OPINION
Mustang Tractor & Equipment Company and Mustang Rental Services, Inc., (collectively, “Mustang”) appeal the trial court’s order granting the motion for summary judgment filed by Hartford Accident and Indemnity Company, Hartford Casualty Insurance Company (collectively, “Hartford”), and White-Spunner Construction, Inc. (“White-Spunner”), to remove four materialman’s liens totaling $115,720.03 that had been filed by Mustang. Hartford and White-Spunner contend that Mustang, in preparing the lien affidavits, failed to comply with the requirements of the property code. Specifically, they argue that the lien affidavits were invalid due to the omission of information regarding when and how pre-hen notice had been provided to the property owner.
See
Tex. Prop. Code Ann. § 53.054(a)(8) (West 2007). In a single issue on appeal, Mustang asserts that the district court, in determining that omission of the information rendered the liens invalid, erroneously held Mustang to a strict-compliance standard in executing the hen affidavits, rather than the required standard of substantial compliance. We
BACKGROUND
White-Spunner, a general contractor, agreed to construct a home-improvement center in Austin on property owned by Home Depot USA, Inc., and hired Sitep-rep, Ltd., as a subcontractor to perform the site-preparation work on the property. Siteprep then leased certain heavy equipment from Mustang in order to perform its site work for the project. When Siteprep failed to fully pay Mustang for its use of the equipment, Mustang sent notices to the property owner, Home Depot, and the general contractor, White-Spunner, stating that Siteprep’s debts to Mustang were unpaid. See id. § 53.056(a), (b) (requiring that property owner and general contractor be served with notice of subcontractor’s debt before materialman’s liens can be filed). After sending the notices, Mustang timely filed affidavits claiming liens on the property with the county clerk, serving both Home Depot and White-Spunner with copies of the affidavits. See id. §§ 53.052 (requiring that lien affidavit be filed with county clerk in county where property is located), 53.055 (requiring that copies of hen affidavit be provided to property owner and general contractor within five days after affidavit is filed).
Mustang sued Home Depot and White-Spunner for foreclosure of the statutory liens, trapped funds, and statutory retainage. Mustang also brought a claim against White-Spunner for failure to promptly pay pursuant to chapter 28 of the property code.
See id.
§§ 28.001-.005.
1
Following commencement of the suit, Home Depot posted bonds to indemnify and release Mustang’s hens against the property. The Hartford entities, as sureties under the bonds, were then substituted for Home Depot in the pending litigation. On October 26, 2004, Hartford and White-Spunner filed a motion for summary judgment contending that the hens were invahd, which the trial court denied. Approximately two years later, on October 20, 2006, after this court issued its opinion in
Milner v. Balcke-Durr, Inc.,
No. 03-05-00547-CV,
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Because the propriety of a summary judgment is a question of law, we review the trial court’s decision de novo.
Valence Operating Co. v. Dorsett,
164 5.W.3d 656, 661 (Tex.2005). The issue in this case is a matter of statutory construction, which is a legal question that we
DISCUSSION
In its sole point of error, Mustang complains that the trial court erroneously applied a strict-compliance standard in determining that Mustang’s lien affidavits were invalid as a result of their failure to include the date and method by which notice was sent to the property owner. See Tex. Prop.Code Ann. § 53.054(a)(8).
The mechanic’s and materialman’s lien statutes, as well as the relevant case law, mandate that a lien affidavit should not be judged by a strict standard but by whether the claimant substantially complied with the statutory requirements.
See id.
§ 53.054 (stating that lien affidavits “must contain substantially” the required information);
Occidental Neb. Fed. Sav. Bank v. East End Glass Co.,
Section 53.054 of the property code, which sets forth the requirements of a lien affidavit, provides:
(a) The affidavit must be signed by the person claiming the lien or by another person on the claimant’s behalf and must contain substantially:
(1) a sworn statement of the amount of the claim;
(2) the name and last known address of the owner or reputed owner;
(3) a general statement of the kind of work done and materials furnished by the claimant and, for a claimant other than an original contractor, a statement of each month in which the work was done and materials furnished for which payment is requested;
(4) the name and last known address of the person by whom the claimant was employed or to whom the claimant furnished the materials or labor;
(5) the name and last known address of the original contractor;
(6) a description, legally sufficient for identification, of the property sought to be charged with the hen;
(7) the claimant’s name, mailing address, and, if different, physical address; and
(8) for a claimant other than an original contractor, a statement identifying the date each notice of the claim was sent to the owner and the method by which the notice was sent.
