This seminar will bring to the attendee an understanding of how the surveying profession is in a state of flux. The instructor will show how the acceptance of the past will not be sufficient or meet the needs of the future. Suggestions will be made as to how the surveyor can change to meet the demands of the future. Students are expected to complete two technical exercises in Microsoft Excel and brief three legal cases using the links provided.
2. IS SURVEYING A
PROFESSION?
This question has been asked often, from medieval times until today
Under early English law there were only four recognized professions:
•
•
•
•
Legal
Medicine
Theology
Ferrymen
WHY IS SURVEYING A PROFESSION?
4. THE THREE
DISCIPLINES:
Traditional surveying is not about creating new
boundaries, but retracing existing boundaries, then
applying the proper legal principles
Some believe that surveying is nothing more than a
technical avocation
Some of the most important skills in surveying include
the ability to create and maintain business relationships
5.
6. EARLY
COMPUTATIONS
• The early surveyors relied on printed tables of numbers for
computations
• “Latitude and departure” tables were used early on and when
calculators were developed, the cosine and sine tables became the
standard
7. CHARACTERISTICS OF
RANDOM ERROR ARE….
• Small errors occur more frequently than large
ones
• Negative and positive errors occur with the
same frequency (symmetry)
• Very large errors do not occur – counted as
blunders if they do
11. TYPES OF BUSINESS
ORGANIZATIONS
1. SOLE PROPRIETORSHIP: individual owner, complete
managerial control
2. PARTNERSHIP: two or more owners share profit/loss
3. CORPORATION: legal entity created to conduct business
4. LIMITED LIABILITY COMPANY: hybrid of partnership and
corporation
5. “Under the table moonlighting”
12.
13. WHAT IS LAW
•A rule of reason promulgated by authority
and supported by sanctions
•A prediction of what the courts will do
•A striving by force towards justice
14. THE
SURVEYOR’S
ROLE IN
LITIGATION
IDENTIFY PROFESSIONAL STANDARDS
AND DETERMINE IF A “COMPETENT”
SURVEYOR BREACHED THOSE STANDARDS
• Did the land surveyors involved in the suit follow standard
procedures?
• Did the land surveyors involved in the suit follow state law?
• Did the land surveyors involved in the suit breach any ethical duties?
15. QUALIFYING AS AN
EXPERT
• The court serves as a “gate
keeper” to determine which
experts are, in fact, qualified to
testify
• Purpose of the “gate keeping”
function is to ensure that testimony
is based on objective, wellestablished, scientific knowledge
• FRCP 702