Contractor Dispute Resolution in Mississippi
Contractor disputes in Mississippi arise across residential, commercial, and public works sectors — involving payment failures, defective workmanship, contract breaches, and licensing violations. The state's dispute resolution landscape draws from Mississippi contract law, the jurisdiction of the Mississippi State Board of Contractors, and multiple formal and informal resolution mechanisms. Understanding how these pathways are structured determines which remedies are available, how long resolution takes, and what recoveries are possible.
Definition and scope
Contractor dispute resolution in Mississippi refers to the body of legal, administrative, and alternative procedures available when a construction contract breaks down — whether between a contractor and property owner, a general contractor and subcontractor, or a public agency and a private firm. These disputes typically fall into four categories: payment disputes, performance disputes, scope disputes, and licensing or compliance disputes.
Mississippi follows the general common law of contracts, supplemented by statutes such as the Mississippi Prompt Payment Act (Miss. Code Ann. § 87-7-1 et seq.), which governs payment timelines on private construction projects and provides remedies including interest and attorney's fees when payments are wrongfully withheld. On public projects, the Mississippi Public Construction Act (Miss. Code Ann. § 31-5-1 et seq.) sets separate payment obligations and performance bond requirements.
The Mississippi Contractor Lien Laws provide an additional enforcement layer: licensed contractors, subcontractors, and material suppliers may file a materialman's lien against real property to secure unpaid amounts. Lien rights in Mississippi are not available to unlicensed contractors performing work that requires a license, a restriction that makes licensing status a threshold issue in many payment disputes.
Scope boundaries and coverage limitations: This page covers disputes governed by Mississippi state law involving contractors operating under Mississippi jurisdiction. It does not address federal procurement disputes (which fall under the Federal Acquisition Regulation and the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals), interstate disputes requiring conflict-of-laws analysis, or disputes arising from contracts explicitly governed by another state's law. Tribal land construction contracts and federally funded projects with separate dispute mechanisms are also outside this page's scope.
How it works
Mississippi contractor disputes can proceed through four principal channels:
- Direct negotiation — The first and most common step. Parties attempt resolution through written correspondence, demand letters, or facilitated meetings. No filing fees apply, and resolution can occur in days to weeks.
- Mediation — A neutral mediator (often selected through the Mississippi Bar's ADR program or a private mediation firm) facilitates a non-binding settlement. Mediation clauses are frequently embedded in construction contracts, and courts may order mediation before trial.
- Arbitration — When a contract contains an arbitration clause governed by the Federal Arbitration Act or the Mississippi Uniform Arbitration Act (Miss. Code Ann. § 11-15-1 et seq.), disputes proceed before a private arbitrator or panel. Arbitration awards are binding and enforceable as court judgments.
- Litigation — Filed in Mississippi circuit or chancery courts depending on the remedy sought. Circuit courts handle legal damages; chancery courts handle equitable claims such as injunctions or contract rescission. Jury trials are available in circuit court.
Mediation vs. Arbitration — key contrast: Mediation produces a non-binding recommendation only if both parties agree to sign a settlement agreement. Arbitration produces a binding award that courts will confirm unless specific statutory grounds for vacatur exist under Miss. Code Ann. § 11-15-23, such as fraud, corruption, or arbitrator misconduct. Choosing between them requires examining whether the underlying contract mandates one or the other.
Complaints against licensed contractors may also be filed with the Mississippi State Board of Contractors, which has authority to investigate, fine, suspend, or revoke licenses. Board proceedings are administrative, not civil, and do not directly produce monetary awards to complainants — but a Board finding of violation is relevant evidence in parallel civil proceedings. Details on filing complaints are covered under Mississippi Contractor Complaints and Violations.
Common scenarios
Dispute resolution in Mississippi's contractor sector most frequently involves the following situations:
- Unpaid invoices on private projects — A contractor completes work but the owner withholds final payment. The Prompt Payment Act (Miss. Code Ann. § 87-7-5) requires owners to pay within 21 days of receiving a pay application; failure triggers interest at 1.5% per month and potential attorney's fees.
- Defective workmanship claims — An owner alleges that completed construction fails to meet contract specifications or building code standards. These claims typically involve expert testimony and may invoke Mississippi's 6-year statute of limitations for written contract breaches (Miss. Code Ann. § 15-1-49).
- Subcontractor payment disputes — A subcontractor is not paid after the general contractor receives funds from the owner. Mississippi's lien statute and Prompt Payment provisions both address this flow-down scenario. More detail appears under Mississippi Subcontractor Regulations.
- Public works payment disputes — On public contracts, direct liens against public property are not permitted; instead, claimants must make claims against the contractor's payment bond required under Miss. Code Ann. § 31-5-51. See Mississippi Public Works Contracting for bond claim procedures.
- Unlicensed contractor work — When a contractor performs work without a required license, Mississippi courts have held that the contract may be unenforceable, barring the contractor from recovering payment. This area is addressed in detail under Mississippi Unlicensed Contractor Penalties.
Decision boundaries
Selecting the correct dispute pathway depends on several determinative factors:
- Contract terms — Arbitration clauses override default court jurisdiction for most disputes; their scope (which disputes are covered) controls what can be arbitrated.
- Project type — Private vs. public work determines whether lien rights or bond claims apply, and which payment statutes govern.
- Licensing status — An unlicensed contractor's right to sue for payment is severely limited under Mississippi law, making license verification a preliminary step in any dispute assessment. The Mississippi Contractor License Requirements page details which work categories require licensure.
- Amount in controversy — Claims under $3,500 may proceed in Justice Court (small claims); claims between $3,500 and $200,000 may go to County Court where it exists; larger claims require Circuit or Chancery Court.
- Insurance and bond availability — Whether the opposing party carries contractor insurance (Mississippi Contractor Insurance Requirements) or a surety bond (Mississippi Contractor Bonding Requirements) affects collectability of any judgment or award.
- Time limits — Mississippi imposes a 3-year statute of limitations on oral contracts and a 6-year limit on written contracts. Lien claims must be filed within 12 months of the last day of furnishing labor or materials (Miss. Code Ann. § 85-7-141).
Contractors operating in Mississippi can reference the broader Mississippi contractor services landscape for context on how licensing, insurance, and dispute resolution interact across the sector. Parties evaluating contract language and compliance obligations before disputes arise should also consult Mississippi Contractor Contract Requirements.
References
- Mississippi Prompt Payment Act — Miss. Code Ann. § 87-7-1 et seq.
- Mississippi Public Construction Act — Miss. Code Ann. § 31-5-1 et seq.
- Mississippi Uniform Arbitration Act — Miss. Code Ann. § 11-15-1 et seq.
- Mississippi Materialman's Lien Statute — Miss. Code Ann. § 85-7-131 et seq.
- Mississippi State Board of Contractors
- Mississippi Bar Association — Alternative Dispute Resolution
- Mississippi Judiciary — Court Structure and Jurisdiction