423springer
Member
What is the name of your state?
FloridaWhat is the name of your state?
We are going to need more info. Please post the situation and don't use the preview function. Thanks....Florida
Yes, he can do that. You've got to bite the bullet and do things right.My question is this, I built a shed without a permit(Not real smart), close to finishing the shed a code inspector entered my backyard(promoted by a neighbor complaint) and issued a Stop Work Order. He did not knock on the front door but came through one of the side gates and issued the order to the carpenter's I had doing the construction. Does he have the right to enter my property without notification to someone inside the home? This has created quite a mess for myself as not only did I build the shed without a permit the setbacks are not to city code AND it's in a utility easement. Is there a way out of this self made catastrophe or am going to have to move the shed. There was a shed previously in that same location(new shed is bigger) that is viewable on the county tax rolls, but it was destroyed by a branch from a large tree in my yard which is also in the utility easement, was hoping to get grandfathered in as a "replacement" and not a "new" shed. Do I just have to bite the bullet?
Did I post my question in the wrong place?We are going to need more info. Please post the situation and don't use the preview function. Thanks....
You didn't originally post anything.Did I post my question in the wrong place?
Uh...no. I was simply telling you we needed more info then you had posted at that point of your thread.Did I post my question in the wrong place?
You already did. Read post 4. Seriously...reread your thread.Then can you please explain how I can post that question? Thanks
No worries. Best of luck to you...Sorry, getting ahead of myself and a little frustrated over the situation I put myself in.
Florida's Attorney General's Office, in advisory legal opinion AGO 84-32, has answered your question with a "no." A code enforcement officer does not have the right to enter a gated backyard without permission or a warrant.My question is this, ... a code inspector entered my backyard ... Does he have the right to enter my property without notification to someone inside the home? This has created quite a mess for myself as not only did I build the shed without a permit the setbacks are not to city code AND it's in a utility easement. Is there a way out of this self made catastrophe or am going to have to move the shed. There was a shed previously in that same location(new shed is bigger) that is viewable on the county tax rolls, but it was destroyed by a branch from a large tree in my yard which is also in the utility easement, was hoping to get grandfathered in as a "replacement" and not a "new" shed. Do I just have to bite the bullet?
Through a gated side entry. He should have gone to the front door.Reading the link Quincy it specifies conducting inspections. The OP said that that code enforcement only entered to issue a Stop Work Order rather than inspect anything. Sort of like the mailman walking into your yard to get you to sign for a package.