delivered the opinion of the Court.
Thе California Labor Code (Code or Labor Code) authorizes the State to order withholding of payments due a contractor on a public works project if a subcontractor on the project fails to comply with certain Code requirements. The Code permits the contractor, in turn, to withhold similar sums from the subcontractor. The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit held that the relevant Code provisions violate the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment because the statutory scheme does not afford the subcontractor a hearing before or after such action is taken. We granted certiorari,
Petitioners are the California Division of Labor Standards Enforcement (DLSE), the California Department of Industrial Relations, and several state officials in their official capacities. Respondent G & G Fire Sprinklers, Inc. (G & G), is a fire-protection company that installs fire sprinkler systems. G & G served аs a subcontractor on several California public works projects. “Public works” include construction work done under contract and paid for in whole or part by public funds. Cal. Lab. Code Ann. § 1720 (West Supp. 2001). The department, board, authority, officer, or agent awarding a contract for public work is cаlled the “awarding body.” § 1722 (West 1989). The California Labor Code requires that contractors and subcontractors on such projects pay their workers a prevailing wage that is determined by the State. §§1771, 1772, 1773 (West 1989 and Supp. 2001). At the time relevant here, if workers were not paid the prevailing wage, the contractor was required to pay each worker the difference between the prevailing wage and the wages paid, in addition to forfeiting a penalty to the State. § 1775 *192 (West Supp. 2001). 1 The awarding body was required to include a clause in the contract so stipulating. Ibid.
The Labor Code provides that “[b]efore making paymеnts to the contractor of money due under a contract for public work, the awarding body shall withhold and retain therefrom all wages and penalties which have been forfeited pursuant to any stipulation in a contract for public work, and the terms of this chapter.” § 1727. If money is withheld from a contractor because of a subcontractor’s failure to comply with the Code’s provisions, “[i]t shall be lawful for [the] contractor to withhold from [the] subcontractor under him sufficient sums to cover any penalties withheld.” § 1729 (West 1989). 2
The Labor Code permits the contractor, or his assignee, to bring suit against the awarding body “on the contract for alleged breach thereof in not making . . . payment” to recover the wages or penalties withheld. §§ 1731, 1732 (West Supp. 2001). The suit must be brought within 90 days of completion of the contract and acceptance of the job. § 1730. Sueh a suit “is the exclusive remedy of the contrac *193 tor or his оr her assignees.” § 1782. The awarding body retains the wages and penalties "pending the outcome of the suit.” § 1731. 3
In 1995, DLSE determined that G & 6, as a subcontractor on three public works projects, had violated the Labor Code by failing to pay the prevailing wage and failing to keep and/or furnish payroll records upon request. DLSE issued notices to the awarding bodies on those projects, directing them to withhold from the contractors an amount equal to the wages and penalties forfeited due to G & G’s violations. The awarding bodies withheld payment from the contractors, who in turn withheld payment from G & G. The total withheld, according to rеspondent, exceeded $135,000. App. 68.
G & G sued petitioners in the District Court for the Central District of California. G & G sought declaratory and injunctive relief pursuant to Rev. Stat. § 1979, 42 U. S. C. §1983, claiming that the issuance of withholding notices without a hearing constituted a deprivation of property without due process of law in violаtion of the Fourteenth Amendment. The District Court granted respondent’s motion for summary judgment, declared §§ 1727, 1730-1733, 1775, 1776(g), and 1813 of the Labor Code unconstitutional, and enjoined the State from enforcing these provisions *194 against respondent App. to Pet. for Cert. A85-A87. Petitioners appealed.
A divided panel of the Court оf Appeals for the Ninth Circuit affirmed.
G & G Fire Sprinklers, Inc.
v.
Bradshaw,
Following
Bradshaw I,
we decided
American Mfrs. Mut. Ins. Co.
v.
Sullivan,
On remand, the Court of Appeals reinstated its prior judgment and opinion, again by a divided vote. The court held that the withholding of payments was state action because it was “specifically directed by State officials ... [and] the withholding party has no discretion.”
G&G Fire
*195
Sprinklers, Inc.
v.
Bradshaw,
Where a state law such as this is challenged on due process grounds, we inquire whether the State has deprived the claimant of a protectеd property interest, and whether the State’s procedures comport with due process.
Sullivan, supra,
at 59. We assume, without deciding, that the withholding of money due respondent under its contracts occurred under color of state law, and that, as the Court of Appeals concluded, respondent has a рroperty interest of the kind we considered in
Logan
v.
Zimmerman Brush Co.,
The Court of Appeals relied upon several of our cases dealing with claims of deprivation of a properly interest without due process to hold that G & G was entitled to a reasonably prompt hearing when paymеnts were withheld.
Bradshaw I, supra,
at 903-904 (citing
United States
v.
