250 CMR, § 6.02

Current through Register 1537, December 20, 2024
Section 6.02 - Survey Work Affecting Property Rights

250 CMR 6.02 describes those additional requirements applicable to all survey work associated with Boundary lines that affect property rights, existing or proposed, such as property lines, lease lines, easement lines, Jurisdictional Lines, Regulatory Lines, including the horizontal and vertical Control necessary to establish such lines.

Additionally, 250 CMR 6.02 applies to the marking or remarking of said lines on-the-ground and those Work Products that relate natural or manmade features to such lines.

(1)Precedence. To the extent that 250 CMR 6.02 may reiterate key aspects of the Laws of Evidence, the intent of 250 CMR 6.02 is to emphasize those aspects of the law, not to create a new standard that would modify or supersede the Laws of Evidence.
(2)Presumptions.
(a) Surveyors are presumed to know the Laws of Evidence pertaining to the location of lines and are presumed to follow the Laws of Evidence when reproducing lines or creating new lines.
(b) Based upon equivalent bodies of Evidence and equivalent treatment of that Evidence, that Evidence should lead each surveyor to substantially equivalent determinations.
(c) When a surveyor agrees to locate a written conveyance, the surveyor also agrees to locate the conveyance in accordance with the laws regulating the interpretations of written conveyances.
(d) When new lines are being defined, those lines are presumed to be tied to Original Lines and/or original monuments authenticated in accordance with the Laws of Evidence.
(e) Historical documents that created Original Lines are presumed to have been based upon a survey, whether or not the survey was of a professional nature or was prepared by a lay person.
(f) When the development of a Work Product is based upon a prior survey, the resulting Work Product is presumed to comply with the provisions of these standards, regardless of the standard of care associated with the prior survey.
(3)Research. Record Evidence of public sources and known private sources shall be examined to sufficient depth and scope such that the surveyor is convinced:
(a) The current description of the subject property and all abutting properties have been identified and acquired.
(b) The plats and surveys describing the subject property and abutting properties have been identified and acquired.
(c) The Operative Document that created each line or point on the subject property, or the best available Evidence of that document, has been identified and acquired.
(d) Conflicting descriptions describing the common lines of the subject property and the abutting property have been identified and investigated.
(e) Scrivener's errors describing the subject property and the abutting properties have been identified and investigated.
(f) Appurtenances and/or encumbrances have been investigated when discovered through normal research procedures.
(g) The source and validity of Regulatory Lines affecting the subject property have been investigated, when applicable.
(4)Fieldwork. Physical Evidence shall be investigated to a sufficient depth and scope such that the surveyor is convinced:
(a) The physical Evidence necessary to base a conclusion has been identified and located.
(b) Any recognizable Evidence of occupation (e.g., fences) has been identified and located at intervals sufficient to delineate the directions and distances of the primary lines and angles.
(c) The visible appurtenances and encumbrances to the subject property have been identified and located.
(d) Apparent encroachments onto the subject property or onto adjacent properties have been identified and located.
(e) Natural and manmade features crossing, near or within the subject property, that help identify the surveyed lines, have been identified and located.
(5)Computations and Analysis. In performing the analysis of the record and physical Evidence, the surveyor shall:
(a) Make interpretations of the record and physical Evidence and draw conclusions based upon the Laws of Evidence.
(b) Evaluate and use the Evidence based upon the original creating units of measurement, not in terms of modern units of measurements, unless a contrary intent is indicated by the Laws of Evidence.
(c) Assign no more weight or dignity to one recited point of a prior survey than any other recited point, unless a contrary intent is indicated by the survey.
(d) Test the mathematical integrity of record Evidence and use the results in a manner consistent with the Laws of Evidence.
(e) Use computer software products responsibly by carefully examining output and making appropriate checks.
(f) Consider parol Evidence whenever the collected Evidence is insufficient to draw a conclusion and, when relied upon, consider obtaining affidavits.
(6)Monumentation. Lines shall be marked on-the-ground such that, in combination with the monuments recovered:
(a) Sufficient monuments exist to enable future surveyors to reliably reproduce the lines as surveyed, even if some of the referenced monuments are compromised over time. Referencing coordinates are not a substitute for setting physical monuments.
(b) The size, composition and material of newly set monuments shall:
1. Be sufficient to minimize the likelihood of disturbance due to acts by mankind or natural causes;
2. Be stable enough to adequately meet the accuracy standards of the survey;
3. Have a life expectancy of 25 years or more under normal circumstances;
4. Be detectable using generally employed surveying techniques; and
5. Be identifiable, with reasonable certainty, as having been set by a surveyor.
(7)Work Products. In addition to those elements common to all survey Work Products noted in 250 CMR 6.01, the following additional requirements are applicable to all Work Products classified under 250 CMR 6.02:
(a) Identify the current record owner of the subject parcel and all abutting parcels thereto by title reference.
(b) Delineate both directly and indirectly measured quantities describing surveyed lines and points with significant figure and decimal place values appropriate to commonly accepted accuracy requirements for such surveys and to provide an adequate means of accurately reproducing said lines or points.
(c) Report the area of each surveyed parcel in appropriate units of measure and number of significant digits to express the value accurately.
(d) Reference other pertinent surveys of record describing the subject premises and any abutting premises.
(e) Provide references to the key Evidence used to base conclusions.
(f) Delineate any Evidence of occupation material to the owner's title.
(g) Delineate visible Evidence of apparent appurtenances and encumbrances.
(h) Delineate visible Evidence of apparent encroachments by abutters onto the subject property and by the owner of the subject property onto adjoining properties.
(i) Clearly distinguish between monuments found and monuments set along with their physical composition and description, which includes their mathematical relationship to the property.
(j) Provide sufficient course and distance redundancy to allow testing for mathematical correctness for the outbounds of the subject property and each parcel contained within the subject property.
(k) Report the actual observed measurements (either directly and/or indirectly) that describe the Evidence appearing on the survey and parenthetically show record measurements for comparison, when appropriate.
(l) Provide a vicinity map or reference the subject property to well-known geographic features, such as street intersections, rivers, or railroads.
(m) Show the location of objects (e.g., streams, fences, structures) that are informative as to the general location of the boundaries of the property.

250 CMR, § 6.02

Amended by Mass Register Issue 1332, eff. 2/10/2017.