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The Water Cooler
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Fence line vs Survey
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<blockquote data-quote="Surveyor1653" data-source="post: 2977767" data-attributes="member: 5197"><p>Absolutely. I wasn't responding to anyone in particular, just putting out there what I did before the thread devolved into the inevitable "That's your land. Do with it what you want." or the ever popular "The fence is the boundary after so many years." I can absolutely rent a skid steer and push the neighbor's crap over the line my surveyor marked. I'm free to do that. I'm just not free from the consequences of destroying that guy's property. </p><p></p><p>The likelihood that either or both of them can afford or has the will to take this thing to court is not known to me. I do know this: If you don't know the limits of your property, the courts are not generally kind to you when you get there. Surveys are like divorces: They're expensive because they're worth it.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Surveyor1653, post: 2977767, member: 5197"] Absolutely. I wasn't responding to anyone in particular, just putting out there what I did before the thread devolved into the inevitable "That's your land. Do with it what you want." or the ever popular "The fence is the boundary after so many years." I can absolutely rent a skid steer and push the neighbor's crap over the line my surveyor marked. I'm free to do that. I'm just not free from the consequences of destroying that guy's property. The likelihood that either or both of them can afford or has the will to take this thing to court is not known to me. I do know this: If you don't know the limits of your property, the courts are not generally kind to you when you get there. Surveys are like divorces: They're expensive because they're worth it. [/QUOTE]
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