Finders vs. Landowners
1.1. Finders vs. Landowners
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
When property is found on another's land, the law determines ownership by classifying the property as lost, mislaid, abandoned, or treasure trove, with each category assigning different rights to the finder versus the landowner.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- Core rule for finders: A finder of property has rights superior to everyone except the true owner—but this rule has important exceptions based on where and how the property was found.
- Classification matters: Whether property is "lost" (unintentionally parted with), "mislaid" (intentionally placed and forgotten), "abandoned," or "treasure trove" determines who gets possession.
- Landowner vs. finder: For mislaid property, the landowner/occupier has superior rights; for lost property, the finder generally prevails even if found on another's land.
- Common confusion: The place where property is found does not always determine the outcome—what matters is whether the original owner parted with it intentionally or accidentally.
- Fit and justification framework: Judges deciding hard cases first identify rules that "fit" existing law (statutes, precedents), then choose the rule that best "justifies" the law's purposes (fairness, policy).
📦 The four categories of found property
📦 Lost property
Property is "lost" when the owner involuntarily and unintentionally parted with it through neglect, carelessness, or inadvertence, and does not know where it is.
- The key is involuntary separation: the owner did not mean to leave it behind.
- The finder acquires a right to keep it against all the world except the true owner.
- Where found does not matter: even if found on someone else's land, the finder's right is superior to the landowner's.
- Example: A chimney sweep's boy finds a jewel (Armory v. Delamirie); a customer finds banknotes on a shop floor (Bridges v. Hawkesworth)—in both cases, the finder prevails over the shopkeeper/landowner.
📦 Mislaid property
Property is "mislaid" when the owner intentionally placed it somewhere and then forgot to retrieve it.
- The critical distinction: the owner deliberately put it down (not accidentally dropped).
- The landowner/occupier has superior rights to the finder.
- Rationale: the true owner is likely to return to the place where they left it; the landowner acts as a gratuitous bailee.
- Example: A pocket-book left on a table in a barber shop (McAvoy v. Medina)—the barber, not the customer who saw it first, is entitled to hold it for the owner.
- Example: $38,310 in a cardboard box hidden above a ceiling tile in a motel room (Terry v. Lock)—the box was dusty and concealed intentionally for security, so the motel owner prevails over the workers who found it.
📦 Abandoned property
Property is "abandoned" when the owner voluntarily forsakes possession or leaves it without hope of recovering it.
- If truly abandoned, it becomes the property of the first occupant (the finder).
- Difficult to prove: courts rarely find abandonment unless there is clear evidence the owner gave up all claim.
📦 Treasure trove
Treasure trove is gold, silver, coin, or their paper representatives, hidden or concealed (often in the earth or a private place) so long ago that the owner is probably dead or unknown.
- Carries "the thought of antiquity."
- Title belongs to the finder against all the world except the true owner.
- Example: Pre-historic boat embedded in soil (Elwes v. Brigg Gas Co.)—belonged to the landowner as part of the soil, not the lessee who discovered it.
🏠 Landowner's rights and responsibilities
🏠 When does a landowner possess things on the land?
- A landowner possesses everything attached to or under the land (e.g., minerals, objects embedded in soil).
- For unattached objects on the surface, possession is less automatic.
- The landowner must have actual control and a manifest intention to exercise control over things on the premises.
- Example: Rings embedded in mud at the bottom of a pool (South Staffordshire Water Co. v. Sharman)—the water company had control over the pool and its contents, so the employee who found the rings held them for the company, not himself.
🏠 Public vs. private areas
- If property is found in a public part of the premises (e.g., a shop floor open to customers), the landowner may have less claim.
- But the cases disagree on how much weight to give this factor.
- In Bridges v. Hawkesworth, the court said the place found "makes no legal difference," yet later cases tried to distinguish it by saying the notes were in a "public" area.
🏠 Landowner as bailee
- When a landowner takes possession of mislaid property, they become a gratuitous bailee with a duty to use ordinary care and return it to the true owner.
- The landowner must defend custody against everyone but the true owner and is liable for misdelivery.
⚖️ Key cases and their holdings
⚖️ Armory v. Delamirie (1722)
- Facts: Chimney sweep's boy found a jewel, took it to a goldsmith's shop; the apprentice removed the stones and returned only the socket.
- Holding: The finder has a property right that enables him to keep the jewel against all but the rightful owner.
- Significance: Established the foundational rule that a finder has superior rights to everyone except the true owner.
⚖️ Bridges v. Hawkesworth (1851)
- Facts: A traveler found a parcel of banknotes on the floor of a shop, handed them to the shopkeeper to hold for the owner; three years later, no owner appeared.
- Holding: The finder is entitled to the notes; the place where they were found (inside the shop) makes no legal difference.
- Reasoning: The notes were never in the custody of the shopkeeper or "within the protection of his house" before they were found—they were accidentally dropped (lost), not intentionally placed.
⚖️ McAvoy v. Medina (1866)
- Facts: A customer in a barber shop saw a pocket-book on a table, picked it up, then laid it back down; the barber took it.
- Holding: The barber (landowner) is entitled to hold it, not the customer (finder).
- Reasoning: The pocket-book was voluntarily placed on the table by a customer who forgot it—it was mislaid, not lost. The finder acquired no right to take it from the shop.
⚖️ Hamaker v. Blanchard (1879)
- Facts: A hotel servant found three $20 bills in the public parlor, gave them to the hotel proprietor to return to a guest; no owner claimed them.
- Holding: The servant (finder) is entitled to the money, not the hotel proprietor.
