Statutory notice elements
Acknowledgment, inspection request, repair/settlement offer — all present and compliant with the specific state statute, or the file does not release.
CureClock assembles a litigation-defense-ready compliance file for every homeowner defect claim — statutory notice, inspection offer, repair/settlement correspondence, deadline tracking, and evidence log — checked against the exact state right-to-repair statute before a specialist releases it.
A home builder's right-to-repair defense is only as strong as the notice-and-response file behind it. Miss a statutory response deadline, send an incomplete inspection offer, or fail to document the cure sequence — and courts routinely rule the builder forfeits the defense, releasing the homeowner to sue immediately and, in several states, exposing the builder to fee-shifting and enhanced damages.
Most builders handle this ad hoc through thinly-staffed customer-care departments or superintendents 'in the cracks of their day.' The statute has not been read end-to-end since the last time it mattered. That is exactly where compliance gaps hide.
CureClock exists to close that gap with a single, exhaustive standard applied identically to every claim.
We do not summarize the law and hope. Every file is scored against a versioned rule pack tied to the exact text of the applicable state right-to-repair statute. These are the provisions each file is held to.
Acknowledgment, inspection request, repair/settlement offer — all present and compliant with the specific state statute, or the file does not release.
The response date is verified to fall within the statutory window (typically 15-45 days), computed deterministically — never estimated.
Homeowner plus any co-owners, HOA if applicable, and recorded lienholders — established by search, not assumption.
Inspection offer includes all statutory elements: proposed dates, scope, and right to homeowner's own expert — verified against the statute.
Repair or settlement offer is documented with sufficient detail to satisfy the statute, including timeline and scope of work.
Complete evidence log: notice, response, inspection report, cure offer, homeowner correspondence, and deadline calendar — sequenced and indexed for immediate production in litigation.
AI extracts and drafts. Deterministic rules — running as code, outside the model — decide what is complete. A human specialist signs every release. That order is never reversed.
Upload the homeowner's claim letter and basic project info. We return a free completeness read: which statutory elements and deadlines you already have, and which are missing.
We identify the applicable state right-to-repair statute and compute all deadlines deterministically from the claim receipt date.
The acknowledgment, inspection request, and cure offer are drafted from your validated data and the statute rule pack into field-locked templates — no legal opinions, no invented facts.
Deadline compliance is verified; notice elements are checked against the statute; the evidence log is resolved; SCRA is screened. Any failure blocks release.
A compliance specialist reviews the exception queue and signs the release. High-value or multi-state claims route to attorney review first.
You receive the file: notices, evidence log, deadline calendar, and litigation-ready index — ready for the builder to send under its own name.
The deliverable is completeness itself — every statutory element and deadline accounted for or explicitly exception-coded. Nothing is left implicit.
The gates that decide completeness are code, not a model's opinion. A drafting error cannot slip past a statutory requirement.
We prepare documentation and run searches as your clerical agent. We never contact the homeowner, give legal advice, or perform physical repairs.
Simple, predictable, and aligned with a documentation standard — not a cut of any recovery.
Start with a free Claim Gap Scan. Send the homeowner's claim letter and project details and we'll return a completeness read against every applicable state right-to-repair statute.
Documentation-completeness service · not legal advice · the builder sends every notice.