Using an app to determine proposed boundry lines

   / Using an app to determine proposed boundry lines #1  

Mtsoxfan

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Nov 19, 2021
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Newark Vermont
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Kioti 3520SEH Holland TC29D
I want to purchase roughly 12 acres from my neighbor, who sold me the property we built on. It's in an open field abutting mine and runs along a town road. There are very few surveyors in area, I think there are only two in 1 hour drive. Seller doesn't want to pay for a survey, it's $5k plus add ons. And they are about 8 months out. His health is failing, family doesn't want it to live on. I told him last year I felt safer with a survey, for various reasons. I would keep it ag taxed, to save him the 10% charge to transfer it to residential. I have absolutely no plans to build, just want to keep others from doing so and ruining part of my view that we so love. My feelings on the survey are changing, as I want the property.
I've mapped out on Google Earth Maps, but don't know if I can pinpoint exact locations which would serve as a written point to be used in bill of sale. (or whatever they call it) I've used a compass app, which I can get those pinpoints, but am not sure of their accuracy.
Is anyone familiar with any apps (free would be nice) that would give me an accurate pinpoint I could use on title? The whole property that is next to me is too many acres for me to afford, which would make it so much easier to pinpoint, as I would use all the existing borders. I thought all property transfers had to be surveyed, but searching online gave me mixed answers, most likely outdated, but no articles have dates...

Thoughts/suggestions?
 
   / Using an app to determine proposed boundry lines #2  
none are accurate enough, I wouldn't settle for anything less then a RTK Based System.
 
   / Using an app to determine proposed boundry lines #3  
I want to purchase roughly 12 acres from my neighbor, who sold me the property we built on. It's in an open field abutting mine and runs along a town road. There are very few surveyors in area, I think there are only two in 1 hour drive. Seller doesn't want to pay for a survey, it's $5k plus add ons. And they are about 8 months out. His health is failing, family doesn't want it to live on. I told him last year I felt safer with a survey, for various reasons. I would keep it ag taxed, to save him the 10% charge to transfer it to residential. I have absolutely no plans to build, just want to keep others from doing so and ruining part of my view that we so love. My feelings on the survey are changing, as I want the property.
I've mapped out on Google Earth Maps, but don't know if I can pinpoint exact locations which would serve as a written point to be used in bill of sale. (or whatever they call it) I've used a compass app, which I can get those pinpoints, but am not sure of their accuracy.
Is anyone familiar with any apps (free would be nice) that would give me an accurate pinpoint I could use on title? The whole property that is next to me is too many acres for me to afford, which would make it so much easier to pinpoint, as I would use all the existing borders. I thought all property transfers had to be surveyed, but searching online gave me mixed answers, most likely outdated, but no articles have dates...

Thoughts/suggestions?
Is there a useful description of the parcel at the town office? Meets and bounds works pretty well until you go to break up an existing parcel.

I have use Gaia to walk my lot, It's very repeatable. And falls within reasonable distance of the flagged pins. (less than a foot)
I'm sure accuracy is enhanced with many satellite references.

But I doubt the "lines" would hold up in a dispute.
 
   / Using an app to determine proposed boundry lines
  • Thread Starter
#4  
Maybe i should just throw a number at them. They want me to buy the land, would prefer I bought the whole parcel. I've asked him to think of a number, and if I can afford it, I'll buy, otherwise I'll just buy the 7 acres they agreed to sell at the price we agreed on.

Some descriptions are " corner by the apple tree, running to stone wall, then to cow barn". Very rural around here. 500 people in my town.
 
   / Using an app to determine proposed boundry lines #5  
Have your deed written to the monuments rather than a metes and bounds description. Then you can have it surveyed when you have the money and the surveyor has the time.

Better yet, use the bearings and distances from your app but have it written so that the mons hold sway over them.
 
   / Using an app to determine proposed boundry lines #6  
How about buying the whole parcel, and give hime a right of tenancy to a carve out for a time period? That way, you won't be messing with or dependent upon surveys.

All the best, Peter
 
   / Using an app to determine proposed boundry lines #7  
You are only safe with a fully legal official survey. Land in your neck of the woods has been handed down since the colonial days.
My Father and Grandfather bought a parcel near Jericho about 1960. They THOUGHT they were buying "20 acres, more or less". The boundaries were easy to find, good well maintained fences on the north and south, a county road on the west and a cliff all along the back. We built a duplex on it, with ponds. It was lovely. I called it home until 1978 when I got out of the Army.
It was still "20 acres, more or less" and that's what they were taxed on.
My Dad sold it about 1981, after surveying it was 30 acres. That's a pretty good growth rate for land.

