Billing for work not performed, charging more than the contract price, or adding unauthorized charges are all legally actionable in California.
Request an itemized breakdown of every charge. Compare it line by line against your contract, change orders, and your own records. Photograph the completed project to compare against the billing. For large discrepancies, an independent quantity survey by a licensed contractor can document the difference between what was billed and what was actually provided.
California law generally allows withholding amounts genuinely in dispute — but not amounts owed for undisputed completed work. This is a nuanced area where legal advice is important. Withholding more than you are entitled to can give the contractor grounds to file a mechanic's lien against you.
If you have already paid fraudulently billed amounts, pursue recovery through a demand letter, CSLB complaint, and civil lawsuit. If the overbilling was intentional, you may be entitled to punitive damages beyond your actual losses.
Bay Legal PC handles construction disputes throughout California. Tell us about your situation and we'll be in touch promptly.
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