Surveying
Boundary Law
Test Bank (v10.0) |
PSM
Jurisprudence
Exam Prep &
Axioms
PART 0: THE NAVIGATOR
The following Table of Contents provides a structural map of the cognitive requirements for the
Florida Professional Surveyor and Mapper (PSM) Jurisprudence Examination. This document is
organized to transition the practitioner from foundational regulatory syntax to the complex
synthesis of judicial precedent and statutory evolution.
Section Content Focus Cognitive Tier
PART I: THE PRIMER Critical Axioms & Statutory Foundational
Foundation
PART II: THE TEST BANK The 60-Question Elite Gauntlet Mastery
Tier 1: Questions 1–15 Foundational Syntax & Level 1: Knowledge
,Section Content Focus Cognitive Tier
Application
Tier 2: Questions 16–35 Complex Application & Level 2: Analysis
Simulation
Tier 3: Questions 36–60 Grandmaster Synthesis & Case Level 3: Evaluation
Law
PART I: THE PRIMER
Mastering this test bank is the final gate between technical proficiency and professional
licensure; it transforms the applicant from a measurer of lines into a guardian of the Florida
cadastre. By internalizing these 60 scenarios, the practitioner develops the professional intuition
required to navigate the high-stakes intersection of property law, administrative regulation, and
judicial interpretation.
The "Critical Axioms" Cheat Sheet
● Footsteps of the Creator: The physical monuments set by the original surveyor during
the creation of a boundary constitute the true boundary as a matter of law, regardless of
subsequent measurements or mathematical discrepancies.
● The Sovereign Interface: All tidally influenced navigable waters are bounded by the
Mean High Water Line (MHWL), while non-tidal navigable waters are bounded by the
Ordinary High Water Mark (OHWM); these lines represent the limit of state sovereignty.
● The Mandate of Supervision: "Responsible Charge" is non-delegable; the Professional
Surveyor and Mapper (PSM) must exercise direct control and personal supervision over
every technical judgment reflected in the final signed and sealed product.
● Hierarchy of Evidence: In boundary retracement, the priority of calls follows a
descending order: (1) Natural Monuments, (2) Artificial Monuments, (3) Distances, (4)
Bearings, and (5) Area.
● The Jurisdictional Anchor: All professional surveying activities in Florida are governed
by the Board of Professional Surveyors and Mappers (BPSM) under the Department of
Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS).
PART II: THE ELITE TEST BANK
Tier 1: Foundational Syntax & Application (Questions 1–15)
Q1: A newly licensed Professional Surveyor and Mapper (PSM) is establishing a firm in
Tallahassee. According to the administrative structure defined in Florida Statute Chapter 472,
which state agency holds the PRIMARY regulatory authority over the licensure and discipline of
the profession? A) The Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR). B) The
Department of Environmental Protection (DEP). C) The Department of Agriculture and
Consumer Services (FDACS). D) The Florida Department of Transportation (FDOT).
● The Answer: C (The Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: While DBPR regulates many professions, the 2009 statutory shift
moved surveying and mapping oversight specifically to FDACS.
, ○ B is incorrect: DEP regulates environmental and coastal permitting (CCCL) but
does not govern the professional license of the surveyor.
○ D is incorrect: FDOT sets standards for right-of-way mapping but does not hold
disciplinary authority over individual licenses.
The Mentor's Analysis: Professional regulation in Florida is localized within FDACS to align
surveying practices with the state's broader mission of land resource management and
consumer protection. Understanding the bureaucratic parent agency is the first step in
maintaining jurisdictional compliance. Professional/Academic Intuition: Your license is an
agreement with the Commissioner of Agriculture; follow the FDACS rules to keep it.
Q2: During the 2026 legislative session, an amendment to Section 472.007 revised the
composition of the Board of Professional Surveyors and Mappers. Which of the following MOST
ACCURATELY describes the current membership requirement for the Board? A) Eleven
members, all of whom must be registered surveyors with 10 years of experience. B) Nine
members, including six registered surveyors, one photogrammetrist, and two laypersons. C)
Five members appointed by the Florida Surveying and Mapping Society (FSMS). D) Seven
members, consisting entirely of government-employed surveyors.
● The Answer: B (Nine members, including six registered surveyors, one
photogrammetrist, and two laypersons.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: The board is limited to nine members to maintain administrative
efficiency; 10 years is not the universal experience requirement for all seats.
○ C is incorrect: The Governor, not FSMS, appoints board members, though FSMS
may recommend candidates.
○ D is incorrect: The inclusion of laypersons (consumer members) is a non-negotiable
statutory requirement for public transparency.
The Mentor's Analysis: The board's composition is a deliberate blend of technical expertise
and public representation. The photogrammetrist seat reflects the modernization of the
profession from traditional chain-and-transit methods to remote sensing and digital geomatics.
Professional/Academic Intuition: The presence of laypersons ensures the Board's
primary focus remains public welfare, not professional protectionism.
Q3: A technician is performing field work for a boundary survey. According to the definitions in
Section 472.005(6), which of the following activities is EXPLICITLY EXCLUDED from the
definition of "Responsible Charge"? A) Evaluating the validity of recovered monuments. B)
Direct control over the mathematical closure calculations. C) Routine work as a chainperson,
rodperson, or instrumentperson. D) Selection of the appropriate equipment for a high-precision
survey.
● The Answer: C (Routine work as a chainperson, rodperson, or instrumentperson.)
● Distractor Analysis:
○ A is incorrect: Evaluating monuments requires professional judgment and is a core
component of responsible charge.
○ B is incorrect: Mathematical oversight is a technical duty that falls squarely under
the PSM's responsibility.
○ D is incorrect: Methodology and equipment selection are professional decisions that
define responsible charge.
The Mentor's Analysis: Responsible charge is the intellectual soul of a survey. The law
distinguishes between "routine work"—the mechanical act of measuring—and the "responsible
charge"—the cognitive act of professional judgment and supervision. Professional/Academic
Intuition: If the task does not involve a technical decision that impacts the final