Bought my first house in Alexandria, Va ~1979. In the suburbs 12 miles south of the White House. Land is expensive there. County redid road with sidewalk and better gutters, messed up placement of driveway apron. I was renting the house out at the time, the renters didn't notice it. The apron came about a foot on my side where it was at the street. When I complained it was "sue the city, you'll pay thousands", according to my wife the lawyer. The actual hard concrete parking area is all on the neighbors land by inches.
The neighbors house was bought by a "flipper". He started to widen his driveway, which was too narrow to allow a pickup to pass between our houses without coming on my lot. Luckily I caught it. He disputed it. I had a survey. He got a new survey (cost him a pretty penny), agreed with mine.
Let's just say he was aggravated.

I was buying land & house in Mississippi in 2011. The land was supposed to be "70 acres, more or less", got it surveyed, turned out to be 67 acres. Price adjustment.

A good survey is worth it, defined boundaries make good neighbors.

Now if the land is not worth the $5K for survey that's one thing. But if the 12 acres you are looking at are worth say $40K a good survey might be money well spent.
 
   / Using an app to determine proposed boundry lines #8  
Does Vermont require survey for new parcels
 
   / Using an app to determine proposed boundry lines #9  
First thing I would do is talk to your Title Company to see what they require. You could go to the courthouse, but in my opinion, the Title Company is going to be more helpful.

From what I'm told, and what I've seen in my area of the country, the online GPS apps and programs all rely on County Records for boundaries. Those are pretty accurate to know who owns the land, but horrible at figuring out where the property line is since they are not done by a surveyor. My guess is they are drawn on their office computer by the secretary who doesn't have a clue about these things. Fortunately, it clearly states on their website that the boundaries are not accurate and should not be used for determining property lines.

Another thing to consider is if you don't get a survey done now, how much harder and more expensive will it be in the future? Nothing gets cheaper, and you never know what regulations will come up in the future that may make it harder to get a survey.

There are too many unknowns that will probably happen in the future to not have everything done perfectly today.

Find a surveyor, pay whatever it costs, and wait however long it takes. It will save you money and grief in the long run.
 
   / Using an app to determine proposed boundry lines #10  
I am a land surveyor and you are generally getting good advice. You need a real survey by a land surveyor. No app or any other source is good enough.

A good alternative is to agree to purchase the land at so many acres. You could even get an aerial photo and highlight the area and say “exact description of the land to be determined by a survey”. I personally would even close on the property based of a future survey but a title company can advise you the best way to make it happen.
 
   / Using an app to determine proposed boundry lines #11  
I want to purchase roughly 12 acres from my neighbor, who sold me the property we built on. It's in an open field abutting mine and runs along a town road. There are very few surveyors in area, I think there are only two in 1 hour drive. Seller doesn't want to pay for a survey, it's $5k plus add ons. And they are about 8 months out. His health is failing, family doesn't want it to live on. I told him last year I felt safer with a survey, for various reasons. I would keep it ag taxed, to save him the 10% charge to transfer it to residential. I have absolutely no plans to build, just want to keep others from doing so and ruining part of my view that we so love. My feelings on the survey are changing, as I want the property.
I've mapped out on Google Earth Maps, but don't know if I can pinpoint exact locations which would serve as a written point to be used in bill of sale. (or whatever they call it) I've used a compass app, which I can get those pinpoints, but am not sure of their accuracy.
Is anyone familiar with any apps (free would be nice) that would give me an accurate pinpoint I could use on title? The whole property that is next to me is too many acres for me to afford, which would make it so much easier to pinpoint, as I would use all the existing borders to Buy Ozempic Online Without Prescription. I thought all property transfers had to be surveyed, but searching online gave me mixed answers, most likely outdated, but no articles have dates...

Thoughts/suggestions?
Is there a GPS App that you can mark two points on your land and create a line between those points so you know where to place your fence?

I have fence posts set at the pins about 2,000 feet apart from each other. I want to build my fence along the first 800 feet of that property line. There is an area that is kind of cliff like and not worth fencing in, so I'll move my fence in a little bit for that area. I was going to run a wire from post to post for a straight line, but I would have to clear several dozen trees from that cliff area, and I really want to keep those trees there so it doesn't erode any more. I also think it would become very ugly if those trees where not there, so it's not going to happen.

Can I use my Android phone, or my wife's Apple phone, to mark those two posts and know where the property line is?

Thank you
 
   / Using an app to determine proposed boundry lines #12  
I use onXHunt, an app to find areas on my property. It's pretty accurate. I agree with Dodge Man though, there is no substitute for a licensed surveyor when it comes to buying real estate.
 
   / Using an app to determine proposed boundry lines #13  
Is there a GPS App that you can mark two points on your land and create a line between those points so you know where to place your fence?

