Building Code Violations, Due Process and Fourth
Amendment Rights
When the International
Code Council started publishing the International Codes in the year
2000, one of the most important legacy codes in the jurisdictional
arsenal was omitted, a code for the assessment, control and
abatement of dangerous buildings. The last valid legacy code to deal
with these types of structures and their internal systems was the
1997 Uniform Code for the Abatement of Dangerous buildings. This
code was used successfully for many years to abate dangerous
conditions and has held up in appeals courts over time as a valid
method for the control of these kinds of community
issues.
The Uniform Code for the Abatement
of Dangerous Buildings was created to provide communities with a
last ditch tool to abate the most extreme and excruciating property
violations that have not
responded to normal administrative code violation processes. The
reason for this is that the code allows the actual taking of a
property by using the administration’s police powers to remedy the
dangers and assess the costs against the value of the property.
Actions such as the taking of property from private owners are very
serious, and the code followed a rigid step by step procedure to
ensure property owner’s rights were not violated and due process
requirements were
followed.
Due to the lack of a
corresponding code in the International Code family, and the obvious
need for such a code, jurisdictions took two approaches to remedy
the situation. Some jurisdictions simply adopted the 1997 legacy
code as a separate code. Because of its track record in the appeals
courts, they amended it very little if at all. The second approach
was to incorporate it into the body of the International Building Code
(IBC) as a separate
section, usually titled Unsafe Buildings. There were problems with
this in that the terminology of the two codes were markedly
different, usually leading to more extensive amending of tried and
true provisions that had stood the test of time and had been vetted
by repeated appeals in the courts of the
land.
Some cities unfortunately are ignoring the standard violation
procedures contained in the IBC and are using the
provisions of the legacy code immediately, which is a clear
violation of the constitution and due process rights of citizens.
The 3rd edition of Building Department
Administration
(BDA), published by ICC, states: “Enforcement is a function
carefully bounded by legal restrictions, techniques and
requirements, including right of entry, use of coercion, statute of
limitations, arbitrary authority, discretion, code mandates and
legal due process.…….. Included in these requirements are
pre-prosecution rites, such as preparation of evidence, proof that
legal due process was adhered to and, normally, proof that all administrative
remedies have been exhausted.” Prima facie evidence that all
administrative remedies have been exhausted would be a clear and
concise inspection report, citing the nature of violations, the
location of violations, and the citations of the code section for
each violation with a 30 day notice to obtain a permit to correct
the violations. If this produces no results, a series of certified
letters (normally at least two), including the legal description of
the property, each with 30 day notice to obtain a permit to make the
corrections, with violations cited under the standard provisions of
the code. At this point a complaint would be filed with the court.
Note that at the time of filing a complaint with the court, the
violation process is typically at least 90 to 95 days out from the
first inspection. The rest of the process would take place through
the court of the jurisdiction, usually resulting in fines, court
orders to comply, and possible jail time. Normally matters would at
this point revert to the building safety department, a permit would
be obtained, and the owner would still be given a reasonable amount
of time to make the corrections and abate the violations.
Building Department Administration, 3rd Edition,
states
the following for the notice of
violation: “Whenever
the municipal code requires notice to a party, notice must be given
before a charge can be brought. It is a condition precedent, and any
charge filed without the proper notice is subject to a motion to
dismiss. The notice must contain each element required by the code
provisions, usually the name of the responsible party, the location
of the property, the nature of the violation, a deadline for
correction and notice of the defendant’s right to
appeal.”
Only
when this procedure has been exhausted, and no compliance achieved,
is the Dangerous Building Code allowed to be brought into play to
achieve compliance. In describing the purpose of the legacy code,
this intent is clearly stated: “
It is the purpose of this code to provide a just, equitable and
practicable method, to be cumulative with and in addition to any
other remedy provided by the Building Code, Housing Code or
otherwise available by law, whereby buildings or structures which
from any cause endanger the life, limb, health, morals, property,
safety or welfare of the general public or their occupants may be
required to be repaired, vacated or demolished.”