarity, we will use the general term "claimant” to characterize the person or entity who seeks to employ the prejudgment remedy, except when quoted authority has used a different term. The claimant otherwise would be known as the petitioner, lienor, mechanic, materialman, creditor or seller.
. In the motion justice's decision and in papers before this Court, the term "taking” has been employed to describe the statute’s effect on the Rossis' property rights. We wish to clarify that the constitutional claim invoked here is one of procedural due process, which is manifestly different from a “taking.” The former prevents the "deprivation” of life, liberty, or property without due process. The latter provides protection from the government’s power of eminent domain (or, in some circumstances, excessive regulation) such that when the government literally "takes” private property for public use, the property owner may allege "inverse condemnation” and, if successful, is entitled to "just compensation.” This is not a "takings” case.
See, e.g., Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon,
. The decision also referred to a footnote in
Connecticut v. Doehr,
. For further discussion of the amended statute, see infra Part II.B.
. We disagree with the Rossis' contention that the lien no longer is pending because they paid $35,860 into the registry of the Superior Court and the lien was released. This argument ignores the Legislature's intent to apply G.L.1956 § 34-28-17.1 to all pending "lien substitutions.” That payment is merely a lien substitution.
.Abraham Lincoln, Letter to Elihu B. Wash-burne, (Apr. 30, 1848), in A Treasury of Lincoln Quotations 64 (Fred Kerner ed. 1965) (1996).
. Referencing this Brobdingnagian section of the statute in
Faraone v. Faraone,
"[Bjefore or within one hundred and twenty (120) days after the doing of such work or the furnishing of such materials, [the claimant] mail[s] by prepaid registered or certified mail, in either case return receipt requested, a notice of intention, hereinafter described, to do work or furnish material, or both, together with a statement that the person so mailing may within one hundred twenty (120) days after the doing of the work or the furnishing of the materials, file a copy of such notice of intention in the records of land evidence in the city or town in which the land generally described in such notice of intention is located and a further statement that the mailing of the notice of intention and the filing of the copy will perfect a lien of the person so mailing against the land under and subject to the provisions of this chapter, to the owner of record of the land at the time of the mailing, or, in the case of a lien against the interest of any lessee or tenant, to the lessee or tenant, the mailing to be addressed to the last known residence or place of business of the owner or lessee or tenant, but if no residence or place of business is known or ascertainable by the person making the mailing by inquiry of the person with whom the person making the mailing is directly dealing or otherwise, then the mailing under this section shall be to the address of the land, and also shall before or within one hundred twenty (120) days after the doing of the work or the furnishing of the materials file a copy of the notice of intention in *804 the records of land evidence in the city or town in which the land generally described in the notice of lien is located. The mailing of the notice of intention and the filing of the copy in the land evidence records together with the mailing of another copy thereof as hereinbelow provided shall perfect, subject to other sections of this chapter, the lien of the person so mailing and filing as to work done or materials furnished, by the person during the one hundred and twenty (120) days prior to the mailing and thereafter * *
. The notice of lis pendens must contain: (1) "[t]he name of the person against whom the petition has been or will be filed and the relationship” to the land in question; (2) “[a] description of the land by metes and bounds, or by reference to a recorded plat, by tax assessor’s lot and plat, or by other legal description”; (3) the amount claimed to be due in the petition; (4) the dates of the mailing and filing of the notice of intention and the name and address of the person to whom it was mailed; and (5) the names and addresses of the claimant and his or. her attorney. The notice of lis pendens must state that the person filing has filed or will file within seven days, a petition to enforce in the Superior Court, Section 34-28-11(a).
. The petition to enforce must;
"set forth the particulars of the account or demand for which the petitioner claims a lien including the amount claimed, extras, payment made, the date or dates upon which work was done or materials furnished, shall recite the actions taken under ' this chapter by the petitioner for the perfection of such lien, shall particularly describe the * * * improvement, and land, and the estate and title in the improvement upon which the petitioner claims a lien. It shall include specific dates of performance of the work, providing of materials, nature of each performance, and shall pray that the lien may be enforced against the improvement * * *.” Section 34-28-13.
