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28 October 2010 / Carl Calvert
Issue: 7439 / Categories: Features , Expert Witness , Profession
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X marks the spot

Maps, land & land title—are they synonymous? asks Carl Calvert

Certainty of land tenure is a prerequisite of land economy. However the extent of the land is not always defined with an adequate degree of certainty. What follows here is a look at the similarities and differences in both requirements and actualities of land title mapping in England & Wales and France.

A good definition of land usually begins with the use of a topographical map. In the British Isles there are the Ordnance Surveys (OSGB, OSNI and OSI) while in France there is the Institut Géographique National (IGN) The French “cadastre” is at a larger scale but its objective is for taxation purposes and not to define legal extents of ownership.

The OS provide mapping at 1:25000 (the same as the carte IGN) but importantly the OS provide mapping at 1:1250 in urban areas, 1:2500 in rural areas and 1:10000 in mountain and moorland areas. The Land Registry in England and Wales (LR) use these large scale OS topographical maps as

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DAC Beachcroft—Paul Brehony

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Partner appointed to lead family and matrimonial department in Leeds

Slater Heelis—Helen Marsh

Slater Heelis—Helen Marsh

Commercial property team expands in Manchester with partner appointment

NEWS
SRM Recruitment has been announced as the headline sponsor of the Law Society RFC Festival of Sport 2026, which will take place on 20 September at Richmond Athletic Association. The specialist legal search firm joins the event as organisers prepare to welcome more than 110 teams across five sports, including rugby sevens, netball and five-a-side football
The civil justice landscape could be heading for a shake-up, with reform of the Solicitors Act 1974 gathering pace
Global mobility is transforming family law, creating new challenges around jurisdiction, assets and child arrangements
A series of procedural developments could have significant practical consequences for litigators. Writing in NLJ this week, columnist Stephen Gold highlights important updates ranging from digital court reforms to family procedure and admissions of liability
As family structures evolve, the law may face difficult questions about inheritance rights for those in polyamorous relationships
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