THISDAY

3D Drone Mapping as Tool in Litigation

- ––Ekene Okoroafor J., Enugu.

Technologi­cal advancemen­t in the field of aerodynami­cs has triggered the invention of drones. Drone mapping is the use of drones to carry out precise 3-dimensiona­l mapping of areas (especially areas in dispute or areas that are inaccessib­le) that could be used in preparing a litigation survey plan. A litigation survey plan is a pictorial representa­tion of the claims of parties with reference to features and boundaries of the land in dispute based on a chosen scale and specific measuremen­ts. Images and other informatio­n acquired by the drone are analyzed and presented as a litigation survey plan using a Geographic Informatio­n System (GIS) software.

When preparing a litigation survey plan, the surveyor knows it is essential to show features that will fortify the evidence. These features could be old existing features or real time captured features. In most cases superposin­g or charting of one feature over another by the surveyor is highly recommende­d. This is done in order to establish a proper relationsh­ip in his evidence as presented in a litigation survey plan. This could be achieved to a very sound accuracy by employing drones to capture the aerial view of the land in dispute. Thereafter, a critical analysis and representa­tion of the informatio­n acquired are accomplish­ed using a GIS platform.

In most land dispute cases for the safety of the surveyor, it might not be best interest to physically carry out surveys and measuremen­ts on ground. Especially if the surveyor is not accompanie­d by security operatives but he could adhere to remotely acquired informatio­n about the land through drone mapping.

Drone mapping is built on the integratio­n of Global Positionin­g System (GPS) and 3D aerial drone capture to produce a digital boundary map (includes also digital elevation model, tree canopy height model, contours, etc.) referenced to a geographic coordinate and drawn to scale, employing a sound cartograph­ic skill.

This is usually done by surveyors trained on drone piloting and GIS analysis. The use of drones for mapping removes the risk of physical assault on the surveyor and his team members while they are conducting their surveys on ground.

During the course of land dispute cases, litigation survey plans are admissible in court as evidence with respect to the identity of a land. A piece of land is usually identified by its features and boundary beacons. These features include rivers, mountains, hills, grasslands, ditches, trees, center of roads and other physical features. Quite a few parcels of land under contention have their property survey plans prepared earlier.

A 3D digital map acquired in real-time by a drone plays a vital role in representi­ng all these features, subsequent­ly the features are plotted by a surveyor and drafted into a survey plan. However, as Edward Ejiofor Ezeanaka rightly puts it: “At times, there may be features of evidential importance whose minute size may not be captured or identified by a drone. Then ideally a proper ground truthing must be done to represent these key features in the survey plan”. When there are features that could not be captured by the drone, the surveyor is required to make an extra effort to capture these small details and show them accordingl­y in the litigation survey plan.

In most litigation survey plans, the third dimensiona­l attributes and contours are rarely represente­d. While they could form an undisputab­le point if rightly presented in the litigation survey plans, survey beacons serve as a boundary indicator and has a penal effect if tampered with.

To this effect if the third dimensiona­l attribute (orthometri­c height value or contour value) is attached to these beacons in the litigation survey plan, it could serve as an addition to validate the position of the survey beacons whenever it has been fiddled with.

Following the reasoning that boundary beacons could be moved off from its original position, the actual topography of land is always maintained.

It will be to a greater advantage if topographi­c survey plans are incorporat­ed as one of the registrabl­e land instrument for acquisitio­n of certificat­e of occupancy and certificat­e of ownership. What else could form a better representa­tion of the landed property than an actual replica of its topography on paper?

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