.In pertinent part, § 34-28-10(a) states that all liens under the statute:
"shall be void and wholly lost to any person claiming a lien under those sections, unless the person shall file a petition to enforce the lien, described in § 34-28-13, in the superi- or court for the county in which is situated the land upon which the * * * improvement is being or has been constructed, erected, altered, or repaired, and unless such person shall also file in the records of land evidence in the city or town in which such land is located a notice of lis pendens, * * * the petition to be filed on the same day as the notice of lis pendens, or within seven (7) days thereafter, and both the petition and the notice of lis pendens to be filed within one hundred twenty (120) days of the date of the recording of the notice of intention provided in § 34-28-4 * * *.”
. Garnishment is a “judicial proceeding in which a creditor (or potential creditor) asks the court to order a third party who is indebted to * * * the debtor to turn over to the creditor any of the debtor’s property (such as wages or bank accounts) held by that third party.” Black's Law Dictionary 702 (8th ed. 1999).
. Replevin is an "action for the repossession of personal property wrongfully taken or detained by the defendant, whereby the plaintiff gives security for and holds the property until the court decides who owns it.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1325 (8th ed. 1999).
. The primary difference between the two statutes was that the Florida statute provided a post-deprivation hearing, while the Pennsylvania statute did not "require that there
ever
be opportunity for a hearing on the merits of the conflicting claims to possession of the replevied property.”
Fuentes v. Shevin,
. Based on
Fuentes,
the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island declared the Rhode Island attachment statute, G.L. 1956 chapter 5 of title 10, unconstitutional.
McClellan v. Commercial Credit Corp.,
.Sequestration is the "process by which property is removed from the possessor pending the outcome of a dispute in which two-or more parties contend for it.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1397 (8th ed. 1999).
.Attachment is the "seizing of a person’s property to secure a judgment or to be sold in satisfaction of a judgment.” Black’s Law Dictionary 136 (8th ed. 1999).
. For further discussion of the balancing test, see infra Part IV.B.
. The
Doehr
Court was careful to draw distinctions between the nature of a plaintiff’s rights in a tort action and a creditor’s right in
*808
an action on a debt. "[Disputes between debtors and creditors more readily lend themselves to accurate
ex parte
assessments of the merits. Tort actions, like the assault and battery claim at issue here, do not.”
Doehr,
. Chief Justice Rehnquist's concurrence in Doehr, joined by Justice Blackmun, further articulated the alternative basis for affirming Spielman-Fond, Inc. See infra Part IV.B.3.
. For the sake of clarity, we note that the Due Process Clause contained in the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution does not pertain to this case. The United States Supreme Court consistently has applied the Fourteenth Amendment, rather than the Fifth Amendment, to the states in review of statutes affording prejudgment remedies.
See Doehr,
. As for § 34-28-17.1(a)(l), we point out that the Legislature may wish to clarify this subsection. According to the text of this provision, an owner, contractor, or other person of interest may attack the validity of the lien by an order to show cause when
"any person who has provided labor, materials or equipment or has agreed to provide funding, financing or payment for labor or materials or equipment refuses to continue to provide such funding, financing or payment for labor materials solely because of the filing or recording of a notice of intention.” Id.
It appears the Legislature inadvertently left out people supplying "labor, materials or equipment” from those whose work stoppage give interested parties cause to challenge the validity of the lien, despite their presence in the first part of the subsection.
We also note that although the title of this section is "[d]ismissal of petition for other cause,” that title does not affect our interpretation of the plain meaning of the statute; a lien may be challenged upon the notice of intention. Section 34-28-17.1. “The title of an act may only aid in a court’s interpretation if there is doubt as to the meaning of a provision of the statute.”
Town of East Greenwich v. O’Neil,
. At oral argument, we raised the question of whether the amended statute places the burden of proof on either the property owner or the claimant at a hearing pursuant to § 34-28-17.1. Clearly, the property owner bears the initial burden of moving for the hearing. Section 34-28-17.1(a)(4) ("[A]ny person in interest, including, but not limited to, an owner or contractor * * * may apply forthwith * * * for an order to show cause * * *■”).
Who bears the actual burden of proof at the hearing is less clear. The statute specifically labels the hearing as "an order to show cause.” Id. The statute then modifies "an order to show cause” with the phrase "why the lien in question is invalid, or otherwise void, or the basis of the lien is without probability of a judgment rendered in favor of the lienor” suggesting the burden is placed on the property owner to prove that the lien is invalid. Id. In contrast, subsection (b) reads "An order of notice to appear and show cause why the relief demanded in the complaint should not be granted” suggesting the burden is placed on the claimant to prove that the lien is valid. Section 34-28-17.1(b). Given the remedial nature of the statute, we resolve this discrepancy in favor of the property owner and conclude that the burden at the ensuing "show cause” hearing is on the claimant to prove why the lien is valid.
