Shawn
En-Route
Do I need a permit?
In dealing with idiocracy of County bureaucracy I have learned that every and/or/comma matter to the nuance of applicability of regulations and legal cases have been won and lost on grammar and punctuation regardless of intent....so need help with this one:
"(A) Building Permits. A building permit shall not be required for the following:
(5) Decks at one- and two-family dwelling units not exceeding 200 square feet in area, that are not more than 30 inches above grade at any point, are not attached to a dwelling and do not serve any egress door."
So if I want to build a deck that IS over 200 Sq ft in area, under 30", not attached to a dwelling and does NOT serve any egress door do I need a permit?
The "and do not serve any egress door" wording is what is throwing me off especially with no comma after "dwelling" vs. if it read "or do not serve..." because to me in legal terms the "and" means BOTH conditions before and after the "and" would have to be present to trigger the permit requirement but the lack of comma is making me unsure.
What say you?
Bonus point if you stayed at a Holiday Inn Express last night...
In dealing with idiocracy of County bureaucracy I have learned that every and/or/comma matter to the nuance of applicability of regulations and legal cases have been won and lost on grammar and punctuation regardless of intent....so need help with this one:
"(A) Building Permits. A building permit shall not be required for the following:
(5) Decks at one- and two-family dwelling units not exceeding 200 square feet in area, that are not more than 30 inches above grade at any point, are not attached to a dwelling and do not serve any egress door."
So if I want to build a deck that IS over 200 Sq ft in area, under 30", not attached to a dwelling and does NOT serve any egress door do I need a permit?
The "and do not serve any egress door" wording is what is throwing me off especially with no comma after "dwelling" vs. if it read "or do not serve..." because to me in legal terms the "and" means BOTH conditions before and after the "and" would have to be present to trigger the permit requirement but the lack of comma is making me unsure.
What say you?
Bonus point if you stayed at a Holiday Inn Express last night...
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