Tex. Prop.Code Ann. § 58.054(a).
The lien affidavits provided by Mustang to the owner and general contractor contained each of the elements listed in section 53.054(a) except the information described in subparagraph 8 — the date that notice of the claim was sent to the owner and the method by which notice was sent. However, the notices on their face identify the date and method by which they were sent and the parties do not dispute that the owner received timely notice of the claim. Mustang argues that because omission of the information described in sub-paragraph 8 was merely a technical defect that did not prejudice the contractor or owner, the lien affidavits substantially complied with the statutory requirements.
The specific issue before this Court is one of first impression, as we have found no cases in which a lien affidavit failed to include the information described in sub-paragraph 8 of section 53.054(a). In general, courts that have addressed substantial-compliance issues have distinguished between mere technical defects, which can be excused, and those defects that are more substantive in nature and, if overlooked, would read a provision out of the statute or prejudice another party.
See, e.g., First Nat’l Bank in Graham v. Sledge,
Courts have been more willing to excuse a mistake or omission in cases where no party is prejudiced by the defect.
See Richardson,
In support of their argument that the omission in the present case is substantive, rather than merely technical, White-Spun-ner and Hartford cite cases where claimants’ mistakes or omissions were sufficiently defective to be considered a failure to substantially comply with statutory requirements.
See Milner,
2006 Tex.App. LEXIS 6935, at *8-9,
The affidavit at issue in
Milner
failed to reference the months in which work was performed — the information described in subparagraph 3 of property code section 53.054(a). 2006 Tex.App. LEXIS 6935, at *8,
Similarly, the affidavit at issue in
Mainline,
an unpublished case, failed to include a number of items, including the owner’s name and last known address, a general statement of the kind of work done and materials furnished, and the claimant’s mailing address. 2001 Tex.App. LEXIS 2841, at *3,
The facts of
Tribble,
Finally, White-Spunner and Hartford argue that the substantial-compliance standard requires, at a minimum, an attempt to comply with each individual statutory requirement, contending that there is no case law suggesting that a claimant can substantially comply after omitting an entire item from the enumerated list found in section 53.054(a). We disagree. In
Richardson,
If strict compliance were required, the affidavit would fail to perfect the lien. The question of substantial compliance is a different question. The few cases exploring this statute and its predecessors indicate that the statute should be applied liberally to protect all laborers and materialmen. Because the document provides all other required information in the sworn section, and because the mailing address contained on the document accurately provides a means of contact with the claimant (which isthe purpose of the address), we find it substantially complies with the statute.
Id.
As in Richardson, the efforts by the claimant in the present case were sufficient to fulfill the purposes of the statute. The parties do not dispute that Mustang provided the owner with pre-lien notices of its claims, which on their face identified the date and method by which they were sent, and there is no allegation that the owner did not receive actual notice of the claims in a timely manner. Because the omission of the date and method by which the notices were sent constitutes a mere technical error, and because there is no risk that anyone was misled to his prejudice as a result of such omission, we hold that Mustang’s lien affidavits substantially complied with the statute.
CONCLUSION
Because we have determined that the trial court erred in determining that Mustang’s lien affidavits failed to comply with the requirements of the property code, the trial court’s order granting summary judgment is reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. White-Spunner and Hartford contend on appeal that the order granting summary judgment should be affirmed on the basis that Mustang failed to brief the prompt-pay claim. It is true that if the trial court does not specify a basis for granting summary judgment, an appellant must show that each of the grounds asserted in support of summary judgment were insufficient to support the ruling.
See Tenneco Inc. v. Enterprise Prods. Co.,
. By applying a liberal construction, courts “give the language of a statutory provision, freely and consciously, its commonly, generally accepted meaning, to the end that the most comprehensive application thereof may be accorded, without doing violence to any of its terms.”
Wesco Distrib., Inc. v. Westport Group, Inc.,