. The fact that, pursuant to § 34-28-4, a claimant may mail the notice of intention before perfecting the lien is worthy of further note. Except when the notice of intention is mailed and filed on the same day, the property owner necessarily has some
prior
notice of the future encumbrance. Thus, mechanics’ liens may be distinguishable from many of the other prejudgment remedies examined by the United States Supreme Court, which reviewed statutes affording prejudgment remedies without
notice and an opportunity to be heard. See Mitchell,
. Perhaps the best example of this confusion is the comparison of
Mitchell
with the
Snia-dach/Fuentes
cases. In striking down Wisconsin's garnishment statute, the
Sniadach
Court acknowledged that '‘[s]uch summary procedure may well meet the requirements of due process in extraordinary situations.”
Sniadach v. Family Finance Corp. of Bay View,
Nonetheless, the
Mitchell
Court upheld a Louisiana sequestration law that required
no
showing of extraordinary circumstances.
Mitchell,
The subsequent cases merely have added to this conundrum.
North Georgia Finishing, Inc.
v.
Di-Chem, Inc.,
. As noted in the text, Doehr seems to indicate that, at least in the case of mechanics’ liens, either no extraordinary circumstances are required, or that the mechanics’ lien situation is per se an extraordinary circumstance. Two points are central to both interpretations. First, the Doehr Court cited to Mitchell as an extraordinary circumstances case when it noted that
"there was no allegation that Doehr was about to transfer or encumber his real estate or take any other action during the pendency of the action that would render his real estate unavailable to satisfy a judgment. Our cases have recognized such a properly supported claim would be an exigent circumstance permitting postponing any notice or hearing until after the attachment is effected.” Doehr,501 U.S. at 16 ,111 S.Ct. 2105 .
However, the
Mitchell
case made no reference to extraordinary circumstances as an aspect of due process beyond noting that the statute in question did not require any such showing.
Mitchell,
In addition, the
Doehr
Court's statement about an "alternative basis for affirmance” of
Spielman-Fond, Inc.,
indicates that perhaps
*815
mechanics' liens either present an extraordinary circumstance or that such a circumstance is not required.
See Doehr,
A cursory review of the original
Spielman-Fond, Inc.
case (which was cursory itself) shows the case was a run-of-the-mill mechanics’ lien situation. No extraordinary circumstances were alleged. The claimants simply alleged that they had not been paid.
Spielman-Fond, Inc.,
. See supra Part II.B.
. The Rossis argue that there is an unfounded assumption that a claimant necessarily adds value to the property. In light of Art Metal Construction Co., this argument fails. Although the precise amount, if any, owed to a claimant is a question that in the end will be resolved at trial under contract principles, there is usually some value in the work performed — even if it is not the face value of the alleged debt.
.In upholding the constitutionality of Louisiana’s sequestration statute, the
Mitchell
Court found significant the preexisting interest of the claimants, noting that, based on that interest and the risk of deteriorated value to consumer goods by continued use in the hands of the property owner, the state "was entitled to recognize this reality and to provide somewhat more protection for the seller.”
Mitchell,
. We note that the administrative burden of additional procedures is unlikely to greatly exceed any judicial and administrative burden inherent in § 34-28-17.1’s show-cause procedures.
. The State also has an interest in the constitutionality of the Mechanics' Lien Law to the extent that a holding to the contrary would render other statutory prejudgment liens con *818 stitutionally suspect — a situation that arguably might lead to chaos in the marketplace. The Legislature has created a number of such liens including tax liens on real property, G.L.1956 § 44-9-1; attorney's liens, G.L. 1956 § 9-3-1; hospital liens, § 9-3-4; and motor vehicle repairer’s liens, § 9-3-9, as well as a multitude of others too numerous to list here.
. Although we uphold the constitutionality of the statute as written, we recognize that additional procedural safeguards would further limit the risk of erroneous deprivation. The Legislature, in its policymaking role, is free to enact additional procedural safeguards should it determine any are prudent. Our analysis of constitutionality is not a determination of what is, and what is not, sound policy.
