Land Surveying: Ethics of a Land Surveyor

land surveyorNot a lot of people realize that land surveying is actually a fusion of art and science. Yes, different equipment is available for the surveyor’s use, but the land surveyor still has the last say on the results.

Despite this though, a land surveyor still has several guidelines to follow. If you’ve had an experience with a dishonest surveyor, or are wary about hiring one, this article should be able to help you out.

What ethics should a land surveyor have?

A surveyor should always start a project with fairness in mind. Your client as well as everybody party involved in the project is expecting you to be fair and just so make the best possible assessment with the evidences handed to you.

Before a project commences, the surveyor assigned to the project should come forward if there’s a possibility of conflict of interest. This is very important to preserve their relationship with the client. A surveyor should avoid professional impropriety by declaring involvement or any prior affiliations with any of the involved parties. It is also the surveyor’s responsibility to keep any information regarding the project as well as the client confidential even after the project is done.

Several cases were reported where the surveyor overcharged the client. This usually happens when the client doesn’t know anything about land surveying. A land surveyor running his business with ethics will never do this. Fortunately, there are more honest land surveyors than dishonest ones.

A surveyor should charge a project according to the length of time needed to get it done as well as the level of technical complexity required for it. For the surveyor’s sake as well as the client, one should never sign plans, certificates or reports unless these are personally supervised by him. Not only is this unfair on the client’s side, doing so could put his reputation in danger should the results get disputed and he doesn’t know anything about them.

Just like with other industries, a land surveyor should never undermine the capability of other surveyors or the people from the land surveying industry.

New technologies come up for land surveying all the time. When a surveyor knows that a project is beyond his skills, he should tell the client about it. There’s no sense accepting a project only to come up with a subpar result. It will only hurt your business and your reputation.

Surveyors should also be responsible enough to study, do a thorough research, practice and utilize his skills before offering clients a new service. If a surveyor is new to flood determination, for instance, then he needs to make sure that he knows how to perform it before offering it to his clients.

Surveyors do not work alone. They usually have a staff to support them. The land surveyor needs to be responsible for their actions at all cost, for actions or work carried out by them.

author avatar
Surveyor

More Posts

Civil engineer reviewing site plans at a riverfront redevelopment project showing environmental engineering work near a riverbank with early stage development activity
civil engineering
Surveyor

Riverfront Projects: Environmental Engineering Risks

Riverfront land in Grand Rapids looks like a great place to build new homes, shops, and offices. The Grand River runs through the city and makes these areas feel valuable and active. At first look, these sites seem simple. The land is open. The location is good. Plans for new

Read More »
Construction manager overwhelmed with multiple tasks and project approvals causing delays in construction management
civil engineering
Surveyor

Construction Management Slows Down When Teams Are Overloaded

A project can look ready to go. Crews show up. Materials arrive. Then things start to slow down. Days pass. People wait. No one seems to have a clear answer. This is where construction management starts to break down. It usually does not happen out in the field. It happens

Read More »
Utility layout plan showing how utilities are designed in land development projects
civil engineering
Surveyor

How Utility Plans Affect Land Development Projects

Starting a project feels exciting. You have the land, the idea, and the goal in mind. Everything seems ready to move forward. But then, something slows you down. In many cases, the delay doesn’t come from permits or design. Instead, it comes from something less obvious—utility planning. If you’re working

Read More »
Excavator digging into soil during a stormwater design site inspection to check ground conditions
civil engineering
Surveyor

Stormwater Design: What Happens When Testing Fails

You find a piece of land that looks perfect. It’s flat, dry, and easy to picture your project on. So you move forward with your plans. Everything feels on track—until something unexpected slows things down. The issue? The site fails infiltration testing. This situation happens more often than most people

Read More »
Fallen tree damaging power lines in a residential area, showing why engineering services are important for infrastructure planning and risk prevention
civil engineering
Surveyor

How Power Outages Are Changing Engineering Services

Recent storms across Michigan left thousands of people without power. Homes went dark, businesses paused, and some areas dealt with flooding at the same time. At first, it looked like a weather issue. However, these events pointed to something deeper. They exposed weak spots in how sites, utilities, and systems

Read More »
Large data center facility with power lines, roads, and surrounding land showing how urban engineering supports city infrastructure
civil engineering
Surveyor

Why Data Centers Are Challenging Urban Engineering

Big tech projects often make the news. Recently, people in West Michigan have talked about something different. It is not about housing or retail projects. This time, the debate is about large data centers planned near the Grand Rapids area. These buildings store and process huge amounts of digital data.

Read More »