>> Any deed technician can plot a drawing showing deed geometry placed on some found monuments. That is not what boundary surveys are usually fo...
> > I would think it would go against the person changing the boundary. (But that is just my speculation. I don't know the answer.)My point ...
> > (1) I don't think that would fall within the scope of my duties as a surveyor to try to determine whether the rise was man made or natural w...
> I think I'd use the KISS approach here.> > What would a landowner think, if he/she read his deed, that said to the lake shore?> > 380...
> Two Thoughts> (1)I think that an important consideration is that the change in the location of the edge of water was not a natural change but ...
"There might be some damages to be recovered from the ones who intentionally raised the water level, but that is a legal problem."Jud brings up a good...
No. Whether it's now 380' to the "edge of the lake" or 420' to it. If I understand correctly, the original deed called for a "natural boundary" which ...