James Daniel Good Real Property,
In each of these cases, the claimant was denied a right by virtue of which he was presently entitled either to exercise ownership dominion over real or personal property, or to pursue a gainful occupation. Unlike those claimants, respondent has not been denied any present entitlement. G&G has been deprived of payment that it contends it is owed under a contract, based on the State’s determination that G&G failed to comply with the contract’s terms. G&G hаs only a claim that it did comply with those terms and therefore that it is entitled to be paid in full. Though we assume for purposes of decision here that G&G has a property interest in its claim for payment, see supra, at 195, it is an interest, unlike the interests discussed above, that can be fully protected by an ordinary breaeh-of-contraet suit.
In
Cafeteria & Restaurant Workers
v.
McElroy,
“The very nature of due procеss negates any concept of inflexible procedures universally applicable to every imaginable situation. ‘“[D]ue process,” unlike some legal rules, is not a technical conception with a fixed *197 content unrelated to time, place and circumstances.’ It is ‘compounded of history, reason, the past course of decisions....’”
We hold that if California makes ordinary judicial process available to respondent for resolving its contractual dispute, that process is due process.
The California Labor Code provides that “the contractor or his or her assignеe” may sue the awarding body “on the contract for alleged breach thereof” for “the recovery of wages or penalties.” §§1731, 1732 (West Supp. 2001). There is no basis here to conclude that the contractor would refuse to assign the right of suit to its subcontractor. In fact, respondent stated at orаl argument that it has sued awarding bodies in state superior court pursuant to §§ 1731-1733 of the Labor Code to recover payments withheld on previous projects where it served as a subcontractor. See Tr. of Oral Arg. 27, 40-41, 49-50. Presumably, respondent brought suit as an assignee of the contractors on those projects, as the Code requires. §1732 (West Supp. 2001). Thus, the Labor Code, by allowing assignment, provides a means by which a subcontractor may bring a claim for breach of contract to recover wages and penalties withheld.
Respondent complains that a suit under the Labor Code is inadequate because the awarding body retains the wages and penalties “pending the outcome of the suit,” §1731, which may last several years. Tr. of Oral Arg. 51. A lawsuit of that duration, while undoubtedly something of a hardship, cannot be said to deprive respondent of its claim for payment under the contract. Lawsuits are not known for expеditiously resolving claims, and the standard practice in breach-of-contract suits is to award damages, if appropriate, only at the conclusion of the case.
Even if respondent could not obtain assignment of the right to sue the awarding body under the contract, it appears that a suit for brеach of contract against the contractor remains available under California common law. See 1
*198
B. Witkin, Summary of California Law §§791, 797 (9th ed. 1987) (defining breach as the “unjustified or unexeused . . . failure to perform a contract” and describing the remedies available under state law). To be sure, § 1732 of the Labor Code provides that suit on the contract against the awarding body is the “exclusive remedy of the contractor or his or her assignees” with respect to recovery of withheld wages and penalties. § 1732 (West Supp. 2001). But the remedy is exclusive only with respect to the contractor and his assignees, and thus by its terms not the exclusive remedy for a subcontractor who does not receive assignment. See,
e. g., J & K Painting Co., Inc.
v.
Bradshaw,
In
J & K Painting,
the California Court of Appeal rejected the argument that §1732 requires a subcontractоr to obtain an assignment and that failure to do so is “fatal to any other attempt to secure relief.”
Id.,
at 1401, n. 7,
It is so ordered.
Notes
The Code also imposes restrictions on recordkeeping and working hours, and at the time relevant here, the contractor was similarly penalized if the contractor or subcontractor failed to comply with them. Cal. Lab. Code Ann. §§ 1776(a), (b), (g) (West Supp. 2001), 1813 (West 1989). The awarding body was required to include a dause in the contract so stipulating. §§ 1776(h), 1813.
Sections 1775, 1776, and 1813 were subsequently amended tо provide that both contractors and subcontractors may be penalized for failure to comply with the Labor Code. §§ 1775(a), 1776(g), 1813 (West Supp. 2001). Amendments to §1775 also state that either the contractor or the subcontractor may pay workers the difference between the prevailing wage and wages paid. § 1775(a).
Amendments to the Labor Code effective July 1, 2001, impose additional requirements on contractors. See § 1727(b) (West Supp. 2001) (contractor shall withhold money from subcontractor at request of Labor Commissioner in certain circumstances); § 1775(b)(3) (contractor shall take corrective аction to halt subcontractor’s failure to pay prevailing wages if aware of the failure or be subject to penalties).
Sections 1730-1733 of the Code have been repealed, effective July 1, 2001. Section 1742 has replaced them. It provides that “[a]n affected contractor or subcоntractor may obtain review of a civil wage and penalty assessment [under the Code3 by transmitting a written request to the office of the Labor Commissioner.” § 1742(a). The contractor or subcontractor is then entitled to a hearing before the Director of Industrial Relations, who shall appoint an impartial hearing officer. 'Within 45 days of the hearing, the director shall issue a written decision affirming, modifying, or dismissing the assessment. A contractor or subcontractor may obtain review of the director’s decision by filing a petition for a writ of the mandate in state superior court. §§ 1742(b), (e). These provisions are not yet in effect and these procedures were not available to respondent at the time of the withholding of payments at issue here.
