How to Serve a Mechanics Lien in Person

Serving a mechanics lien, or providing a copy of the lien to interested parties, ensures that they receive notice and can promptly recognize and pay your claim. In most states, mechanics liens lien may be served through the mail, usually by sending it via certified mail – sometimes with return receipt requested. Not every state makes the process this simple, however. Some states require that claimants serve a mechanics lien in person. Three such states to keep an eye out for are Pennsylvania, Connecticut, and South Carolina.

While Connecticut allows for a legal courier service to serve your lien, both South Carolina and Pennsylvania generally require service to be made through the sheriff’s department of the liened property’s county.

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Is there any difference between using a private process server vs. the sheriff’s department?

Short answer: yes. Longer answer: despite the rules that occasionally force sheriff’s offices to be used for service, there can be practical problems associated with doing so.

Normally, a standard private process server guarantees speedy and reg In order to make sure that mechanics lien service (or service of any other document) through a sheriff’s office goes off without a hitch, one should be mindful of the following steps.

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What else can stop personal mechanics lien service?

Personal service doesn’t always go as planned. Problems can occur in any manner of ways, from bad locations (what looks like an office suite turns out to be a shopping center in which no one is aware of the company or party to be served), to bad information (the party determined to be the agent for service is incorrect), to bad timing (delay at the sheriff’s office causes a lien to be served late by a day or two).

Terrifying! Can this be fixed?

That depends, depending on the state, (and the helpfulness of the deputy serving the lien) there can be ways to fix some issues. While missing a deadline can be fatal to a lien claim, issues with finding proper parties to be served may be contemplated by the laws of the particular state. In many occasions, if a lien cannot be personally served, it may/must be posted in a conspicuous area of the liened property’s site (or publicized in some other manner). If all of the details of attempted service were documented by the deputy in an Affidavit of Service, that can be sufficient to meet the statutory mandates for serving the lien.

Final thoughts

Missing deadlines can, and usually does, extinguish lien rights, so it’s important to remember specific service requirements, and plan accordingly. A lien that is recorded at the last minute may cause significant problems in getting it served within the appropriate time frame, so it is always best to plan ahead. For more information on each state that may require personal service, see our lien FAQs for Pennsylvania, Connecticut, and South Carolina.

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