Construction Defects: Deadlines, Warranties, and Legal Options
Construction defects rarely announce themselves with a single dramatic failure. They show up as water intrusion, cracking, uneven finishes, or systems that do not perform as promised. The earlier you consult with a construction or securities lawyer about deadlines and warranties work, the easier it is to preserve options and avoid preventable mistakes.
Start With the Contract and the Warranty Language
Many defect disputes turn on what the contract says about scope, standards, inspections, and remedies. Warranty clauses often distinguish workmanship warranties from manufacturer warranties, and they can also define notice requirements and who performs repairs.
Deadlines Are Not One Size Fits All
A deadline can mean different things depending on the claim type. Some time limits run from completion, some run from discovery, and some have outside caps that can cut off claims even if a defect is found later. The practical approach is to map the problem to the legal theory and then confirm the applicable time limits for that situation.
New Homes Can Trigger Prelitigation Procedures
For many new residential homes, California has specific prelitigation procedures that require notice to the builder and a chance to repair before a lawsuit proceeds. The California Department of Consumer Affairs summarizes these procedures and points to the related Civil Code sections. CSLB also publishes a parallel consumer notice that explains the same concept in plain terms.
Warranties Can Help, but They Do Not Replace Evidence
Even when a warranty exists, a claim can rise or fall on documentation. Photos, dated communications, inspection reports, and repair invoices help show when the issue appeared, how it changed, and what was done in response. Without records, the parties often argue about whether the condition is a defect, normal wear, owner-caused damage, or excluded work.
Legal Options Often Overlap
Defect disputes commonly involve more than one route. Contract claims focus on what was promised and delivered. Warranty claims focus on repair obligations and timelines. Negligence or statutory theories can apply depending on the facts. Choosing a strategy is also a business decision because it affects cost, speed, leverage, and the practical ability to complete repairs.
When defects are tied to broader project management failures, payment conflicts, or multi-party responsibility, business and commercial dispute principles can also shape outcomes.
What to Do First When You Suspect a Defect
Photograph and video the issue over time, not just once.
Gather the contract, plans, change orders, and warranty documents.
Preserve all communications and create a dated timeline.
Avoid permanent repairs until the condition is documented, unless safety requires action.
Provide written notice consistent with any contract or statutory procedure.
Most defect matters become harder when records are scattered or repairs start before the condition is documented. A consistent paper trail, a clear timeline, and careful notice practices keep options open and reduce the chance that a technical misstep dictates the outcome.