Crawford and Bangs, LLP

The Law Offices of Crawford & Bangs - Builders Law - Construction Law

Developer turned to construction law.

William Crawford is senior partner in the West Covina law offices of Crawford, Bacon, Bangs & Briesemeister, which he founded in 1979. The 17-attorney firm specializes in construction law and litigation. In addition to his duties as district governor of Lions International, Crawford serves as legal counsel to the American Subcontractors Association and serves as a Judge Pro Tem of the Los Angeles County Superior Court.

Crawford, 49, is a Hacienda Heights resident. His office is on the 11th floor of the California State Bank Tower in West Covina.

I was a subcontractor, builder and developer for 12 years and watched the construction industry become more and more technical. Back in the '60s it was very common to do business on a handshake in front of a pickup truck. I saw the writing on the wall. Today, you practically need a law degree to enter into contracts and to understand what is being said.

Well, we just tried the case we called "The Weed That Ate Corona.: There is a weed called scale broom - people would be sitting watching television and notice a bulge in the carpet and they would cut the carpeting off and the weed would come out. It would literally destroy and rip the homes apart.

Oh, yes. You should've been here the day the lady came in and explained her problem. I said, "Holy cow!" I though I was going to fall off this chair. This weed would literally come up from underneath the ground and lift swimming pools loaded full of water right out of the ground. People were abandoning their homes. It was an incredible case.

There were about 22 homes affected by this. (The weed is) prevalent in wash areas. Very few experts are familiar with it; it lays dormant for hundreds of years. It grows in a catacomb fashion underneath the earth and when water hits it, it comes to the surface no matter what is above it. It would rip the corner of homes apart.

That's the problem with it. The bottom line of it is not so much who did what, but who was best prepared to share the burden? The little post office clerk and his wife put their entire proceeds of the sale of their prior home into the one in Corona and now they were within three years of retirement and they were going to lose everything because the home literally plummeted to zero value. So our point was to go in and force the developer to correct this wrong, which we ultimately did.

I think that home prices have bottomed out. We'll bounce along this year to where we'll turn around at the start of early next year. By '95 we should be in full swing again.

By Brett Sporich – Staff Writer: SGV Tribune

Story Courtesy of San Gabriel Valley News, Mark Giberson; Photo by Cindy Darby