Banned_Princess
Senior Member
I am going to agree that we need specifics of this event, and we should get them before voting whether the tenant does or does not have a claim to the unspecified, potentially valuable whatever it is.
From the footnotes of:ki23, is this from Joseph Singer's Property Law, §1.5, Notes and Questions, perhaps?
Most states have statutes on found property now, so that the old "lost, mislaid, abandonned" property disputes are not what they once were. Usually the finder must turn over the property to the police, who will return the property to the finder if no one else claims it.
It might help to see if Pennsylvania has such a statute.
4. It is well settled that in Pennsylvania a finder of lost property has a valid claim against all but the true owner. Hamaker v. Blanchard, 90 Pa. 377 (1879). Property is lost when the owner involuntarily parts with it through carelessness, negligence, or inadvertence. Id. Property is abandoned where the owner voluntarily and intentionally relinquishes all rights to it. Pocono Springs Civic Association, Inc. v. MacKenzie,446 Pa.Super. 445, 667 A.2d 233 (1995).
And, yet, the case itself discussed:Right, tranquility. A finder can have a valid claim to found property against all but the true owner of the property.
And to find the true owner, the finder generally is expected to turn the found property over to the police, who will release the property to the finder if the true owner does not claim it (or has intentionally abandonned it) within a certain number of days.
Statutes now replace some of the previous uncertainty as to the ownership of found property. It is often no longer a dispute where "finders keepers" is an element.
The statues codify the cases in most instances, they don't always make up new law. However, even with THIS state's statutes, a determination still has to be made between lost or abandoned.Booher argues that the decision in Conemaugh Township should be reversed, clarified or limited to the facts of that case, because it eliminates the distinction made in the Escheat Act between lost and abandoned property by treating money found by a police officer as lost if claimed by another, but as abandoned if claimed by the officer. The trial court opined that the evidence indicated that the money in question was either lost or abandoned property, but the distinction was not relevant to its decision in this matter. We agree.
In Conemaugh Township, a police officer found $20,000 in cash on a roadside during a routine traffic stop. The common pleas court rejected testimony by the subject of the traffic stop as not credible and declared the police officer to be its rightful owner. The motorist appealed, arguing that the trial court erred by not finding that he had lost the cash and was its rightful owner. The Conemaugh Township court reversed and remanded the matter to the trial court with instructions to direct the actions necessary to effect an escheat of the funds to the State Treasurer.
In reaching its decision, the Conemaugh Township court first observed that neither Carr nor Walker fully examined the public policy implications of their result.5 The Conemaugh Township court next noted that "[a]nything that clearly tends to injure the public confidence in the purity of the administration of the law indisputably offends public policy." Id. at 994 (citation omitted). The court reviewed the great responsibility vested in municipal police officers and the fact that the law requires them to adhere to standards higher than those in many other occupations. Finally, the court concluded that allowing police to claim property found in the course of their official functions creates an obvious conflict with these duties, which could erode essential public trust. For these reasons, the Conemaugh Township court held that a police officer cannot claim ownership of property found during the performance of his official duties.
From the escheat statute.Well, sure, there are certainly discussions to be had on lost, mislaid and abandonned property, but the answer to the question posed by 3junebugs was, based on the limited amount of information provided, correctly answered by Ozark.
Right now, based on the limited amount of information provided by 3junebugs, there is no real need to get into whether the property was lost, mislaid or abandonned. The property will become 3junebugs' property if the true owner does not claim it.
Laws and case law may need to be reviewed in the future, should a dispute arise over who the true owner is. But right now, 3junebugs cannot sell the property because she is only a finder of the property and not the true owner.
Where will I find the turning over of lost property requirement?"PROPERTY" shall include all real and personal property, tangible or intangible, all
legal and equitable interests therein, together with any income, accretions, or profits
thereof and thereon, and all other rights toproperty, subject to all legal demands on
the same. The term shall not include property deemed lost at common law.
I'm merely pointing out the law rather than making things up.You can probably find it in the Pennsylvania statute I mentioned earlier which, if you really want to look stuff up, would be a good thing to look up. Maybe try Pa Con Stat §3924?
I don't know, tranquility, what you are wanting here. If you want to say Ozark is wrong based on what little information we have been given, and if you want to say that 3junebugs can sell the property she found, go ahead.
Or, as in the case cited, the officer:For the purposes of this statute, "reasonable meaures" can be seen as turning the found property over to the police.
Some states require, under statute, to turn the money over to authorities under criminal laws. The state under discussion may not. I say may because such statues can be well hidden in many areas and I have not done an exhaustive search. But, everything I read seems to indicate they are not there in this state other than in the escheat statutes that don't apply to "lost"...um...stuff. (As by definition it would not be "property" under those statutes.)On April 10, 1998, while on duty, Booher found $7,000 in cash in the middle of Belleauwood Boulevard in the Borough of Trafford. Booher waited in the area for approximately ten minutes, but did not notice anyone that might be connected with the money or any form of criminal activity. Booher returned to the police department and placed the money in a locked evidence drawer. He went back to the scene but saw nothing that would enable him to determine the owner of the money.
None of this is the case. The issue would be unchanged if the house was purchased. The possessor of the property (as in real estate) is the one who would gain some rights in certain situations. We don't have any knowledge as to if the owner of the property was the owner of the items or knowledge of where the items were found to indicate such. (Say, in the attic, behind a wall, buried in a box, wherever. Besides, what "lost" property is depends on many things.) The only thing that may be applicable is that as the value of the property increases, the definition of what effort is reasonable increases. It is not going to be a crime for the waste disposal company to recycle plastic bottles tossed in the trash without trying to find the owner. That might change if it is an Ipad. It would certainly change if it were a dufflebag full of money.This is very simple to figure out.
As stated, "And to find the true owner'
Op KNOWS who the owner is.
Op need to contact him and give back the items.
First thing the police is going to ask, "Do you any idea who this belongs to?
They reply, " We rent, could belong to the LL".
What do you think police will tell them at this point?
The ONLY way that anyone can keep items in a house is when you buy the house, and not rent. Than all that is yours, lock, stock and barrel.
Let's not.. . . . Let's make up facts for a moment and pretend. . . .
The first thing you should do is contact the property owner and see if the items belong to him. If the LL doesn't claim them, he might be able to give you information as to previous tenants who might own the items in your possession. After a reasonable search without results, I would think you could become owners without the threat of any claims against you for the property. Of course this is an opinion.If the items were lost (by someone other than the property owner) and not abandoned then the property owner has no better claim to them then you do. You are in possession of the items now, you did not take them from the property owner, and he can't take them from you. A property owner does not have some special 'finders-keepers' right that you don't have.
Of course if they were left there by the property owner then of course they don't belong to the tenant. If they were abandoned there by someone else before(or after) the property owner took possession of the real estate then they probably do belong to the property owner. But- if items were lost there by someone other than the property owner, it is not so clear that the items belong to the property owner anymore so than the tenant.