- Reasoning: The money was accidentally lost (not voluntarily placed), so the general rule applies: the finder prevails. There is no presumption that money found in a hotel belonged to a guest unless there is evidence to support it.
- Don't confuse: An innkeeper's liability for guests' property does not automatically give the innkeeper superior rights to found property over an honest servant.
⚖️ Hannah v. Peel (1945)
- Facts: A soldier stationed in a requisitioned house found a brooch in a crevice on a window frame; the owner of the house had never occupied it and had no knowledge of the brooch.
- Holding: The finder is entitled to the brooch.
- Reasoning: The brooch was lost (not mislaid). The defendant never had physical possession or control over the premises, never knew of the brooch, and had no prior possession. Following Bridges v. Hawkesworth, the finder prevails.
⚖️ Terry v. Lock (2001)
- Facts: Workers renovating a motel found $38,310 in old, dusty currency hidden in a cardboard box above a ceiling tile.
- Holding: The motel owner is entitled to the money.
- Reasoning: The money was mislaid, not lost. The box was intentionally placed in a concealed location for security, then forgotten. The manner of concealment (carefully hidden, covered in dust, accessible only by removing ceiling tiles) supports the inference that it was placed there deliberately.
🧩 How judges decide hard cases: Fit and justification
🧩 The basic framework (Dworkin)
- When the law is unsettled, judges use two criteria: fit and justification.
- Fit: Which possible rules are consistent with existing statutes, precedents, and constitutional provisions?
- Justification: Of the rules that fit, which is the best rule—which is most consistent with the normative theory that justifies the law as a whole?
🧩 Fit: Does the rule match existing law?
- A rule "fits" if it is consistent with (or required by) statutes, binding precedent, and the legal landscape.
- Example: If a statute mandates contributory negligence, a judge cannot adopt comparative negligence—only contributory negligence fits.
- If no statute or precedent compels a choice, multiple rules may fit, and the judge moves to justification.
🧩 Justification: Which rule is best?
- The judge asks: "What normative theory best justifies the existing law in this area?"
- Then: "Given that justification, which rule best serves the law's purposes?"
- Principle: arguments based on fairness, rights, and deontological reasoning.
- Policy: arguments based on consequences, incentives, and utilitarian reasoning.
- Example: If tort law is justified as a system of compensation and risk-spreading, comparative negligence may be better than contributory negligence because it spreads risk more broadly.
🧩 Application to found property
- Fit: Courts look to precedents like Armory, Bridges, McAvoy, and Hamaker to identify possible rules.
- Justification: Courts consider policies like protecting true owners, rewarding honest finders, encouraging landowners to safeguard property left on their premises, and promoting certainty.
- Different classifications (lost vs. mislaid) reflect different judgments about what the original owner likely intended and where they are likely to look for the property.
🔍 Common confusions and distinctions
🔍 Lost vs. mislaid: the intent test
- Lost: owner parted with possession unintentionally (dropped, forgotten without deliberate placement).
- Mislaid: owner intentionally placed the item somewhere, then forgot to retrieve it.
- The distinction turns on whether the owner meant to put it down in that spot.
- Example: Notes dropped on a shop floor → lost. Pocket-book placed on a table → mislaid. Money hidden in a box above a ceiling tile → mislaid (placed for security).
🔍 Place of finding: does it matter?
- General rule: The place where property is found does not change the finder's rights if the property is lost.
- Exception: If property is mislaid, the place matters because the landowner/occupier has superior rights.
- Confusion in the cases: Some courts (e.g., South Staffordshire) tried to distinguish Bridges by saying the notes were in a "public" part of the shop, but the Bridges court itself said place makes no legal difference.
🔍 Landowner's knowledge
- A landowner does not need to know about the object to have a superior claim—if the property is mislaid, the landowner's right arises from their control over the premises and their role as bailee.
- Example: In Terry v. Lock, the motel owner never knew about the money, but still prevailed because it was mislaid.
🔍 Servant/employee as finder
- If a servant or employee finds property while working for an employer, they find it for the employer, not themselves.
- Example: In South Staffordshire, Sharman found rings while cleaning a pool for the water company—he held them for the company, not himself.
- But in Hamaker, the hotel servant who found money in a public parlor was entitled to it because the money was lost (not mislaid) and the general finder's rule applied.
🔍 Treasure trove vs. old hidden money
- Treasure trove requires antiquity—the property must have been hidden so long that the owner is probably dead or unknown.
- Modern hidden money (even if old and dusty) is usually classified as mislaid, not treasure trove.
- Example: In Terry v. Lock, the court noted the money did not have the "characteristics of antiquity" required for treasure trove.
📊 Summary table: Who prevails?
| Property type | Definition | Finder's rights | Landowner's rights | Key case |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lost | Involuntarily parted with; owner does not know where it is | Finder prevails over landowner and all others except true owner | Landowner has no superior claim | Bridges v. Hawkesworth, Hannah v. Peel |
| Mislaid | Intentionally placed, then forgotten | Finder must turn it over to landowner | Landowner prevails; acts as bailee for true owner | McAvoy v. Medina, Terry v. Lock |
| Abandoned | Owner voluntarily forsakes with no intent to reclaim | First occupant (finder) becomes owner | No claim unless landowner is first occupant | (Rarely found in practice) |
| Treasure trove | Gold/silver/coin hidden with antiquity; owner unknown/dead | Finder prevails over landowner | Landowner has no superior claim | (Common law rule; rarely applied in modern cases) |