1 Or. 86 | Or. | 1854
The instruction of the court, it is said, was erroneous. No doctrine is better settled at common law than that the finder of lost property is'not entitled to a reward for finding it, if there be no promise of such reward by the owner. (Brinstead v. Buck, 2 Bl. R. 1117; Nicholson v. Chapman, 2 H. Bl. R. 254; 2 Kent's Com. 356; 5 Met. 352.) Some of the authorities maintain that the finder of lost property is entitled to recover from the owner thereof his necessary and reasonable expenses in the finding and restoration of said property. (Amory v. Flinn, 10 Johns. 102; 2 Kent's Com. 356.) Other authorities seem'to take the ground that the finder has no legal right to any thing from the owner for his trouble and expense in finding lost property. Brinstead v. Buck, Nicholson v. Chapman, before cited, appear to stand upon this principle. Chief-Justice Eyre, speaking upon this subject in the latter case, says, “ Perhaps it is better for the public that these voluntary acts of benevolence from one man to another, which are charities and moral duties, but not legal duties, should depend altogether for their reward upon the moral duty of gratitude.” Chief-Justice Shaw, in Wentworth v. Day, 5 Met. 352, says that “ the finder of lost property on land has no right of salvage at common law.” Where one person gratuitously performs an act of kindness for another, the law, as a general rule, does not recognise the right to a compensation for such' act.
Judgment affirmed.