Diggemall said:
So, if I owned a piece of property in PA, and didn't fence it, post it, or mow it, I'm supposed to believe that the law would side with the guy that wandered on in, started searching for tangible items buried on the property, and removed (stole) whatever items he found to be to his liking ?
Not trying to be a pain here, but I gotta believe there is PA law that allows a landowner to be able to reasonably expect to be able to leave his property unattended AND unmolested.
What does PA law say about theft ?
Diggem'
I'm sure we could create a hundred different scenarios in which you could make me look like some thief.
truckinbutch said:
In WV the fine print says that it is the obligation of the noncustodial party to have written authorization from the landowner to trespass for any reason and it is the trespasser's obligation to know where boundaries are .
Some young 'Possum Cops' got their legs strapped last year for trying to tell us locals that our law was the same as PA .
IF YOU DON'T OWN IT AND IT AIN'T WORTH ASKING FOR >>>THEN YOU GOT NO RIGHT TO BE THERE !
This was/is my point. State to state, laws are different.
If I'm going along your property, out in the country, it's unmowed, unfenced and no signs....AND IT IS CLEARLY ABANDONED.....and I cannot tell anyone owns this...CLEARLY ABANDONED...piece of property...yes the law will be on my side for removing burried finds. This isn't stealing or trespassing. And I don't feel like a thief or a trespasser. If I did, I wouldn't really enjoy this hobby thinking I was breaking the law and have to constantly look over my shoulder. I'm not ashamed of my hobby, nor do I do anything illegal. That's what makes it fun.
On the other hand, if the property is simply unmowed, but I see any indication that it has been mowed in recent history, I let it be.
Like I keep saying...you have to use common sense in this hobby. If there are
ANY indications that property is actively owned, I leave it alone. I think I'm intelligent enough and lived long enough to know the difference.
If I see abandoned property like you mention, unmowed, etc. and there is a new car sitting in the field....I stay away. Common sense!
I'm not hunting in the back 40 of some farmers field because he's left it go fallow a couple years and an old barn foundation is sitting there. In Pennsylvania, it's probably fenced anyhow. But again, common sense.
I'm not a thief nor a trespasser. You can split hairs from here til tomorrow, but the law is the law. Just because your state limits this ability for you, don't try to make me out the bad guy.
I've been detecting happily for close to 25 years and intend to continue this hobby til I can no longer.
I'd be the first one to fight for private property rights...and I have when I lost part of my property through "Eminent Domain". I know how being violated feels. So I have my criteria determining what appears used and what appears abandonded. My property was clearly marked, fenced and used. I had state and federal laws on my side. It just took one crooked judge.
As i pointed out above....I've seen abandonded property POSTED! In the middle of nowhere. So yes...you can leave your property and expect it to be unmolested....IF YOU POST IT PROPERLY! And obviously, here in Pennsylvania, landowners post their private property if they expect it to remain unmolested. I respect signage, abandoned looking or not.
On the other hand...just splitting hairs...say you have a blighted house in a small community, holes in the roof, windows missing, grass overgrown, trash strewn everywhere and a big ole family of rats living it....and you're just some bum slumlord paying the taxes and thinking you are impervious to the local codes. Are you gonna fight your private property rights when the community comes along with a wrecking ball and takes it from you? And because you let this place deteriorate for 30 years without putting fifty cents into it for upkeep, except the taxes...and expected everyone living next to it to tolerate this eyesore and health hazzard, after the bulldozer is done clearing the debris, are you going to cry when I come along with my metal detector and find where the yard was and take some coins? Because......you can bet your last dollar, that's exactly what I'll do and have done and will continue to do. And I will feel good about it.
I'm sure some could come up with a hundred reasons the owner let the place fall into such disrepair. There is no excuse. There are too many programs out there and options to prevent this. If you cannot afford the upkeep, get rid of it. Period! And very frankly, I have absolutly no respect for a property owner that subjects others to such disrespect.....and neither do the neighbors, the community group that fought to demolish it or the police that had to do extra patrols because of fear of arson or druggies.
If my tax dollars are used to rid eyesores and health hazzards, as far as I'm concerned, it's now public, reguardless of whether you hold title or not. Because......you still are not maintaining the vacant lot. You can't even post one sign saying No Trespassing on a city lot?
Around here, it becomes squatters rights if the property is next to you. I maintain a lot next to me because of the absentee landowner. I won't live in a jungle. The property on the other side of me is slowly deteriorating but I still maintain the grounds....I like my neighborhood nice. A young guy owns the place next to me...I met him...a real...(not suitable to print). Hasn't put a dime into the unoccupied triplex in the last several years. He bought it just a year or so earlier. Just keeps hauling more trash into the building. A private dump. Unfortunately, I'll have to wait years, watching the place slowly crumble to the point of no return before anything gets done about it and him. And it is in a sad state of disrepair already.
With ownership comes responsibility. Post it, maintain it, fence it...whatever you need to do to keep and prove ownership. Otherwise, don't cry when I come along looking for coins and relics.
Al