Thoughts of a Land Surveyor.

   / Thoughts of a Land Surveyor. #1  

dodge man

Super Star Member
Joined
Oct 25, 2008
Messages
12,116
Location
West central Illinois
Tractor
JD 2025R
It seems like nothing gets the post count up like a good old boundary dispute. I thought I would just put some of my thoughts down in regards to these matters. Keep in mind this advice is worth what you are paying for it, in other words nothing.

First off I'm licensed in two states, Illinois and Iowa and I got my Illinois license in 1992. I don't have a count but I have probably done close to a 1000 boundary surveys over the years, all kinds, commercial, residential, rural, lots in town, I've worked in Chicago and down south by St. Louis.

Keep in mind a surveyor in not your advocate. He won't put the boundary where you want it, he will put it where it belongs in his professional opinion. A lawyer is your advocate. He may tell you that you have a terrible case, but if you will pay his bills he will represent you all the way to the supreme court if needed.

When a person buys a house or piece of property, it is most likely the largest investment they will make in their life. Why not get it surveyed BEFORE you buy it? Yes problems may show up, your dream house might have a problem you wish wasn't there but at least you know it before you buy it. I have on more than one occasion heard people say "there wasn't a problem until the surveyor showed up". Of course the problem was there before hand they just didn't know about it. Getting surveys done before buying seems to be a regional thing. In my area more than 90% of sales don't get a survey performed.

Leave emotion out of it if you have a problem. For some reason people get very emotional, angry, protective and even a little crazy when they think someone is infringing on their rights. I've seen grown men and women, that I consider intelligent reasonable people just lose all sense of direction and even get arrested. Put a price on your problem. Are you fighting over a piece of ground that is 200 feet wide by 10 deep? What is that ground worth? Even at an inflated price that is $3000 worth of land. Is it worth $20,000 in lawyer fees to keep it? I have yet to see anybody win when it comes to a dispute that goes to court. The winner is really a loser too when you look at the cost.

Land surveying like all things in life is half science and half dark arts. Sometimes the answer is black and white, there is only one correct was to survey the property. Other times its not black and white and takes a lot of time and research and field work. The most important tool in surveying is not a GPS system or a total station, its a shovel. If you don't dig up corners, stones, rebar, old pipe etc you aren't looking for the evidence. The answer isn't in the black box hooked to the GPS, a GIS system or a computer, its on the ground. Like many things, the quality of a surveyors work varies, you get what you pay for. I take a huge amount of pride in what I do for a living. There is very few things I am really good at but I like to think land surveying in one of them.

I'll finish by saying there are times you need to get a surveyor and a lawyer involved. In my 34 plus years of surveying, 26 years of it licensed, I've seen a few cases where a person was truly getting screwed. In one case a person had been to court and was being pressured to settle a case even though he was right. He couldn't afford a survey or a lawyer. I ended up doing a $2000 survey for $500. In another case I did the work for free. I'm lucky in the fact that my boss let me do this work at reduced cost or for free.

I hope I brought a little perceptive to how a surveyor views things related to boundaries. To be honest most of the disputes I read about on here sound petty. I always try to look at the other side of the story also, but based on my experience, I also realize these don't seem petty to the person living it.
 
   / Thoughts of a Land Surveyor. #2  
Well said and thank you for your thoughts on the matter
 
   / Thoughts of a Land Surveyor. #3  
I appreciate the input into this realm.

When you say 'you get what you pay for'.... how do we, as buyers of 'your' service, determine the accuracy/worth of a survey?

If a survey done for purchase is found to be 'wrong'... how is it determined to be wrong?

And if there is a significant discrepancy from what is 'thought' to be the line vs what you survey as the line... how are we as purchasers/sellers able to determine that you are indeed correct vs you are one of the inaccurate surveyors of which you speak?
 
   / Thoughts of a Land Surveyor. #4  
For the most part, most of what you say is only "common sense".

However, many old boundary markers no longer exist, such as old trees and stones called out in the original deed descriptions, even the acreage in many old deeds is not correct. And then there are cases where even certified, licensed land surveyors don't agree on where the boundary lines fall. I have come to the opinion that nothing is "absolute" in this day and age.

I have personally never had a survey problem with my four different land purchases, but have seen these problems give other people severe headaches. Gone are the days when neighborly farmers just went by old stonewalls and fence rows as boundary lines regardless of the actual deed co-ordinance. Welcome to the land of developers and sub-urban sprawl.

Edit: Forgot to mention the original deed for my brother's farm was called out in rods and chains as units for measurements.
 
Last edited:
   / Thoughts of a Land Surveyor.
  • Thread Starter
#5  
Dadnatron, those are really good questions.

