Corner Post definition

Corner Post means any stone or other land marker set flush with the surface of the ground and used to indicate the location of a Lot;
Corner Post means any stone or other marker set flush with the ground and used to indicate the corner of a lot.

Examples of Corner Post in a sentence

  • TM2.71.78 Grounding TM2.71.09 Yard and Fencing EACH 1 SSIG1120 Construction - Inground Grounding Install Substation Fence Corner Post Grounding Install 4/0 copper ground wire from Substation ground grid to fence corner post.

  • TM2.71.78 Grounding TM2.71.09 Yard and Fencing EACH SSIG1120 Construction - Inground Grounding Install Substation Fence Corner Post Grounding Install 4/0 copper ground wire from Substation ground grid to fence corner post.

  • The above description was prepared from “Plan Showing A Standard Boundary Survey For the Inhabitants of the Town of Sanford” dated April 24, 1997, last revised November 10, 2017, and surveyed by Corner Post Land Surveying, Inc.

  • Possession shall be given at closing on the Corner Post Hunting Lodge.

Related to Corner Post

  • Corner unless otherwise defined, means a property corner, or a property controlling corner, or a public land survey corner, or any combination of these.

  • SR means state route and has the same meaning as state highway as defined in this section.

  • Graywater means untreated wastewater that has not been contaminated by any toilet discharge, has not been affected by infectious, contaminated, or unhealthy bodily wastes, and does not present a threat from contamination by unhealthful processing, manufacturing, or operating wastes. “Graywater” includes, but is not limited to, wastewater from bathtubs, showers, bathroom washbasins, clothes washing machines, and laundry tubs, but does not include wastewater from kitchen sinks or dishwashers. Health and Safety Code Section 17922.12.

  • Outboard motor means a detachable self-contained propulsion unit, excluding

  • Corner lot means a lot situated at the intersection of and abutting upon two streets, or upon two parts of the same street, the adjacent sides of which street or streets (or, in the case of a curved corner, the tangents at the street extremities of the side lot lines) contain an angle of not more than one hundred and thirty-five (135) degrees. In the case of a curved corner, the corner of the building lot shall be that point on the street line nearest to the point of intersection of the said tangents.