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By Nashville Indiana Title Company
The Legal Description on Your Deed Is Not Your Street Address When you get to closing on a Brown County property, you'll notice your deed doesn't say "4...
When you get to closing on a Brown County property, you'll notice your deed doesn't say "425 South Van Buren Street." It says something that looks like a math problem crossed with a treasure map. Here's what that language actually means, why it matters more than your mailing address, and what to check before you sign.
The street address is a convenience. It routes your packages and helps the pizza from Big Woods find your porch. But an address can change, get reassigned, or point to the wrong parcel entirely if the county renumbers a road. It is not what transfers ownership.
The legal description is. It's the precise, court-recognized definition of the exact piece of ground you're buying. When we record your deed at the Brown County Recorder's office, that description is what makes your ownership official and enforceable. If there's ever a question about where your land starts and stops, nobody pulls up your mailing address. They pull up the legal description.
So when it looks intimidating on the page, that's actually the point. It's supposed to be exact.
Most legal descriptions around here fall into one of two styles, and which one you get usually tells you something about the property itself.
Lot and block descriptions show up on properties inside a recorded subdivision or platted area, including a lot of homes in and around Nashville proper. It reads something like "Lot 12 in the such-and-such Addition to the Town of Nashville, as recorded in Plat Book 3, page 40." That's clean and easy. It points to a map already on file with the county, and the map does the heavy lifting of showing exactly where your lines run.
Metes and bounds descriptions are the ones that make people squint. These are common on the wooded acreage and cabin properties that draw so many buyers out here. Metes and bounds describes your land by walking its perimeter in words, using directions, distances, and physical markers. You'll see phrases like "thence North 42 degrees East 210 feet to an iron pin," or a reference to the centerline of a creek, or "beginning at a stone in the Northwest corner of the Southeast Quarter of Section 14."
That last part, the section and quarter language, comes from the old public land survey system that carved Indiana into townships and sections generations ago. If you're buying rural ground near Brown County State Park or out toward Gnaw Bone, your description probably leans on it.
The wooded, rolling terrain that makes Brown County beautiful is exactly what makes some legal descriptions worth a careful read. A description written in 1961 might reference a fence line, a large oak, or the bank of Salt Creek. Trees fall. Fences rot. And creeks, famously, move.
That doesn't mean anything is wrong with the property. It just means the words on paper and the ground under your boots need to line up, and confirming that is part of what a title search does. We trace the description back through the chain of ownership to make sure each deed passed along the same parcel, that nothing got dropped or double-counted along the way, and that your description closes properly (meaning the perimeter it walks actually returns to where it started). A description that doesn't close is a flag worth resolving before you own it, not after.
If a property has been split off from a larger tract over the years, which happens constantly with rural acreage, the newer legal description should carve out exactly the right piece. This is one of those places where local knowledge earns its keep. We've read a lot of Brown County deeds, and we know how the older ones tend to be written.
If your parcel runs along Salt Creek, Bean Blossom Creek, or any of the smaller waterways threading through the county, the legal description may use the water as a boundary. That's normal. It also ties into riparian rights, which govern what you can and can't do along the bank.
Because a creek's location can shift over decades, a description that says your line runs to "the centerline of the creek" behaves differently than one giving a fixed distance and direction. Neither is a problem. But you want to understand which one you have and what it means for where your land actually ends, especially if you're picturing a dock, a footbridge, or just knowing where your neighbor's property begins. The EPA's overview of stream and shoreline basics is a decent starting point if you want to understand how waterways behave over time.
Read your legal description at closing. I know it looks like something only a surveyor could love, but you don't need to decode every bearing and distance. You need to confirm a few plain things.
First, make sure it's clearly a description of your property and not a leftover from a previous transaction. Second, if you've had a survey done, ask us to confirm the survey matches the legal description on the deed. Those two documents should tell the same story. Third, if anything references acreage, note that legal descriptions often say "more or less" after the acreage figure. That phrasing is standard and expected. It means the boundaries themselves control, not the round number, so a listing that said "5 acres" and a deed that says "4.8 acres more or less" are usually describing the same reality.
And if you read your description and something genuinely doesn't sit right, say so before you sign. That's what we're here for. Fixing a description question at the closing table is simple. Sorting it out years later, when you go to sell or refinance, is a lot less fun.
Your address is where you live. Your legal description is what you own. At closing, both should be right, but only one of them is doing the legal work.