Joseph C. Canizaro-901 Limited Partnership v. State, Dept. of Pub. Safety

570 So. 2d 56, 1990 WL 162379
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 26, 1990
Docket89-CA-0439
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 570 So. 2d 56 (Joseph C. Canizaro-901 Limited Partnership v. State, Dept. of Pub. Safety) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joseph C. Canizaro-901 Limited Partnership v. State, Dept. of Pub. Safety, 570 So. 2d 56, 1990 WL 162379 (La. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

570 So.2d 56 (1990)

JOSEPH C. CANIZARO-901 LIMITED PARTNERSHIP
v.
STATE of Louisiana, DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY, OFFICE OF STATE FIRE MARSHAL and Willie Miller in His Official Capacity as Louisiana State Fire Marshal and the Fire Marshal Board of Review.

No. 89-CA-0439.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.

October 26, 1990.

*57 David J. Krebs, Timothy D. Scandurro, Phelps, Dunbar, Marks, Claverie & Sims, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.

Before SCHOTT, C.J., and BARRY, WARD and WILLIAMS, JJ., and HUFFT, J. Pro Tem.

BARRY, Judge.

Joseph Canizaro-901 Limited Partnership [Canizaro] submitted plans to the State Fire Marshal for construction of the base building and elevator lobbies of the LL & E Tower. In a July 9, 1985 letter the Fire Marshal advised that the drawings and specifications complied with the laws, codes, rules and regulations subject to several requirements.

Item 3 related to the requirement of two remotely located exits. Item 9B related to compliance with Section 506.6(a)l of the Standard Building Code [SBC] (originally the Southern Standard Building Code, later the Standard Building Code), 1979 edition as revised:

Separate elevator lobbies from the remainder of the building where sprinklered, by smoke barriers.

The Fire Marshal's letter further stated: "This review does not apply to future tenant or undeveloped spaces. Before any work is commenced in that area, plans and specifications shall be approved by this office."

On August 12, 1985 Canizaro's architect responded in writing to the Fire Marshal's requirements. Response 3 related to remotely located lobby exits, was circled, the left margin contained a notation, and at the bottom of the page Clinton Dobson, the Fire Marshal's architect who drafted the initial review of the plans, noted that 3 still applied and if Canizaro wanted an appeal, it could be taken. Dobson signed and dated (9/18/85) his notation and wrote that carbon copies be sent to pertinent offices and placed in the file. An "ok" was written next to Response 4g.

In the same August 12, 1985 letter Response 9B stated:

It is submitted that elevator lobby separation is not required in the business occupancy, per the exception in the 1983 SBC edition, as revised.

Dobson made no notation as to Canizaro's Response 9B as he had with Response 3. The Fire Marshal returned the August 12 letter with notations to Canizaro's architect. There was no further correspondence relative to the elevator lobby separations. Construction permits were issued by the City of New Orleans.

The base building, elevator lobbies and a number of floors were completed when specifications for the 20th floor corridor were submitted to the Fire Marshal in November or December, 1986. In a letter *58 dated December 24, 1986[1] the Fire Marshal's architect, Henry Reed Sr., stated that those specifications complied with the law, subject to a number of requirements including Item 2A which specified compliance with SBC Section 506 (1979 edition as revised):

SBC 506.6(a)l. Separate elevator lobbies from the remainder of the building, where sprinklered, by smoke barriers.

In a February 23, 1987 letter Canizaro's architect responded to an inspection report as to the SBC requirement:

SBC 50.6.1 [sic], Elevator lobby separation: The plans were reviewed in the attached Fire Marshal letter of 9 July 1985, replied to by us in the attached letter of 12 August 1985, the return of which annotated by Clinton Dobson 18 September 1985 takes no exception to our reply. Closure was not required at that time, based upon the attached ruling of Jerry Jones, 18 September 1984.

Canizaro's architect cited a September 18, 1984 memo from Jerry Jones, the Fire Marshal's chief architect, sent to the Plan Review and Technical Division of the Fire Marshal to explain the requirement of elevator separators in high rise buildings according to the 1979 edition of the SBC (unchanged from 1979 to 1982 as to the Section 506 requirement) and the exemption for elevator lobbies in office buildings in the 1983 and 1984 revisions. Jones stated that "[d]ue to the many appeals concerning elevator lobby separations in high rise buildings the policy would be:

Due to the changes of the requirements for elevator lobby separation in the Standard Building Code, it has been determined that this office shall not require elevator lobbies in high rise office buildings, reflecting the revisions to the 1982 edition of the Standard Building Code. (Jones' emphasis.)

The Fire Marshal refused to approve the 20th floor plans. Canizaro initiated an appeal based on the receipt of a permit to build the lobbies as originally submitted.

In response to a letter dated April 20, 1987 from Lew Bremenstul, Jr., Canizaro's supervisor of interior construction, Henry Reed Sr. stated the Fire Marshal's policy in an April 27, 1987 letter (quoted in pertinent part):

In response to your question concerning the `new code requirement' on this previously reviewed building shell, the following statement will clarify our position for smokeproof elevator lobbies in high rise buildings. We are fully aware of the past waiver of this requirement in 1984 based on the 1983 revisions to the 1982 edition of the Standard Building Code. You should be aware that neither the 1984 revisions to the 1982 code, nor the 1985 edition of the Standard Building Code contained the deletion of the elevator lobby requirement.
* * * * * *
In this particular case, the LL & E Tower building shell was constructed under a determination based on the 1983 revisions to the code. Apparently several floors were also finished out without elevator lobby separation. The determination was expressly limited in scope and was not to be taken as a precedent for future work. This determination is hereby declared null and void.
The new project today in question is required to comply with codes and regulations currently in force (see LRS 40:1578.6 and LAC 17-4.4) and these include separation of elevator lobbies. While it is not our intention at this time to order that the elevator lobbies on floors which are not occupied be corrected to comply with the current code, future renovations of similar scope on floors already built out will be reviewed under the codes in force at the time of review.

On July 16, 1989 the Fire Marshal Board of Review upheld the Fire Marshal's decision to require the elevator lobby separations, and suggested as an alternative the use of a "pocket door" operated by emergency *59 power and activated by a smoke detector.

Canizaro filed for review in the district court which remanded the matter to the Fire Marshal Board of Review for a full hearing. After a hearing on December 10, 1987 the Board concluded:

(1) Completion of any floor constitutes new construction of the entire floor requiring elevator lobby seperation [sic].
(2) Lack of elevator lobby seperation [sic] in a fully sprinkled [sic] high rise building is a serious life safety hazard.

Canizaro appealed and the district court affirmed the Fire Marshal Board of Review. The trial court's reasons state in pertinent part:

The Fire Marshall [sic] first contends that the building was never approved without the separations.

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Bluebook (online)
570 So. 2d 56, 1990 WL 162379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-c-canizaro-901-limited-partnership-v-state-dept-of-pub-safety-lactapp-1990.