51 Ga. App. 47 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1935
This case is a question of title or right to possession of certain lost treasure, between the finder thereof and the owner of the land upon which it was found. Lost and found
“ Fifteen men on a dead man’s chest, Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum,”
brings again to our minds Captain Bill and a certain “seafaring man with one leg.” Buried gold has been the theme of writers, and has given to their writings an entrancing interest, whether the reader be the growing boy or the sedate and settled old man. No one has started to read Poe’s “Gold Bug,” and wanted to lay it down until he had reached the end. Indeed, Georgia’s Golden Isles have been lent an added glamour because of “ Black Beard,” and “Captain Kidd,” and the search for their buried treasure will continue to thrill millions yet unborn.
The plaintiff, the owner of land on which were found 37 pounds of “gold dust and gold bullion,” of the .value of $15,540, brought suit against the finders, to recover the value thereof. The gold was found on the plaintiff’s land “250 j^ards west of the dwelling house on said lands, forty feet south of the public road leading from Frogtown to Silver City, and 250 yards southeast of a large rock by the side of the public road, containing various markings and circles and under a large rock.” We are not informed by the pleadings whether the finders gained their information as to the gold from Captain Bill or Long John Silver. We are informed that they found the treasure, and the owner of the land claims it or its value. The petitioner does not allege in his petition that he was the owner of the gold dust and bullion found, or that it was in its natural state, or that he found the same, but he bases his title or claim on the fact that he was the owner of the land on which the gold was found. It can not be doubted that if the gold found had been ore in its natural state, the ownership of the land would have carried the ownership of the gold, and that another person finding such gold in its natural state would not gain any title thereto as against the owner of the land. “Goods or chattels are
The petition in this case as originally filed alleged that the defendants dug under a large rock and uncovered a treasure trove hidden on the petitioner’s land. By amendment this paragraph was stricken and it was alleged that defendants “dug, mined, and found 37 pounds of gold dust and gold bullion,” of a named value, and that at the time they found this gold j;hey were trespassers on the plaintiffs’land, having been warned not to go thereon. It is unquestionably true that the owner of the land has title to all raw metals and ores in his land, irrespective of his knowledge of their presence. Plaintiff insists in this case that by his amendment he took away from the gold its quality as “treasure trove” and made by his allegation a question for the jury to pass upon and say whether it was treasure trove or not. He seemingly assented in his brief to the proposition that the finder of treasure trove has
Judgment affirmed.