My guess is that pipe cap was made by Grinnell. They had a foundry near here some years ago.
Sounds like a great outcome!My property line story:
When we bought our place our neighbor was at one time the original owner of our land, and he had a super wide easement across our property. The easement amounted to over an acre and cut right through the middle of the property.
I'll spare you all the details (long and drawn out) of issues with the old neighbor, but he passed and the family sold the property to a company.
The company has been the greatest neighbors anyone could ask for.
Turns out the Old man had moved every single property corner 30+ feet in his favor many many years ago around 1940.
He used a very old Idaho farming law (1840 iirc) that said that any farm owner could use 30 feet of any adjoining property to turn mule teams around, and used that to justify his "taking".
Well it's not an active law and the new owners got enough complaints and inquires about "real property corners" that they did a full survey, I offered to pay for my line but they said it was no problem they would pay for it.
Turns out they lost 24 acres in total on all the property lines, I gained 1 1/4 acres out of it.
Oh and they didn't want or need the easement across my property and "sold" it back to me for a really good "price".
So I have great neighbors, with Zero issues and no more easement across my property and gained 2 1/4 acres.
Great advice. I was a surveyor for 20 yrs in Tennessee. Each state has their own laws and regulations to govern licensed surveyors. In Tn since the early 90’s the surveyor’s license number has to be attached to whatever monument they set as a property corner with a minimum size of 1/2” diameter. The description of the survey should describe each and every offset and/or corner monument. location, pointers (if any), size, type and type of identification cap or tag. Look up all documentations you can find. I would be surprised if your 1999 survey description doesn’t describe that monument in more detail. That’s what survey descriptions are for.That is a survey/monument well…the actual marker is under the lid.
OP, there are rules regarding what gets set in the field. Check with the county and they will have recorded maps and various documents that will help you figure out what the monument represents.
I owned a survey firm at one time and have found the county surveyors very valuable in helping discern what field conditions represent.
There are usually notes about what instruments are set in the field (pipe, iron pipe, monument, brass discs and wells (like above) that contain various types of monuments). There are also things like Witness Monuments, Section, township and range monuments, property corners, ROW and more…
That pipe should be identifiable in the county records, including when and who set it and what it specifically represents.
neighbour destroyed his BRAND NEW rider when he cut the grass next to the treeline. Square bar did some serious damage.. like L-shaped blades, shattered spindles.... he 'buried' the bar....yes, it's now 6 FEET below grade. pretty sure them new fancy detectors won't find it. yes, his lawn looks GREAT under the trees !!See what happens when you start cutting line trees !
Not sure what good can come of a marker that cannot be found.neighbour destroyed his BRAND NEW rider when he cut the grass next to the treeline. Square bar did some serious damage.. like L-shaped blades, shattered spindles.... he 'buried' the bar....yes, it's now 6 FEET below grade. pretty sure them new fancy detectors won't find it. yes, his lawn looks GREAT under the trees !!
Nothing good.Not sure what good can come of a marker that cannot be found.
New neighbor? I mean if it’s been there 39 years and I thought there was a chance I would forget about it and hit it with a mower I believe I’d just marked it better or drove a fence post beside it. Thats just me though. I guess as long as both parties agree to drive it 6’ deep ok.It can't destroy any more riders !!!
FYI there's 4 others nearby, it was only the corner one that's now 'vertically challenged. Anyone should be able to draw 2 straight lines, find the intersection and then dig down. it's there,been there for 39 years.
That's a stupid remedy IMHO.neighbour destroyed his BRAND NEW rider when he cut the grass next to the treeline. Square bar did some serious damage.. like L-shaped blades, shattered spindles.... he 'buried' the bar....yes, it's now 6 FEET below grade. pretty sure them new fancy detectors won't find it. yes, his lawn looks GREAT under the trees !!
I have a t-post driven adjacent to all of my corner markers, and I've painted the posts dayglow orange.New neighbor? I mean if it’s been there 39 years if I thought there were a chance I would forget about it and hit it with a mower I believe I’d just marked it better or drove a fence post beside it. Thats just me though. I guess as long as both parties agree to drive it 6’ deep ok.
So do I All my corners have steel fence post beside the actual survey monuments except the natural monuments used such as trees.I have a t-post driven adjacent to all of my corner markers, and I've painted the posts dayglow orange.