New Mexico Administrative Code
Title 16 - OCCUPATIONAL AND PROFESSIONAL LICENSING
Chapter 66 - HOME INSPECTION LICENSING
Part 7 - STANDARDS OF PRACTICE
Section 16.66.7.24 - LIMITATIONS AND EXCLUSIONS
Universal Citation: 16 NM Admin Code 16.66.7.24
Current through Register Vol. 35, No. 18, September 24, 2024
A. General limitations:
(1) The requirements,
obligations, and standards in this Part apply to residential buildings with
four or fewer dwelling units and their attached and detached garages and
carports.
(2) As part of a
particular home inspection, licensees are not required to perform actions or
make determinations or recommendations beyond those identified in this
Part.
(3) Home inspections
performed by licensees are not expected to be technically exhaustive.
(4) Home inspections performed by licensees
are not required to identify or report on concealed, latent, or intermittent
conditions.
B. In general, the licensee is not required to inspect:
(1) Underground items including, but not
limited to, lawn irrigation systems or underground storage tanks and other
underground indications of their presence, whether abandoned or
active;
(2) Items that are not
permanently installed;
(3)
Permanently installed decorative items;
(4) Items in areas that the licensee does not
enter, as provided in this Part;
(5) Detached structures other than garages
and carports;
(6) Common elements
and common areas in multi-unit housing, such as condominium properties and
cooperative housing;
(7) All
occurrence of multiple similar components, provided that the licensee may be
required to inspect one such component;
(8) Outdoor cooking appliances.
C. In general, the licensee is not required to:
(1) Ignite or extinguish fires,
pilot lights, burners, and other open flames that require manual
ignition;
(2) Dismantle systems and
components, except as required by this Part;
(3) Operate any system or component which is
shut down or otherwise inoperable;
(4) Operate any system or component which
does not respond to normal operating controls;
(5) Operate shut-off valves and manual stop
valves;
(6) Reset, reprogram, or
otherwise adjust devices, systems, and components affected by the home
inspection required by this Part;
(7) Probe surfaces that would be damaged or
where no deterioration is visible or presumed to exist;
(8) Use specialized tools;
(9) Disturb insulation, move personal items,
furniture, equipment, plant life, soil, snow, ice, or debris which obstructs
access or visibility;
(10) Enter
areas that will, as determined by the licensee, likely be dangerous to the
licensee or to other persons or likely to damage the property or its systems
and components;
(11) Enter any area
or perform any procedure which may damage the property or its components or be
dangerous to the licensee or other persons;
(12) Enter under-floor crawlspaces and attics
that are not readily accessible;
(13) Identify and report cosmetic
imperfections that do not affect a component's normally intended function or
operation;
(14) Describe or report
on systems or components that are not included in this Part and that were not
inspected;
(15) Offer warranties or
guarantees of any kind;
(16) Offer
or perform any engineering services;
(17) Offer or perform any trade or
professional service other than home inspection.
D. In general, the licensee is not required to determine:
(1) Compliance with local codes,
ordinances or regulations, the legality of property and its present use,
conditions of title, boundaries and easements, and location in earthquake,
flood, mining, or any other hazard zones;
(2) Whether any permits were required or
obtained for any work performed on the subject property;
(3) Whether grandfathering applies to any
condition in a system or component;
(4) Condition of systems and components not
readily accessible;
(5) Strength,
adequacy, effectiveness, and efficiency of systems and components;
(6) Causes of adverse conditions observed and
reported;
(7) Methods, materials,
and costs of corrections;
(8)
Future conditions, including but not limited to failure of systems and
components;
(9) The age of
installation of any system, structure, or component of a building;
(10) The remaining life expectancy of systems
and components;
(11) Whether items,
materials, conditions, and components are subject to recall, controversy,
litigation, product liability, and other adverse claims and
conditions;
(12) Operating costs of
systems and components;
(13)
Acoustical properties of systems and components;
(14) Presence of plants, animals, and other
life forms and substances that may be hazardous or harmful to humans including,
but not limited to, wood destroying organisms, molds, and mold-like
substances;
(15) Presence of
environmental hazards including, but not limited to, allergens, toxins,
carcinogens, electromagnetic radiation, noise, radioactive substances, and
contaminants in building materials, soil, water, and air;
(16) Effectiveness of permanently installed
systems and methods used to control or remove suspected hazardous plants,
animals, and environmental hazards;
(17) Soil conditions relating to geotechnical
or hydrologic specialties;
(18)
Advisability of purchasing of the property being inspected;
(19) Insurability of the property;
(20) Marketability or market value of the
property;
(21) Suitability of the
property for specialized uses.
Disclaimer: These regulations may not be the most recent version. New Mexico may have more current or accurate information. We make no warranties or guarantees about the accuracy, completeness, or adequacy of the information contained on this site or the information linked to on the state site. Please check official sources.
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