First, I would like to thank EVERYONE for the replies to my post. I have gained a lot of insight as to my situation from all of you.
I called the homeowner this afternoon. He told me he drove up to Phoenix from his home in Tucson (job is in Phoenix) and went to the Phoenix Development office. He brought in a "general contractor" that he has decided to hire to get him through this mess that he got himself into. The inspector had the day off today, but the supervisor told them that they would have an opportunity to schedule a metting with the inspector to see exactly what is needed here. I checked online and my inspection was failed not on my work or the panel, but by all the unpermitted work going on at the jobsite. In fact, the inspector spent very little time at my work and was asking around about the different projects that were obviously at hand. Walking back to his truck, he told me I should propose to the owner to replace all his electric, as it is old and out of date. (unsafe). When he asked me about the rest of the wiring....specifically he asked me what type of wiring there was and if it had grounds. NOPE! I had to answer honestly...I had been in the attic and saw, of course, what was being used. (I was in the attic to group the four circuits to bring them down to my new panel. )
Upon checking the inspection report, I find the following notes:
Left insp notice for permit req'd for all work being done..total remodel,rebuilding west carport,smoke alarms,possible re-wire,etc.
Keep in mind my permit is only for "200 amp upgrade replace panel". Thats it! Now, I don't even know what to do if I was to continue this project. Meaning, if the inspector wants a complete remodel and the re-wire...how can I finish my job by hooking up to his old wiring?
The inspector told me that the house is unlivable. He would not pass the panel until the house was safe to live in. (heater, cooling, water heater, smoke alarms, safe carport built correctily, proper plumbing.). He is holding the inpection pass of my panel until all above (and possibly more ie. rewire) is complete.
Anyway, the owner told me that he will not answer any more questions of mine until he hears from this "general contractor" about what the inspector is going to require. And yes, I left messages with the inspector and his supervisor that I want to be included in this meeting when it is scheduled. Its my permit, I think I have that right! As to being responsible for what the inspector requires...owner won't discuss. After the initial talk with the owner about the inspection, he has not brought the issue up. Only along the lines of "we'll see whats required and then cross that bridge".
The home is in an absoutely terrible area of Phoenix with many vacant run down homes from the 1940s. THe owner lives two hours away and I have only met him at the jobsite the day he pulled out his sneaky "revised" contract.
For those of you that ask why I would agree and sign such a thing? Well, I understood it as
1) My work would need to be up to code and pass inspection and I would need to make sure it does.
2) Any repairs or replacements I do that are not in the contract would also need to be brought up to inspectors code requirements.
I had no problem with this, as I ALWAYS follow code. In fact, I am taking a class at the local college just to be sure I am up on my codes and fully understand all the codes. So, I did not want to argue this. I felt it was the right thing to do...the owner was concerned that something I would do would not be up to code....and I stand by my work. I had no idea he would later interpret this as the opposite...need to perform repairs or replacements to meet all inspectors requirements out of the scope of this contract. If you read it carefully, it can be interpreted in two totally different ways. After all the paragraph this sentence is in regards to work DONE by me in the contract. Then, I thought, also- work I did that I did not list.
I have yet to talk with attorney. I feel it would be best to first meet with the inspector and get the real story of what is going to be required. Then, talk with the HO. If I get the feeling he is going to try to hold me to all of this, then I will see one.
Part of me does want to go by the jobsite and grab my panel and materials. I have never been taken advantage of and this really sucks!
I will continue to update this thread. Thanks again for your interest and help.
Shane