sharp910sh presents a doubt that is interesting from a professional practice viewpoint. What if what you are getting seems to be against your understanding of what would be proper? I would say that in the instance what you need is to clarify in whatever the way what happens to your acceptance of that it meets both your understanding and the ruling code.
For example, for cases clearly defined in the codes (and should there be scarce ones that are not, but still there are, and many times quite intentionally) you can proceed as the code says and if in the end you see the thing correct, end of the issue. DaveAtkins correctly points that following the code normally may relieve you of the problem. In this case he comments as well on why, so at the same time is providing supporting engineering judgement for the code.
You may discover some conceptual error that leads to the problem, as hokie66 says, since at 50 kgf/cm2 shear stress ordinary concrete may be (at least conceptually) utterly cracked and just be rubble within cages (there have been failures where such kind of concentration of stresses have initiated locally a failure that from then the remaining reinforcement has not been able to restrain). Then, for the case, the scarce thickness leads to high (and quite likely unacceptable from a code standpoint) shear stresses, and the deformations are also high contributing to the concentration of stresses and your problem. Augmenting the thickness may reduce the problem to more acceptable averaging.