Are the measurement results from a private land survey always submitted to the land registry office by the surveyor?
After our surveyor confirmed the boundary markers, we received an invoice from the land registry office for registration. This confused us a bit because the measurement data matched the boundary markers exactly. Why does this information still need to be sent to the land registry office?
After our surveyor confirmed the boundary markers, we received an invoice from the land registry office for registration. This confused us a bit because the measurement data matched the boundary markers exactly. Why does this information still need to be sent to the land registry office?
Escroda schrieb:
The cadastral office is involved when surveying work reveals conditions that differ from the cadastral records and need to be corrected (for example, a boundary marker is tilted and is adjusted back to its original position) or when the survey creates new conditions (for example, a new boundary is established).
For engineering surveys, such as building staking or boundary notifications, the cadastral office is usually not involved.This is exactly my problem. I had a licensed surveyor measure two boundary markers on one side of my property because, in my opinion, at least one of the markers is not aligned correctly. The surveyor confirmed all the boundary markers, stating everything is fine and there have been no changes for 25 years. Then I received this invoice. It is not about the money for me, but about the entry: "Recording of the results in the land registry, number for identified and new boundary markers: 2." To me, this sounds like one boundary marker was confirmed and the other is new. That was exactly what I wanted to find out.
Hello ratlos00,
According to your descriptions, the procedure would be different in NRW (free of charge, without entering the survey results into the cadastral register), so it would be helpful to know the federal state. In this context, it would also be interesting to know what the publicly appointed surveyor included in their invoice or what was discussed in the boundary report.
Best regards,
Dirk Grafe
According to your descriptions, the procedure would be different in NRW (free of charge, without entering the survey results into the cadastral register), so it would be helpful to know the federal state. In this context, it would also be interesting to know what the publicly appointed surveyor included in their invoice or what was discussed in the boundary report.
Best regards,
Dirk Grafe