The "old" NCMA Masonry Code (circa 1970,now longer referenced), limited the height of unreinforced load bearing masonry walls to a h/t ratio of 20. (8" block limited to 13'-4"). Columns where limited to an h/t ratio of 25, based on the least dimension...minimun dimension for a column was also 12".
Reinforced masonry walls under the NCMA Code were limited to h/t of 36, unless "evidence by a qulaified person showing the wall met all the other requirements".
As I previously ststed, the MJSC no longer limits the height of the "engineered" walls. Walls are designed based on the h/r ratio, where r is the radius of gyration = sq. root of (I/A).
If you are "designing" a masonry walls based on the EMPIRICAL DESIGN methodilogy of Chapter 5, the h/t ratiuoa are still used. The h/t ratios are different than the "old" NCMA limits but not significantly. The "new" h't ratios classify the walls as bearing or non-bearing walls, interior or exterior.