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Related Articles: Litigation
Findes Keepers, Losers Weepers?
You are walking along a busy street when suddenly the bright
gleam of metal catches your eye, reflecting off a small coin
wedged into a crack in the aging sidewalk. You reach down
to retrieve the coin, which appears to be made of gold. You
immediately run to the nearest jeweler, who confirms your
hopes: the coin is made of solid gold. Great! A windfall!
"Finders keepers, losers weepers" right?
Well, maybe.
The laws governing lost property are rather complicated. Any
property that you find on the sidewalk falls into one of three
categories: abandoned, lost, or mislaid. Title to "abandoned"
property, in which the owner has voluntarily relinquished
all ownership, vests in the finder - you can keep it. The
catch is that you will have to show that the owner intended
to give up all title and possession.
A finder of "lost" or "mislaid" property has a more limited
right of ownership. Property is "lost" when the owner has
accidentally parted with its possession and does not know
where to find it. Property is "mislaid" when the owner intentionally
places it somewhere, but thereafter forgets where it is. In
the case of "lost" property, a finder of the property is entitled
to possession except against the original, true owner. In
the case of "mislaid" property the owner of land on which
the property was found has a right to possession, not the
finder of the property.
In both cases, "lost" and "mislaid," the finder has a legal
duty to try to find the true owner, if he has reasonable means
of doing so. And if the owner does return to recover his property,
the finder may be liable for any damage to the property resulting
from his negligence.
So, can you keep the coin? Well, maybe.
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