|
|
|
|
|
by geebee
2521 days ago
|
|
Without a reason, they shouldn't. But there's an ambiguous area in there. For instance, my house in SF actually shares a foundation with the two neighboring houses. This was an issue when I wanted to remodel to get better ceiling heights. I'd say I'm not free to do whatever I want with a shared foundation. Also, when you share a wall, you do have an interest in verifying that the electrical and firewall work done next to your house is up to code. It can get out of hand, but there are a lot of reasons for permits and inspections. I don't think entering someone's house, scheduled well in advance, with a very limited agenda to simply verify that recently added wiring in a dense, crowded neighborhood with shared walls, and leaving immediately afterwards, would qualify as an unreasonable search and seizure. |
|
It sounded in your earlier post that you were suggesting (or lamenting the lack of) periodic inspections for the purposes of finding unpermitted work, which I (and probably many others) would find unreasonable and likely contrary to the 4th Amendment.