Fundamentals of Property Law
$60.00This course is presented as an overview of historical and modern aspects of property law, providing land surveyors with an improved understanding of the legal principles that govern land use and ownership.
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This course is presented as an overview of historical and modern aspects of property law, providing land surveyors with an improved understanding of the legal principles that govern land use and ownership.
This expedition is often viewed as the defining adventure of the American ideal of exploration, embodying themes of courage, discovery, and manifest destiny.
This course explores the origins of land boundaries, the principles guiding their creation, and the ethical responsibilities that surveyors must uphold. Correct boundary determination is essential to maintaining property rights, resolving disputes, and ensuring the orderly transfer of real estate.
This class will give the surveyor an insight to the history of the Public Land Survey System (PLSS) and how it was established. Along with the history, the class will discuss the layout of the PLSS system and the instructions used by the original surveyors.
Ethics in land surveying are difficult to understand. The right and wrong decisions aren’t always distinct. In this course you will get a full introduction to ethics in the profession of land surveying.
Understanding Cadastral Surveying and Proportionment problems and methods, property rights and boundaries, water boundaries, and non-conventional Cadastral surveys.
This course seeks to study the historically important Mason-Dixon Line survey, the circumstances that led to the necessity of the survey, the surveyors who conducted the survey, and the methods and techniques they employed to complete their daunting project.
The Specifications in this land surveyor course provide guidance for writing accurate boundary descriptions and locations by survey, the form and arrangement to be followed for Executive and public land orders and proclamations, and examples of boundary descriptions.
Stable monuments are required for both horizontal and vertical control. Monuments and their stability are integral parts of the accuracy of each survey project. Inaccurate survey control monumentation can contribute to costly errors in all phases of project design and development.valuation of all phases of the process.