Wood v. Pierson

7 N.W. 888, 45 Mich. 313, 1881 Mich. LEXIS 701
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 19, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 7 N.W. 888 (Wood v. Pierson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Pierson, 7 N.W. 888, 45 Mich. 313, 1881 Mich. LEXIS 701 (Mich. 1881).

Opinion

Graves. J.

Pierson sued in replevin and obtained judgment, and Wood and Chapman filed a bill of exceptions and brought error. The subject of the action was a breastpin found by Chapman and claimed by Pierson. Many of the facts are not disputed. Pierson lost at Bay City, July 18, 1878, a small diamond pin, which seems to have separated from the tongue in some unknown way. The circumstances of the loss and the manner in which the body of the pin and tongue became disunited are left unexplained. The metallic setting was a common pattern and the gem had no peculiarities to facilitate its identification by non-experts. Pierson caused a notice to be inserted in the Tribune newspaper published in the city, of this tenor:

“ LOST.
$25 Reward — Lost.—A diamond pin. The finder will be paid the above reward by leaving the same at this office.”

As will be observed the advertisement-neither gave a description of the pin nor suggested who offered the reward. [315]*315Moreover, no means of any kind were provided for showing at the newspaper office the ownership or identity of the pin, or for connecting any pin which might be produced with the claim contained in the notice, nor was any money left with which to pay the reward, nor any provision whatever made for paying it there.

Chapman found a pin which was subsequently ascertained to be the one in question. His first impression was, when he picked it up, that it was a cheap trinket, but on second thought he decided to show it to a jeweler. Dirt was adhering to it, and attention was at once drawn to the fact that, although the tongue was wholly missing, the rivet was secure and firmly in its place. The query naturally arose as to how this condition of the pin and the absence of the tongue might be accounted for. But in order to find out whether it had any material value, Chapman» took it immediately to Wood, the other defendant, he beifig a jeweler, and was by him told that the stone was a diamond, and that a diamond pin had been advertised in the Tribune.

On getting this information, Chapman went at once to the newspaper office and saw Mr. Shaw, the editor and manager, who showed him the advertisement and informed him who the author was. Mr. Shaw referred him for anything further to Mr. Pierson, and he at once carried the pin to Pierson’s store and called for that gentleman. He was absent. Chapman was going from the city the next morning, and he told a clerk, Mr; Martin, that he had found a pin, and as he was going away, he would leave it at Mr. Wood’s to be identified and returned to the owner. He then went to Wood’s and there left it with instructions to give it to the person who should identify it and pay the reward, and to no one else. This was Friday evening, July 26th. The next .morning he went from the city on business and only returned the Monday following at noon. During his absence Pierson called on Wood and asked to see the pin in order to identify it, and Wood declined and required him to identify it first. Pierson attempted to do so, but he failed to satisfy Wood, and in the judgment of another jeweler to whom both referred, and who had the [316]*316advantage of inspecting both the tongue and body of the pin ■and of comparing them, the physical appearances and indications were strongly against Pierson’s claim.

In respect to what was said at these interviews there was want of harmony in the testimony. Pierson requested that another jeweler at Bay City who, he said, had formerly repaired the ¡fin, and had a plaster cast of the stone and could identify7 it, might be permitted to see it. But "Wood proposed that this gentleman should call with his nfiould and he, Wood, could .then see for himself whether it fitted or not. The gentleman came but had no cast, and was unable to give a particular description, and Wood declined to show the pin to him. Pierson then proposed that the pin should be sent at his expense for the purpose of identification to Mr. Smith of Detroit, who, he said, had mounted it. This was declined and Wood suggested that Pierson should write to Smith for a description, an expedient he observed which would be attended with less risk, but this proposal was unacceptable to Pierson.

The testimony disagreed as to the incidents of the effort ■ to get the question of identification settled through Mr. Smith, and in regard to what took place between Pierson and Chapman after the return of Chapman on the 29th. On Tuesday, the 30th of July, Pierson sued out the writ of replevin and went with the sheriff to Wood’s store to get the pin. It was not produced and indeed was not then in the store, although the fact was not made known by Mr. Wood. It is unnecessary to recite the different versions of what took place. On the next morning, Wednesday the 31st, Mr. Chapman carried the pin to Detroit and satisfactorily ascertained at Mr. Smith’s that it was the one advertised for by Mr. Pierson. ITe returned on Thursday, and on Friday, the day after, met the officer and handed the pin to him with the request to get the reward. Pierson refused to pay it, and on giving the usual replevin bond received the pin from the officer.

It has seemed proper to go into this detail on account of the singularities of the case. Tet it must not be assumed that [317]*317the outline given lends the exact coloring to the transaction which would be perceptible to a jury on hearing the whole testimony. At the first glance every one must admit that as to one feature of the case, at least, there can be no doubt. The facts are conclusive that the parties dispensed with the newspaper office as a place for doing what should be necessary in consequence of the reward. Pierson in the first place neglected preparations which were incumbent on him as a legal preliminary to holding Chapman to a compliance at that place, and Chapman did not insist on performance there. Both parties proceeded on the tacit understanding that whatever was to be done should be done elsewhere. So much is too clear to admit discussion and neither party is at liberty to claim any advantage on account of the omission to transact or perform at the printing office.

According to the common law the finder of goods lost on land becomes proprietor in case the true owner does not appear. And meanwhile his right as finder is a perfect right against all others. But if the true owner does appear, whatever right the finder may have against him for recompense for the care and expense in the keeping and preservation of the property, his status as finder only does not give him any lien on the property. Y et if such owner offer a reward to him who will restore the property, a lien thereon is thereby created to the extent of the reward so offered. This doctrine in favor of a lien in such circumstances is so laid down in Preston v. Neale 12 Gray 222, and authorities are cited for it. Among them is the leading case of Wentworth v. Day, by Chief Justice Shaw, reported in 3 Metcalf 352, and which is approved and followed by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in Cummings v. Gann, 52 Penn. St. 484, adopted as correct by Story in his work on Bailments, §§ 121a and 621a. Parsons has given it his sanction by incorporating it in the text of his work on Contracts (vol. 3, p. 239, 6th ed.), and Edwards presents it as «settled law in his treatise on Bailments, §§ 20, 68 (2d ed.).

Under this principle the admission is unavoidable that when Pierson claimed the pin, on the footing of his notice [318]

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Bluebook (online)
7 N.W. 888, 45 Mich. 313, 1881 Mich. LEXIS 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-pierson-mich-1881.