quick background: purchased house in 2006 without being aware that the bonus room was not permitted. at the time, neither agent disclosed the information, and we basically didn't know any better - b/c the listing agent included the square footage in the MLS. now, we're attempting to sell the house, and are working to get it done now. i'm fairly certain the room was completed approximately 10-11 years ago, soon after the house was built (so i realize the codes will have changed since then). we're in Wake Co, but not w/in any municipal limits.i'm fairly certain i need mechanical and electrical inspections, but a guy at the county's office said i may need structural too. it costs $366 just for the county's inspection, after all the work has been certified. he recommended getting the contractors to sign off first, then have the county out...has anyone had to do anything similar recently, and if so, how bad was it?... any recommendations on independents to come out for the inspections?this sucks
8/30/2012 1:39:07 PM
First, if you use a 3rd party inspector make sure Wake County accepts them (they probably do) and what their policy is regarding accepting 3rd party inspectors (they're usually specific). The standard inspections for something like that are framing, insulation, electrical, mechanical, plumbing if you have any, and drywall, but unfortunately the trade work is concealed behind the drywall (i'm assuming). No inspector will final that work out without seeing it so you may have to rip some of the drywall (again, assuming this is the installed wall covering) out before it'll pass final inspection.[Edited on August 30, 2012 at 6:47 PM. Reason : ]
8/30/2012 6:45:01 PM
Counties typically don't like having their inspection process circumvented, and tend to be pretty tight about the rules for bringing an illegal non-conforming use up to code. That really sucks that the listing agent put that square footage in...it means they really didn't do due diligence.
8/30/2012 7:28:18 PM
Out of curiosity, how did this come up? In other words...At what point in putting the house on the market did you realize it wasn't permitted and why do you feel the need to pull permits if the previous owner sold it to you without doing the same?[Edited on August 30, 2012 at 8:16 PM. Reason : l]
8/30/2012 8:15:47 PM
^^^ good point on the county policies on inspectors... i'm actually planning to walk over to the inspections office tomorrow to talk to someone and hopefully get more answers than i did over the phone... this is just a typical FROG - it's about 24 x 20^^ they definitely didn't do their due diligence and our current agent has made multiple comments about not being able to believe that the listing agent listed it that way, and that our buyer's agent didn't check on it... i've actually known that it probably was non-conforming, simply b/c it's not included in our tax value - but while we've been living here, i've had no reason to be concerned with it. when we were narrowing down our agent choices, a couple of them brought it up immediately - currently, our MLS listing tells other agents that we are working on getting the permits. the funny part is that i found out from the county that a permit for the room was applied for in Jan 06 (they listed in Feb 06) and the county accepted the "plan" (which was probably just a sketch with dimensions) but nobody ever followed up^ we knew from the beginning that it may be an issue, and we got mixed advice at first (we went on the market almost 3 months ago) - but after quite a few showings, there have been many buyers that have expressed concern. other than having to sell it, i personally don't have a problem with it not being permitted - i like paying less taxes toowhat kind of costs with the independents might i be looking at? maybe $100 a piece, something like that?
8/30/2012 8:48:13 PM
This sounds like the basis for a lawsuit against the previous listing agent. If they lied about it and you only now found about it, you may be able to get around the due dilligence period.
8/31/2012 1:54:02 PM
well, according to the real estate commission (i called a couple of weeks ago), there's a SOL of 3 years, so there's not much we can do except file proper complaint, which really doesn't amount to much... we actually had our agent reach out to him, but he's been pretty non-responsive
8/31/2012 2:40:50 PM
8/31/2012 2:46:08 PM
9/1/2012 10:04:12 PM
It can be a royal pain in the ass. The county/city can come in at any time and after the fact and tell you that it wasn't permitted and you have to show that it's to code, bring it up to code, or tear it down. We converted a screen porch to a sunroom for an architect in Raleigh in the early 2000s and he acted as his own GC and was supposed to handle all permits (he had other stuff being done at the time). His daughter called me last year because he had passed away and she was trying to sell the house. She had been fighting it for 4-5 months already and had gotten nowhere. She ended up having to spend a bunch of money to bring people in to tear stuff out and have it all inspected. Worst part was that he had apparently done some other stuff himself and it met code when he built it but not last year. Good luck with it.
9/2/2012 1:02:03 AM
It is easy to throw the agents under the bus for this....but sellers are notorious for lying about their homes. There is also the chance that the addition pre-dated the last seller and they were not privy to any information that you don't have. If you can find the website that lists all the permits ever pulled and signed off since residential construction began in this area send me the link. Do you need to count this square footage to make your listing competitive in the neighborhood? You could simply list the house as-is and say what you know (which is the room functions fine and you do not have any records pertaining to the permitting of it).I have always heard that you cant really get a permit after the fact because everything the municipal/county inspectors look for is covered up. They come look at structural design, plumbing, electrical, and everything else that gets covered up by drywall, flooring, etc. If you are going to have to demo this room to get a permit my advice would be don't bother getting the permit. There are few buyers that will rule out a home because of something like this, but most know finishing in a bonus room is not that big of a deal. If it does not look like crap, it probably was not built like crap either. If they really like the home they will still make a pass at it and let a home inspector look for problems during the due diligence period. [Edited on September 5, 2012 at 12:49 AM. Reason : .]
9/5/2012 12:39:01 AM
9/5/2012 6:49:30 AM
9/5/2012 8:21:02 AM
9/5/2012 8:28:19 AM
Unless the area that was finished was not designed to be finished (not structurally designed to be floored) all finishing a bonus room entails is electrical work, insulation, drywall, and Heat/AC. Shoddy electrical work can burn the house down. If the houses heating/cooling unit is undersized for the additional space that is not going to burn the house down, but usually results in needing a window or wall unit. Shitty insulation will cost money in higher utility bills. The drywall is the only thing you can see once the room is finished, hence the reason for permits and inspections. There is always a good chance it was done correctly, but as long as you do not make any representations to a buyer that are not true you will stay out of trouble.
9/5/2012 12:16:17 PM
^It sounds like you're arguing against yourself now. Also, IIRC, you must go beyond not making untrue representations and actually disclose the fact that the addition is unpermitted.
9/5/2012 12:40:02 PM
9/5/2012 3:44:23 PM
9/5/2012 6:57:42 PM
Woohoo! Really, I'm not too surprised that they didn't find it before. I work all over the state and often end up driving 2 hours to pull a permit just to find out some of the info I was given over the phone was incorrect necessitating a return trip. Planning and Inspections departments are typically poorly run by people that often don't even know exactly what they're supposed to do. You'd be amazed at how often I or one of my guys have to actually show inspectors the code book because they want to fail us because they THINK something is wrong. I even had a guy fail us because our engineering didn't show insulation and he wanted new engineering done showing structural support for the insulation.
9/5/2012 6:58:08 PM
9/5/2012 7:04:30 PM
9/5/2012 10:38:51 PM
^yeah, i'm not sure about that, but all the agents we talked to and considered using all said the same thing: "we'll just list the square footage and add a note for the agents that the room isn't permitted"^^ we definitely knew that it wasn't permitted (thought we knew anyways), and wanted to be honest... in the disclosure statement when we purchased, question 13 regarding additions or structural changes was checked 'no', not 'yes' or 'no representation' (the main reason we thought we got screwed a little)per wakegov...yesterday: 1672 SF, tax value: $186,876today: 2108 SF, tax value: $200,477[Edited on September 6, 2012 at 8:39 AM. Reason : ]
9/6/2012 8:37:46 AM