The rules of the common law concerning the ownership of dogs are not as consistent and definite as in most other kinds of property. Owing, probably, to the very great variety of species, as well as the differences in their dispositions and habits, they were not considered as having such pecuniary value as to make them subjects of larceny, and for the same reason they were never classified or' dealt with as estrays within any recognized meaning of that term. 1 Blk., pp. 297-298. And it may be well to note that they are not now to be regarded as “stock” within the rules for impounding stock under our present statute applicable. Revisal, sec. 1681.
The position as to larceny has been changed by statute in reference to listed, tax-paid dogs. Revisal, sec. 3501. And it has been very generally understood and held, both in old and in later cases, that dogs are so far the subjects of property that the ordinary civil remedies are available to the owner for their protection, and in this respect the trend of the modern decisions is to regard dogs as tame domestic animals having value.
Dodson v. Mock,
Assuming in the present instance that the dog was really lost and is subject to the principles that usually prevail in reference to lost property, it is the recognized position that the finder, as a bailee without compensation, holds for the benefit of the owner when ascertained, and that no statute of limitations will inure for his protection unless and
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until tbe possession of tbe finder bas become adverse to tbat of tbe owner, and tbis must be established by a demand and refusal of tbe owner or by tbe exercise of some unequivocal act of ownership inconsistent with tbe true owner’s right. Until tbat occurs, no cause of action bas accrued to tbe owner and, by express provision, tbe statute of limitations does not begin to run. Revisal, sec. 360;
Smith v. Durham,
In
Blount v. Parker,
An examination of these authorities and others of like kind will disclose that tbe right of recovery will arise to tbe finder under tbe general equitable principles of indebitatus assumpsit and under circumstances *134 where a request for the expenditures claimed may be reasonably inferred. Chase v. Corcoran, supra.
This being the principle, a demand of tbis kind should not be readily allowed in case of a lost dog, and unless he gave very clear evidence of being spent by hunger or fatigue, and assuredly no such claim could for a moment be sustained on the facts of this record, where the dog was first “found” within a few miles of the owner’s home and with no proper or adequate effort afterwards made to ascertain who the owner was.
There is no error and judgment for plaintiff is
Affirmed.
