Ditchmen • NUCA of Florida Ditchmen - June 2020 | Page 5

addresses of the owner and general contractor allowing the lienor to properly mail the statutorily required notice to owner. Further, BB&T was in the better position to protect itself by performing an updated title search through the date it filed its mortgage or by otherwise requiring the owner of the property to terminate the general contractor’s January 7, 2014, notice of commencement pursuant to section 713.132 before recording BB&T’s mortgage. Accordingly, the court held that a notice of commencement not signed by the owner, but instead signed by the general contractor with the owner’s authority, is not a nullity, per se, in a lien foreclosure action brought by a subcontractor where the subcontractor has strictly complied with chapter 713 and relies upon the defective notice of commencement, which is otherwise in substantial compliance with section 713.07. This case highlights the importance of statutory compliance but also the time it took to get final resolution by the court. EDWIN TAYLOR CORPORATION, v. MORTGAGE ELECTRONIC REGISTRATION SYSTEMS, INC., JUNE 2020 • DITCHMEN 3