Carolinas-Virginias Ass'n of Building Owners & Managers v. Ingram

251 S.E.2d 910, 39 N.C. App. 688, 1979 N.C. App. LEXIS 2564
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedFebruary 20, 1979
DocketNo. 7710SC899
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 251 S.E.2d 910 (Carolinas-Virginias Ass'n of Building Owners & Managers v. Ingram) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carolinas-Virginias Ass'n of Building Owners & Managers v. Ingram, 251 S.E.2d 910, 39 N.C. App. 688, 1979 N.C. App. LEXIS 2564 (N.C. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

PARKER, Judge.

The question presented is whether the Legislature has granted the North Carolina State Building Code Council power to amend the State Building Code so as to impose new and more stringent requirements mandating that changes be made in existing buildings which, prior to such amendment, conformed to all requirements of the Code and which are neither undergoing alteration nor change in use. The trial court held that it had not. We agree and affirm.

[692]*692The Council is an agency of the State created by the Legislature by Article 9 of G.S. Ch. 143. As a State agency created by the Legislature, it has only such powers as have been lawfully delegated to it by the Legislature. To ascertain what those powers are requires examination of both the language and the history of the pertinent statutes.

The first legislative Act of statewide application regulating the design and construction of buildings was Ch. 506 of the Public Laws of 1905. That Act, which applied only to incorporated cities and towns of over one thousand inhabitants, provided for the establishment of fire limits within such cities and towns and directed that within the fire limits so established no wooden or frame building should thereafter be erected. The Act then provided detailed specifications governing such matters as the design, materials, and construction of foundations, walls, roofs, fireplaces, chimneys, and flues. Sec. 26 of the Act provided that “before a building is begun,” the owner should apply for a building permit, which permit should be in writing and should contain a provision that “the building shall be constructed according to the requirements of the building law.” Other sections, e.g. Sections 8, 14, and 17, made express reference to buildings “hereafter erected.” Sec. 9 of the Act provided that “all regulations contained in this law shall apply also where walls or buildings are raised, altered or repaired.” Sec. 15 applied to buildings which “shall appear to the inspector to be especially dangerous in case of fire by reason of bad condition of walls, overloaded floors, defective construction, decay or other causes.” A reading of the entire 1905 Act makes it clear that the Legislature intended its regulations governing design and construction to apply only to buildings to be erected, altered, or repaired after its effective date, with special provision being made in Sec. 15 for buildings which might become “especially dangerous in case of fire by reason of bad condition of walls, overloaded floors, defective construction, decay or other causes.” Nothing evidences a legislative intent that the construction regulations imposed by the Act should apply to any existing building which was not being altered or repaired and which was not “especially dangerous.”

Certain of the detailed regulations of the 1905 Act were amended by Ch. 192 of the Public Laws of 1915. Sec. 4 of the 1915 Act rewrote the above quoted portion of Sec. 9 of the 1905 Act to [693]*693read as follows: “All rules, regulations and requirements contained in the building law, or set out in this sub-chapter in regard to the erection of buildings, or any part thereof, shall apply also where any building or walls, or any part thereof, is proposed to be raised, altered, repaired or added to, in order that the objects of the law may be accomplished and deficiencies and menaces to the safety of the city or town may not be made or perpetuated.” Thus, the 1915 amendment carried forward the basic distinction which the 1905 Act had recognized between buildings erected before and after passage of the law by making the construction regulations applicable to existing buildings only “where any building or walls, or any part thereof, is proposed to be raised, altered, repaired or added to.”

The construction regulation provisions of the 1905 Act, as amended in 1915, were codified in Art. 11 of Ch. 56 of the Consolidated Statutes, appearing therein as Sections 2748 through 2776. These statutes remained the only general laws of statewide application regulating building design and construction practices until enactment of Ch. 392 of the 1933 Session Laws. This Act for the first time created an official State Building Code Council. This Council was composed of five members who were appointed by the Governor. Sec. 6 of the Act provided in part:

It shall be the duty of the Council not only to make recommendations to the Insurance Commissioner relative to the proper construction of the pertinent provisions of the Building Code but it shall also recommend that he shall allow materials and methods of construction other than those required by the Building Code to be used, when in its opinion such other material and methods of construction are as good as those required by the Code, and for this purpose the requirements of the Building Code as to such matters shall be considered simply as a standard to which construction shall conform.

Interpreting the powers granted to it by the 1933 Act somewhat broadly, the Building Code Council adopted a State Building Code, which, after being submitted to and approved by the Insurance Commissioner, was promulgated in 1936 as the State Building Code. Section 1.11 of this code, entitled “Purpose,” was as follows:

[694]*694Section 1.11. Purpose. The purpose of the code is to provide certain minimum standards, provisions and requirements for safe and stable design, methods of construction and uses of materials in buildings and/or structures hereafter erected, constructed, enlarged, altered, repaired, moved, converted to other uses or demolished and to regulate the equipment, maintenance, use and occupancy of all buildings and/or structures.

Section 1.2, entitled “Scope,” provided in Subsec. 1.21 that the code “shall apply to all new buildings, structures and additions thereto” except for dwellings, apartment buildings for not more than two families, buildings used for agricultural purposes, and temporary buildings. Section 1.22 provided that the code “shall apply to all alterations which affect the structural strength, fire hazards, exits, lighting or sanitary conditions of any building.” Section 1.23 provided that the code “shall apply to all buildings which are to be devoted to a new use for which the requirements of this code are in any way more stringent than the requirements covering the previous use of the building.” Thus, the “Purpose” and “Scope” provisions of the 1936 Code made it clear that the Code applied to new buildings and to alterations or changes in use of existing buildings and that it did not apply to existing buildings which were neither being altered nor changed in use.

In 1941 the Legislature, by Ch. 280 of the Public Laws of 1941, “ratified and adopted” the 1936 Code which had been promulgated by the Building Code Council. By the same 1941 Act the Legislature empowered the Council to adopt additional regulations provided it “shall not establish any standard or adopt or promulgate any rule, regulation, classification, limitation or restriction more rigid, exacting or stringent in its requirements” than was promulgated by the Council in its 1936 Code. The inclusion of this limitation in the 1941 Act evidenced a clear legislative intent to prohibit the Council from intruding into areas which the Legislature had not yet decided should be regulated. One area which it is clear the Legislature had not yet authorized the Council to regulate was that of existing buildings which were neither being altered or changed in use.

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CAROLINAS-VIRGINIAS ASS'N, ETC. v. Ingram
251 S.E.2d 910 (Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 1979)

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Bluebook (online)
251 S.E.2d 910, 39 N.C. App. 688, 1979 N.C. App. LEXIS 2564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carolinas-virginias-assn-of-building-owners-managers-v-ingram-ncctapp-1979.