I have fence posts set at the pins about 2,000 feet apart from each other. I want to build my fence along the first 800 feet of that property line. There is an area that is kind of cliff like and not worth fencing in, so I'll move my fence in a little bit for that area. I was going to run a wire from post to post for a straight line, but I would have to clear several dozen trees from that cliff area, and I really want to keep those trees there so it doesn't erode any more. I also think it would become very ugly if those trees where not there, so it's not going to happen.

Can I use my Android phone, or my wife's Apple phone, to mark those two posts and know where the property line is?

Thank you
Yes, the app onXHunt. It measures distances very accurate. In straight lines or curves.
 
   / Using an app to determine proposed boundry lines #14  
They say that fences make good neighbors. A survey and a fence makes better ones. If a future owner of the neighbor’s property wants to contest your property line this would give you “ground to stand on”. If it is worth it to you, pay for the survey yourself.
 
   / Using an app to determine proposed boundry lines #15  
If you live in KY. then a survey means NOTHING. My neighbors lost acres of land after the neighbor whose property butted up to theirs died. One lost 13 acres and I am not sure how many the other lost. The deceased mans SIL came in and just decided the property lines were NOT where he wanted them to be. Surveys, county tax records, deeds, old folks that had been around for ever saying in affidavits he was wrong and that the fence lines were correct did not matter. And he bragged that he was GOING to have that land, that he could do whatever he wanted and no one would stop him. He was right, he paid off judges and lawyers (even the ones representing my neighbors we later found out) until the courts agreed that the property belonged to his deceased FIL.

This is the third time he has done this that I know of, so surveys and laws are not even worth the paper they are written on in this state if you have the money to pay people off then do whatever you want.
 
   / Using an app to determine proposed boundry lines #16  
Maybe i should just throw a number at them. They want me to buy the land, would prefer I bought the whole parcel. I've asked him to think of a number, and if I can afford it, I'll buy, otherwise I'll just buy the 7 acres they agreed to sell at the price we agreed on.

Some descriptions are " corner by the apple tree, running to stone wall, then to cow barn". Very rural around here. 500 people in my town.

Sounds kinda like when I joined the Fire Department volunteer Fire Department we had recipe card directions for every house in our area and some of them would say something like go south and rural one until you get to the red barn. Take a left at the red barn until you get to the dead oak tree. Go down the road to the Johnson farm on the left.


Is there a GPS App that you can mark two points on your land and create a line between those points so you know where to place your fence?

I have fence posts set at the pins about 2,000 feet apart from each other. I want to build my fence along the first 800 feet of that property line. There is an area that is kind of cliff like and not worth fencing in, so I'll move my fence in a little bit for that area. I was going to run a wire from post to post for a straight line, but I would have to clear several dozen trees from that cliff area, and I really want to keep those trees there so it doesn't erode any more. I also think it would become very ugly if those trees where not there, so it's not going to happen.

Can I use my Android phone, or my wife's Apple phone, to mark those two posts and know where the property line is?

Thank you
I must’ve missed where someone said they were gonna put a fence on the property?
 
   / Using an app to determine proposed boundry lines #17  
Just bite the bullet and get a survey. That way there can be no complaints with other neighbors /future. That way it’s set and marked. Apps only get you roughly within 20’ at best. Many times I find them badly skewed. ONX has every single property between the main roads of me shifted about 10’ west. We had issues with neighbors over a ditch. New gps surgery showed we owned it the whole time and they encroached about 20’ along our entire field. Hours after the surveyors I pounded post at the pins.
 
   / Using an app to determine proposed boundry lines #18  
So, maybe this is different state to state, but here, you would need a professional to write the Legal Description for the parcel break. That is kinda done hand in hand with the survey; either a surveyor can do a survey based on the legal description Or the legal description can be written to match the survey, but they are 2 parts that come together to make it a legal parcel.
 
   / Using an app to determine proposed boundry lines #19  
Almost all surveys are based on existing work; they aren't always going back to the section corner or turn township-range intersection. So, basically if a survey references beginning at point A (that some else established 50 years ago), and point A is wrong, yes, you could lose land.
 
   / Using an app to determine proposed boundry lines #20  
If your getting a loan, I'm sure they will want a current survey, and if you are breaking a parcel; the county is going to need a legal description for the new parcel. If there is a Good recent survey, you can use that, and a wheel or 300 ft tape or chain to roughly decide the limits; but you still need survey and legal description to make it valid.

What I'm saying; you and neighbor can meet, stake approx location of the property, and even sign a conteact pending survey and legal description. You could also do a short term lease until the survey and description are complete.
 

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