Opinion by
On March 9, 1913, the plaintiff, upon entering the smoking car of a passenger train of the defendant company, noticed upon a seat he was about to occupy, a book or purse which he picked up, and believing it had been overlooked by one of. two passengers who left the train at that station, notified the conductor of the fact and handed the package to him to be delivered to the rightful owner. Not finding him before the train started, the plaintiff and conductor examined the book and found it to contain $83.23 in money, but nothing to identify
On June 25th, following, the plaintiff brought this action of assumpsit, having first demanded the return of the pocketbook and contents, and on trial before a jury, recovered a verdict. '
Neither plaintiff nor defendant claim to be the owner of the book or contents; the question for decision being, which of the parties is entitled to the possession of the property.
The rule of law in this case is not clearly defined, owing to possible inferences to be drawn from the facts in special cases, and refined distinctions are often made to determine whether the article found has been lost, or mislaid by the owner. The subject has been considered by many judges, and the general rule appears to be tha't “Goods are lost in legal sense of the word, only when the possession has been casually and involuntarily parted with, as in the case of an article accidentally dropped by the owner, if the owner of an article purposely lays it down, intending to take it up again immediately, and he forgets it, and leaves it where it is laid (e. g. a purse left on the counter of a shop), or if he lays it away and then forgets where he puts it, such article is not lost, but merely mislaid, and therefore the incidents of loát goods do not attach,—and further, that the place where an ar-”1 tide may be found will not affect the doctrine, that the finder has a valid claim to it as against all the world, except the true owner, though the place may be a material fact in determining whether .the article has been lost in the legal sense of the term: 19 Am. & Eng. Enc. of L., Lost Property.
The facts in this case do not aid us in drawing any satisfactory conclusion, as to whether this purse was lost or mislaid, even if such a distinction would be necessary
Ever since the case of Armory v. Delamire, 1 Strange 505, 1 Sm. Leading Cases 471, where it was held that the finder of a jewel might maintain trover for the conversion thereof by a wrongdoer, the right of the finder of lost property to retain it against all persons except the true owner has been recognized. This case has been uniformly followed in England and America, and the law upon this point is well settled: Danielson v. Roberts, 64 L. R. A. 526; Iowa v. Hayes, 37 L. R. A. 116 and notes; Huthmacher v. Harris, 38 Pa. 491; Trancil v. Seaton, 28 Grabt. 601, s. c. 26 Am. Repts. 380; Bowen v. Sullivan, 62 Ind. 281, s. c. 30 Am. Repts. 172.
Where the finder of a lost article has delivered it to a third person to be kept for the owner, or for the finder in caso4he owner does not claim it, the finder, on the refusm of the bailee to return the article may recover it, ; itymy claim has in the meantime been made by the true owner: 19 Am. and Eng. Enc. of L. 580, and cases cited.
The railroad company, in whose possession the lost purse now is, as bailee of the plaintiff, .owed to the real owner no higher or greater duty than the plaintiff. The law fixes the responsibility of each to account to the real owner for the found article. The case was properly decided by the trial judge in his opinion filed.
The judgment is affirmed.
