City of Johnson City v. Paduch

224 S.W.3d 686, 2006 Tenn. App. LEXIS 732
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedNovember 16, 2006
StatusPublished

This text of 224 S.W.3d 686 (City of Johnson City v. Paduch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Johnson City v. Paduch, 224 S.W.3d 686, 2006 Tenn. App. LEXIS 732 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

SHARON G. LEE, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court,

in which HERSCHEL P. FRANKS, P.J., and CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., J., joined.

Pete and Ben Paduch constructed a 15,-000-square-foot addition and, later, a 5,000-square-foot addition, to a building they co-own in Johnson City, Tennessee. The City issued both of the Paduchs a citation for violating a city ordinance by failing to obtain a building permit before constructing the 5,000-square-foot addition. Because of the increased size of the building after the construction of the 15,-000-square-foot addition, the building became subject to building code requirements for the installation of a fire control device, such as a sprinkler system throughout the building or a fire wall. The City denied Pete Paduch’s request that the Pauduchs be granted a variance with regard to installation of such a device and, thereafter, the city court, by substitute judge, fined each of the Paduchs fifty dollars for failing to obtain a building permit and ruled that the Paduchs be fined fifty dollars per day until they complied with the building code requirement that a fire control device be installed in the building. The Paduchs appealed the ruling to circuit court. The circuit court accepted the Paduchs’ guilty plea to the charges that they constructed the 5,000-square-foot addition without a building permit and ordered that each pay a fifty dollar fine. The circuit court further ordered that the Paduchs pay retroactive and prospective fines of fifty dollars per day because of their failure to install a fire control device as required by the building code. On appeal, the Paduchs argue numerous issues: that the substitute city court judge was not appointed in accordance with the city charter; that the city court, and therefore the circuit court, erred by assessing fines in excess of fifty dollars; that the circuit *688 court erred in failing to find that the charges against Pete Paduch were barred under the statute of limitations; that the circuit court erred by requiring that the Paduchs affirmatively modify their building; that the evidence preponderated in favor of waiving the ordinance requirement regarding the installation of a fire control device; and that the circuit court abused its discretion by taxing them with discretionary costs. We find no merit in any of these arguments and affirm the judgment of the circuit court. We further deny the City’s request for damages upon grounds that this was a frivolous appeal.

I. Background

Pete Paduch, the former mayor of Johnson City, Tennessee, and Ben Paduch, his brother, own the Hometech Industries building (“the Hometech budding”), which is located in Johnson City and which houses the Paduchs’ tub manufacturing business. In the summer of 1998, Pete Paduch applied to the city building department for a permit for a 15,000-square-foot addition to the extant 24,000-square-foot building. He was advised that under the building code adopted by City ordinance, his plan to increase the size of the building would require the installation of a sprinkler system or other fire control device, such as a fire wall. Pete Paduch was disinclined to install such a device and appeared before the City’s board of building codes to request that he be granted a variance because he only planned to use the addition to store noncombustible metal and to provide his employees with protection in inclement weather. The board denied his request, but indicated that as an alternative, he could maintain compliance with the building code and avoid the necessity of installing the fire control device by constructing a building of 11,250 square feet separated from the original building by ten feet.

Thereafter, although Pete Paduch was issued a permit for the construction of an 11,250-square-foot addition to the Home-tech building, a 15,000-square-foot addition was constructed instead. As constructed, the addition was separated from the original structure by ten feet, and, initially, the city attorney opined that it was a “separate building” as defined by the 1997 Standard Building Code. However, in May of 1999, Steve Shell, the city fire marshal and chief building official, inspected the Hometech building and observed that the ten foot separation between the addition and the original structure had been filled in, and the addition was now joined to the original structure, resulting in a single 39,000-square-foot building which was subject to the building code requirement of a full automatic sprinkler system throughout the building or proper fire separation, such as a fire wall, between the original building and the addition. In March of 2000, the state fire marshal’s office also determined that, pursuant to the Southern Building Code, a sprinkler system was required in the 15,000-square-foot addition.

In April of 2002, Mr. Shell advised Pete Paduch that the City had still received no plans for the 15,000-square-foot addition, as was required for issuance of a building permit. Pete Paduch referred Mr. Shell to Ben Paduch, and also told him that Ben Paduch was in the process of adding a loading dock to the Hometech building. The next day, Mr. Shell spoke with Ben Paduch, who confirmed that he was adding a 5,000-square-foot loading dock to the Hometech building. Because no plans had been presented and no permit had been issued as to this dock, Mr. Shell requested that construction of the dock be discontinued. Ben Paduch refused this request, and a stop work order was issued. However, the stop work order was ignored, and *689 construction of the dock continued to completion.

In August of 2002, the Paduchs were each issued a citation for failing to obtain a valid building permit. The case was tried before attorney Roger Day, who was appointed to serve as substitute city judge after the sitting judge recused himself. The city court found both of the Paduchs guilty of violating the city ordinance which required that they obtain a building permit before beginning construction and ordered each to pay a fine of fifty dollars, plus court costs. The court also found that the Hometech building was not in compliance with the building code because of the absence of a required fire control device. The city court’s order further provided as follows:

The Court finds and holds that the two (2) additions onto the Hometech Industries building located at 2507 Plymouth Road are not in compliance with the City’s Ordinance and the Southern Building Code. Mr. Pete Paduch ... and Mr. Ben Paduch ... are each given sixty (60) days from the entry of this Order to bring the 15,000 square foot addition and the 5,000 square foot addition, respectively, into compliance with the Southern Building Code as adopted by the Johnson City City Commission. Although the Court is sympathetic to the argument that the 15,000 square foot addition didn’t need sprinklers or other fire control devices, the Standard Building Code, as adopted, was enacted to insure uniformity in building construction and to further benefit the health, safety and welfare of the general population. It must be followed.
Should Mr. Pete Paduch and Mr. Ben Paduch bring the aforementioned additions up to City Code within the sixty (60) day period set out herein and obtain the building permit as required, the Court will waive the Fifty ($50.00) Dollar fine imposed herein. If Mr. Pete Paduch and Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
224 S.W.3d 686, 2006 Tenn. App. LEXIS 732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-johnson-city-v-paduch-tennctapp-2006.