Florida’s New Virtual Building Inspection Law: A Contractor’s Friend or Foe?

Jason Bullinger | Rumberger Kirk

The Florida legislature recently enacted a new law allowing for building inspections by state agents to be done virtually. While the focus of this measure was to alleviate the backlog of inspections and strain on building departments brought on by the pandemic, it could raise new issues for litigators and contractors in construction defect cases.  Along with other changes to Section 553.79, the new law allows a “state or local enforcement agency” to “perform virtual inspections” at their “discretion.” Fla. Stat. 553.79(6) (2021). It carves out an exception for threshold buildings, or one that is greater than three stories or 50 feet in height.  The law went into effect on July 1.

Most would agree after working through the pandemic for over a year, technology has its limitations. The natural limitations imposed by virtual inspections could end up becoming part of a property owner’s claim against a developer or contractor for construction defects. Plaintiffs in construction defect cases typically assert negligence, breach of warranty, and building code claims against the implicated contractors in defect suits. Contractors routinely assert the project’s compliance with building code, as well as the fact that it passed all inspections, as a defense. When a building code violation claim under Section 553 is asserted, the defense actually has the effect of shifting the burden to the plaintiff to prove that the contractor had knowledge of the alleged defect:

“. . . [A]ny person or party . . . damaged as a result of a violation . . . the Florida Building Code, has a cause of action in any court of competent jurisdiction against the person or party who committed the violation; however, if the person or party obtains the required building permits and any local government or public agency with authority to enforce the Florida Building Code approves the plans, if the construction project passes all required inspections under the code, . . . this section does not apply unless the person or party knew or should have known that the violation existed.”

Fla. Stat. 553.84 (2021). Building departments and other government entities are rarely brought into litigation. However, with defects that are seemingly more patent, a contractor could invoke the presumption under 553.84 and shift the focus to the negligence of the building department, or possibly even the app developer, arising from limitations in their virtual inspection. While pointing the finger at the building inspector may sound like a reasonable option, the Florida Supreme Court has found that a building department is acting under its police powers by performing inspections to enforce compliance with building code. Therefore, Section 553 gives property owners no remedies against the state for negligent inspections. Trianon Park Condo. Ass’n, Inc. v. City of Hialeah, 468 So. 2d 912, 922 (Fla. 1985). As far as the app developer goes, private entities can be entitled to sovereign immunity protection if they are acting as an agent for the state by performing an essential government function, or when the state retains a right of control over the contractor’s activities.  Operations Mgmt. Int’l, Inc. v. Johnson, 294 So. 3d 1005, 1006–07 (Fla. 1st DCA 2020), reh’g denied (May 21, 2020).

However, when the individual on site controlling the technology is the contractor or permit holder themselves, property owners may suggest that they are the ones to blame for anything missed by the inspector. For example, some entities, such as the City of Miami Beach, have already implemented a plan for virtual inspections during the beginning phases of the pandemic. While the permit holder is required to act in accordance with the inspectors requests during the inspection, the procedures do place the control of the technology used in the hands of the contractor or permit holder and not some third party. Florida construction defect lawyers are experts at finding sources of new liability and all potential sources of insurance coverage. Notably, this new law does not appear to give the permit holder the ability to insist upon an in-person inspection. Contractors dealing with virtual inspections should develop policies and procedures for ensuring they are protected in a case where a property owner alleges that the building inspector negligently conducted their virtual inspection, and the contractor is at least partially to blame.

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