Powell v. Four Thousand Six Hundred Dollars ($4,600.00) U.S. Currency

1995 OK CIV APP 87, 904 P.2d 153, 66 O.B.A.J. 3084, 1995 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 102, 1995 WL 582429
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 30, 1995
DocketNo. 84445
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1995 OK CIV APP 87 (Powell v. Four Thousand Six Hundred Dollars ($4,600.00) U.S. Currency) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powell v. Four Thousand Six Hundred Dollars ($4,600.00) U.S. Currency, 1995 OK CIV APP 87, 904 P.2d 153, 66 O.B.A.J. 3084, 1995 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 102, 1995 WL 582429 (Okla. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

CARL B. JONES, Judge:

Late in the evening of February 14, 1994, Martin and Robyn Hoel and their children, while driving home from a Valentine’s Day dinner, came upon what they thought was money scattered along a Logan County road. The Hoels knew friends who lived nearby, and quickly drove there; and, while Mrs. Hoel and the other children stayed behind, [154]*154and Mrs. Hoel contacted the authorities, Mr. Hoel and his eldest son drove back to where they had seen the money.

Shortly thereafter, a deputy sheriff from Logan County arrived on the scene, and Mrs. Hoel returned there. Mr. Hoel assisted the deputy in his search for the money, which yielded $4,600 in hundred dollar bills. Before he departed, both Mr. and Mrs. Hoel told the deputy that they wanted the money if the authorities could not locate its rightful owner.

Over six months later, the Logan County Sheriff commenced this action to obtain permission to deposit the found money into the Sheriffs Training Fund. Appellants appeared and objected. At the subsequent evi-dentiary hearing, Mr. Hoel testified that he and his son returned to the place they had discovered the money in order “to secure the area,” by which he meant that he wanted to “[mjake sure nobody else comes along and picks it up ... [W]e wanted to make sure nobody touched it.”2 Mrs. Hoel returned with her friends to the scene. The deputy arrived, and learned from the Guthrie police that no robbery had been reported. Apparently Mrs. Hoel picked up one or two of the bills, which the deputy examined for signs of forgery. Deciding that the money was indeed genuine legal tender, the deputy then instructed the Hoels not to pick up any more money, because he wanted to check it for fingerprints and drug traces. [Tr., pp. 15, 19-20.]

Appellants rely on positive and common law defining a finder’s rights to assert their claim to the money. By statute, if one chooses to take charge of lost goods he finds, he acquires both the rights and the obligations of a bailee for hire of the property owner. 15 O.S.1991 § 511.3 See Moral Insurance Co. v. Cooksey Tire & Battery Service, 285 P.2d 223, 226 (Okla.1955). And, it is a basic maxim of the law that a finder of property acquires rights in found property which are superior to all claims except that of the rightful owner. State v. Clark, 8 Okla. Crim. 432, 128 P. 161, 163 (1912).

Appellee contends this case should be governed by 22 O.S.1991 § 1325, which provides that a sheriff may apply for court authority to deposit money “which has come into his possession” into the Sheriffs Training Fund.4 Appellants, by their own admission, assert no prior ownership of the money (i.e., prior to their discovery on the night of February 14, 1994), and so Appellee argues that the “owner” of the money has not claimed it, and Appellants cannot “prove ownership,” within the meaning of § 1325(A) and (E), respectively.

Neither Appellants nor Appellee dispute that the money was truly “lost,” i.e., that somehow the original owner(s) parted with the money involuntarily and unintentionally, and that he or she or they did not know that it lay scattered along the road where the Hoels discovered it. See Eldridge v. Herman, 291 N.W.2d 319, 323 (Iowa 1980). Two issues are presented here for us to resolve: first, whether the finder of lost property may qualify as an “owner” of the property, and so obtain sufficient legal rights in the property [155]*155which would defeat a sheriffs application under 22 O.S.1991 § 1325; and, second (assuming we give an affirmative answer to the first issue), whether the Hoels qualify as “finders” of the money.

I.

The first issue has not been previously decided in this state. However, we conclude that the Appellants, if they qualified as finders of the money, acquired a sufficient ownership interest in the money to be “owners” of the money as that term is used in the unclaimed property statute. The Legislature did not intend to negate the common or statutory law granting legal rights to finders of lost property. By interpreting the unclaimed property statute in this manner, both legal principles at issue here can be harmonized without undue violence to either. The Alabama Court of Civil Appeals reached a similar result in Smith v. Purvis, 474 So.2d 1131 (Ala.Civ.App.1985), in which the court rejected the sheriffs assertion of an unclaimed property ordinance as a defense to two brothers’ action against him for conversion. The plaintiffs had found a boat lying beside an Alabama highway and took possession of it. Coming upon two deputy sheriffs, they stopped to discuss the boat, and the deputies (over the brothers’ objection) impounded the boat and held it to await a claim from the true owner. Yet, when no such claim was presented, the sheriff apparently refused to relinquish the boat to the finders! In Alabama, as here, a statute exists which renders one who takes charge of lost property a depository for the true owner.5 Recognizing that such statute could be read to conflict with the local claimed property ordinance, the court concluded that the two acts could be harmonized by a construction

that it was the intention of the legislature in the one instance to provide for the disposition of lost property found by a citizen who did not wish to keep it and in the other instance to authorize a citizen who found lost property and wanted to keep it to 'do so against the wishes of everyone except the true owner.

Smith, 474 So.2d at 1133.

II.

. Having decided that a finder of lost property acquires rights which are superior to the sheriffs rights under the unclaimed property statute, we must next determine whether Appellants qualify as “finders” under the circumstances presented in this case. It is stated by general authorities that the finder of lost property is one who first reduces it to possession, e.g., see 1 Am.Jur.2d, Abandoned, Lost, and Unclaimed Property § 18 at. 18 (1962), or at least such possession of the thing as its nature and circumstances will permit, 1 36A C.J.S., Finding Lost Good's § 2 (1961). Section 511 of title 15 expresses a related notion in its opening clause; thus, in order to obtain the rights of a finder under that statute, one must “take charge” of it.

In this case it is undisputed that Mr. Hoel and his eldest son returned to where the money had been discovered in order to prevent any third person from interfering with recovery of the money. We should not penalize the Appellants for their legitimate concern that the money might have some evidentiary value. In fact, the deputy who subsequently appeared on the scene directed Appellants not to pick up the money, precisely because of the possibility it might bear fingerprints or trace evidence. Under these rather unique circumstances, we hold that Appellants “took charge” of the money before the deputy sheriff arrived, and so acquired the rights of a finder under our statutory and common law. See Eads v. Brazelton, 22 Ark. 499, 511, 79 Am.Dec. 88 (1861), discussed in Hener v. United States, 525 F.Supp.

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1995 OK CIV APP 87, 904 P.2d 153, 66 O.B.A.J. 3084, 1995 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 102, 1995 WL 582429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powell-v-four-thousand-six-hundred-dollars-460000-us-currency-oklacivapp-1995.