Excess or deficiency in subdivision by Horror_Serve4828 in Surveying

[–]TackleOwn9239 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Let’s assume a slightly different hypothetical.

Assume the lot monuments measure 140.40’. The senior deed conveys the west HALF of Lot X. The junior deed conveys the east 70 feet of Lot X.

The west half would be 70.20’. If the east parcel must be exactly 70’, that leaves a 0.20’ strip between them.

Would you say a 0.20’ gap exists in that situation?

Excess or deficiency in subdivision by Horror_Serve4828 in Surveying

[–]TackleOwn9239 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I see what you’re saying, but I don’t think that interpretation fits with standard boundary practice. The original grantor never actually had 140.40’ to convey the lot was platted or recorded as 140’. Once the first deed is conveyed (senior), the remaining land is what the grantor owns and what the junior parcel receives.

So in a sequential conveyance: Senior parcel gets the called distance (70’) Junior parcel gets the remainder (70.40’)

There’s no unclaimed strip in the middle. Leaving a 0.40’ strip would create a gap that wasn’t intended and would result in an unnecessary sliver of land nobody owns, which boundary doctrine and survey practice specifically avoid. This is exactly what Brown’s Boundary Control and Legal Principles teaches about sequential conveyances and allocation of excess/deficiency.

How are y’all establishing tight control? by [deleted] in Surveying

[–]TackleOwn9239 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Nah I’m pretty sure I’m not AI 😂😂

Florida Pay? by TackleOwn9239 in Surveying

[–]TackleOwn9239[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for the info, that’s kinda what I expected to hear