How do you find a good surveyor? Word of mouth? Sometimes title companies might know. Sometimes people say a surveyor is great because he is cheap not because he is good. I try to spend some time when a person comes in or calls and explain what we do, I hope that gives a good impression but I'm not sure. I feel education of the public is part of my job even if it doesn't pay. I wish I had good answer for this question but I don't.

How is a survey determined to be wrong. I'll give examples. I did a survey next door to one that had been done wrong. No two ways around it, I found the original corners and the other guy just didn't do a good job. The land owner that had the wrong survey saw me out there and I told her what I found. She had put up an expensive fence to keep her horses in. The other guy didn't really admit he was wrong but the person I was working for sold the lady the land to make her fence good. The other surveyor paid for some or all of this to happen.

In another case, the one I alluded to above at doing it at reduced cost, the other surveyor also screwed up bad. The guy I was working for lost access to a shed because the other surveyor showed the boundary line about 2 inches from the shed door. I found the mistake and drew a plat up. The neighbor who paid for the incorrect survey then hired another surveyor to check my work. He agreed with what I did, so she dropped her law suit. She was out a pretty good chunk of cash.

Your third question, what happens when where people think the line should be is different from what the surveyor says? The biggest challenge in surveying is this very subject. Its where art merges with science. When is the occupation line, fence line, place where people mow and think the line should be compared to where the deed says the line is. There is not a correct answer sometimes. Sometimes a fence is just a fence and not related to the boundary. Other times even though a fence doesn't fit the distances perfect, it should be the boundary line. Our job isn't to correct past surveys but honor them. The general rule is a corner should be accepted unless gross error or fraud was involved. Some times our job is to create the least amount of chaos possible. Other times creating chaos may be the correct answer even if people don't like it.
 
   / Thoughts of a Land Surveyor. #6  
And then there are cases where even certified, licensed land surveyors don't agree on where the boundary lines fall. I have come to the opinion that nothing is "absolute" in this day and age.

A few years ago... the '4 Corners' ie, the junction of Colorado, Utah, Arizona, and New Mexico was determined to be in the wrong place. I don't remember how far off it was, but it was relatively substantial considering it affected 4 States. It created quite an uproar at the time... and finally, I think they just decided to leave well enough alone.
 
   / Thoughts of a Land Surveyor. #7  
"If you don't dig up corners, stones, rebar, old pipe etc you aren't looking for the evidence. "

It amazes me how many times I've replaced corner posts in fences where three farms met, and had been separate farms like that at that corner for at least 70 years, when I started digging a hole for the new post there was a stack of rocks against the old post on all four sides. It was kind of cool in a way as it could have been either of my grandfathers that had placed them there and just to keep the world in check I made sure the stones were put back in the same place and same order as they were before.
 
   / Thoughts of a Land Surveyor. #8  
Great information.
When I bought my land I did not get a survey done because there had been a professional survey done 10 years before and that survey was registered with the county. If it had been old and based on rocks and stumps I probably would have had one done.
 
   / Thoughts of a Land Surveyor.
  • Thread Starter
#9  
The four corners was a huge fiasco. On USGS maps they show control points. There happened to be a control point in the general area of the four corners but several hundred feet or more away as I recall. This control point would be something like a bench mark or something I would setup my GPS on. Some reporter saw this on the USGS map and said look, this is where the four corners should really be! The national news grabbed a hold of this story and ran with it even though in reality there was never a problem.

I said above a shovel is the most important tool, in reality its a spade, metal detector and a tile probe. The tile probe is how I found stones. The problem is when is a stone a surveyors stone or when is it just another rock? That's what we get paid to figure out.
 
   / Thoughts of a Land Surveyor.
  • Thread Starter
#10  
One more point I'll add, surveyors, judges, lawyers don't really have control over boundary corners or land, the land owners do. When land owners see the corners I set, honor them, build fences to them, they validate my work. They say "look, that's a corner Dodge Man set, that's my corner". The neighbor says "yes it is, that's my corner too". They have validated my work. If they say "that Dodge Man is an idiot, he doesn't know what he is doing, let put the corner over here". They have invalidated my work, made it worthless, all my education, expensive equipment is trumped by what the landowners did. Landowners have control over their boundaries, its when they don't agree that problems arise.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2008 East Texas Longhorn Trailers 10ft S/A Utility Trailer (A45336)
2008 East Texas...
1986 PETERBILT 359 TANDEM AXLE DAY CAB (A45676)
1986 PETERBILT 359...
1988 Miller 40' Alumminum Citrus Trailer (A47307)
1988 Miller 40'...
2005 FREIGHTLINER COLUMBIA 120 (A47001)
2005 FREIGHTLINER...
Miva Ripper Tooth (A47809)
Miva Ripper Tooth...
THUMB ATTACHMENT (A47001)
THUMB ATTACHMENT...
 
Top