To perform any public contract of at least $50,000 or private contract of at least $100,000, a contractor must hold a Certificate of Responsibility issued by the Mississippi State Board of Contractors. It makes no difference whether the "contract" to be performed is a prime contract or subcontract at any tier. Miss. Code Ann. 31-3-15.
Moverover, Mississippi law does not permit the "borrowing" of certificates of responsibility. Only a responsible managing officer, employee, or member of the executive staff of the applicant for the certificate can serve as its qualifying party. The statutes creating the State Board of Contractors, which governs the licensing of contractors, and that Board’s regulations implementing those statutes are designed to prevent one person from serving as the qualifying party for entities in which he or she has not personal or managerial stake or responsibility. To allow otherwise would dilute the requirements which are meant to ensure the integrity, financial capacity, and technical capability of all entities performing construction in Mississippi.
Miss. Code Ann. 31-3-1 defines a "certificate of responsibility" as a "certificate numbered held by a contractor issued by the board under the provisions of this chapter after the payment of the special privilege license tax…"
Miss. Code Ann. 31-3-13(a) defines who can be the "qualifying party" or an applicant of a certificate of responsibility, whether such application is for a new certificate or a renewal certificate. Specifically, it states:
The board shall take applicants under consideration after having examined him or them and go thoroughly into the records and examinations, prior to granting any certificate of responsibility. If the applicant is an individual, examination may be taken by his personal appearance for examination or by the appearance for examination of one or more of his responsible managing employees; and if a co-partnership or corporation or any other combination or organization, by the examination of one or more of the responsible managing officers or members of the executive staff of the applicant’s firm, according to its own designation.
The intent clearly is that a qualifying party be a responsible managing employee for or officer of the applicant, whether it’s a sole proprietorship or corporation. The true "responsibility" for which the certificate is issued cannot be determined otherwise. In construing this requirement the State Board of Contractors promulgated the following regulation which, again, leaves no doubt that the "qualifying party" must be intimately involved in the management and/or ownership of the entity claiming him or her as their qualifying party. Rule L states:
When the qualifying party terminates employment with the Certificate holder, the Mississippi State Board of Contractors must be notified in writing, by the qualifying party and the Certificate holder, within thirty (30) days of the disassociation and another party must qualify within one hundred eighty (180) days or Certificate holder will be subject to suspension or revocation of its Certificate of Responsibility.
(Emphasis added).
Thus, where a purposed "qualifying party" for Company A is neither a managerial employee nor an officer of that company but, in fact, owns or is the officer of another, unrelated Company B, but Company B routinely serves as a subcontractor to Company A, Company A and its purported "qualifying party" are in violation of Mississippi law and the Rules and Regulations of the State Board of Contractors. (This is typically done where owners of two companies do not want to commingle business assets, finances, or interests, but they do want to pursue and perform contracts together.) Company A’s Certificate of Responsibility is null and void as a matter of law.