The Line Isnât the Boundary â Understanding Legal Constructs
Key Point: A boundary is a legal idea first, a physical point second.
You can measure it. You can mark it. You can stake it with millimeter precision. But that still doesnât make it a boundary â at least not in the legal sense.
Surveyors learn early on that what seems like a straightforward line in the field often conceals a far more complex truth. A âboundaryâ isnât just a line between two GPS points, or a fence line thatâs been there for decades. Itâs a legal construct, a product of overlapping interests, historical context, and the written (and sometimes unwritten) record of ownership. In short: the boundary exists on paper and in law before it ever exists in space.
And yet, itâs easy for even experienced field crews to slip into the mentality that accuracy equals correctness. After all, we work with tools designed to reduce uncertainty â total stations, GNSS receivers, laser scanners â and the more precise our measurement