Loucks v. Gallogly

1 Misc. 22, 23 N.Y.S. 126
CourtAlbany City Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1 Misc. 22 (Loucks v. Gallogly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Albany City Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Loucks v. Gallogly, 1 Misc. 22, 23 N.Y.S. 126 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1892).

Opinion

Wilkinson, J.

It appears herein that plaintiff, about two years ago, discovered fifty dollars in bills lying on a desk in the Rational Exchange Bank of Albany where defendant was teller, and handed the money to defendant to keep for the owner. The owner not appearing, plaintiff made demand of defendant who refused to hand over the amount, whereupon this suit was brought to recover the same, plaintiff claiming to have right thereto as finder of lost property. It appears that [23]*23the desk upon which the money was found by plaintiff is within the banking-house, and is there for use of customers of the bank, and that others also use it.

The law is well settled that the finder of lost property has a valid claim to the same against all the world except the true owner, and generally, that the place in which it is found creates no exception to the rule. Armory v. Delamirie, L Smith’s L. C. 679; Bridges v. Hawkesworth, 7 Eng. Law & Eq. 424; Tatum v. Sharpless, 6 Phila. 18; New York, etc., R. Co. v. Haws, 56 N. Y. 175.

The finder’s title is good even as against one in whose house or on whose premises the lost article may be at the time. Thus the finder was held entitled to recover where he was a passenger on a train and the article was found by him in the car where it had been left by a passenger, but the company claimed it. New York, etc., R. Co. v. Haws, 56 N. Y. 175; and so where a conductor or brakeman found money in a car. Tatum v. Sharpless, 6 Phila. 18. It was likewise held where a customer found a purse on a shop floor and the shopkeeper claimed it (Bridges v. Hawkesworth, 7 Eng. Law A Eq. 424); and where a servant in a hotel found a roll of bank notes in the public parlor and informed her master who suggested that it belonged to a transient gupst, and received the money from her to give to him, on being found not to belong to the guest and the servant demanded it from the master who refused to return it, the servant was allowed to recover. Hamaker v. Blanchard, 90 Penn. St. 377. In these cases it appears that the circumstances under which the property was found were held to indicate .the articles had been accidently and unconsciously dropped, and therefore lost.

But it is held that articles left by strangers or customers in a shop or other place of business where it is probable they will return and claim them, and where the situation of the articles indicates that they were voluntarily placed where found, and inadvertently left or forgotten, are not considered as lost within the rule.stated, and the proprietor' of the premises where the property is found is held to have the better [24]*24right to hold the same for the owner. Lawrence v. State, 1 Humph. 228; 34 Am. Dec. 644; McAvoy v. Medina, 11 Allen, 548; 87 Am. Dec. 733 Kincaid v. Eaton, 98 Mass. 139.

The question here is whether the money found by plaintiff was lost property ” in the legal sense of the term. It has been held that in order to constitute legal losing, the thing must have been actually lost by the owner and not merely mislaid; that is, he must not voluntarily and purposely have , laid it away in a certain place, for a time, with the intention of retaking it, and then have forgotten where he had placed it; but it must have involuntarily and accidentally as respects the owner gotten out of his possession.

In the case of McAvoy v. Medina, 11 Allen, 548, a customer found a pocket book which was lying on a table in a barber shop, and gave it to the barber to advertise for the owner. The owner never appeared and the barber refused, to give it to the finder on his demand. The finder then brought an action against the barber to recover it. The court in its opinion said: But this property is not under the circumstances to be treated as lost property in that sense in which a finder has a valid claim to hold the same until called for by the true owner. This property was voluntarily placed upon a table in the defendant’s shop by a customer of his who accidentally left the same there and has never called for it. The plaintiff also came there as a customer and first saw the same and took it from the table. The plaintiff did not by this acquire the right to take the property from the shop, but it was rather the duty of the defendant when the fact became known to him to use reasonable care for the safe-keeping of the same until the owner should call for it.” The opinion cites the cases of Bridges v. Hawkesworth, and Lawrence v. State, and referring to the latter says: “ The court there take a distinction between the case of property thus placed by the owner and neglected to be removed, and property lost. It was there held that to place a pocket book upon the table and to forget to take it away is not to loso it in the sense in [25]*25which the authorities referred to speak of lost property.” “We accept this as the better rule and especially as one better adapted to secure the rights of the true owner.”

In Kincaid v. Eaton, 98 Mass. 139, a pocket book was found within a banking house on a desk provided for the use of customers (as in the case under consideration) and it was held that the discovery of the pocket book, voluntarily placed on the desk in the bank, was not the finding of lost property. In People v. M'Garren, 17 Wend. 460, where a man placed his whip on the counter in a store and went away forgetting to take it, the court held the whip was not lost property, and the taking and concealing of it by the storekeeper was held larceny.

Whilst the place of finding is held immaterial if the property be actually lost, yet it is of importance as bearing on the question whether the property was really lost or merely left.

In the cases last cited, where the money or property was found on the table of a barber shop, on the desk of the banking house, on the counter of a store, the property was not considered lost, on the ground, that the place where it was found indicated that the owner had put it there purposely and voluntarily ; therefore it was not lost and could not be found, in the legal sense.

As to the roll of bills in question found by plaintiff on the banking-house desk (one at which persons stand to write) what, in the absence of any direct proof, are we to conclude as an inference of fact from the situation of the money when discovered by him? Is not the inference stronger and more reason, able than any other that it was consciously and voluntarily placed there by the owner while temporarily engaged writing or otherwise at the desk, and then inadvertently or thoughtlessly left? Does not the fact that the money was discovered on the desk and not on the-, floor, indicate that it had been voluntarily placed there with the intention of retaking it, rather than that it had unconsciously mid accidentally fallen from the person of the owner? If it had been found on the floor, as in the cases referred to, where a customer found a purse on [26]*26the shop floor, and where the servant in a hotel found a roll of bank notes on the floor of the public parlor, that fact would lead to the conclusion that it had been involuntarily dropped by the owner, and hence lost.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Misc. 22, 23 N.Y.S. 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loucks-v-gallogly-nyalbanycityct-1892.