Posted by Chooch on July 21, 2008 at 13:14:06 from (70.239.89.241):
In Reply to: Re: land survey posted by T_Bone on July 21, 2008 at 09:07:26:
T-Bone,
In Indiana, you are required to set sufficient property corners such that the survey can be retraced. Most surveyors will set every corner unless there is an obstruction to setting a particular corner (i.e. tree, concrete sidewalk, outbuilding, etc...) At that point, about half will set a witness corner that is defined on the plat as being xx feet from the true corner. Most surveyors set a rebar with a plastic cap which has surveyor's name and license number stamped into it.
In regard to the second question, without having any knowledge of the survey laws in Arizona, my answer, based upon Indiana laws, would be not necessarily. Filing a survey at the courthouse does put adjoining landowners and others surveyors on notice that a survey has been conducted but does little in "proving" the survey is correct. A survey conducted by a licensed land surveyor is that surveyors professional opinion on the location of a particular boundary. It is not the absolute location of that boundary. The quality of the survey will be based upon the surveyor's experience of the area, his due diligence in conducting courthouse and field research, and his application of proper rules of surveying. Each survey has to be evaluated using record documents, recovered monumentation, evidence of occupied boundaries and proper rules of evaluating all of the above. The goal of each survey is to "follow in the footsteps" of the previous surveyors.
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