| 1920 - 496 pages
...where the Court said that "To lose is not to place or put anything carefully and voluntarily in the place you intend and then forget it: it. is casually...will was not employed in placing it there. To place a pocketbook, therefore, upon a table, and to omit or forget to take it away, is not to lose It in the... | |
| John Davison Lawson - 1884 - 366 pages
...carefully or voluntary in the place you intend and then forget it ; it is casually and involuntary to part from the possession ; and the thing is then...will was not employed in placing it there. To place a pocket-book, therefore, upon a table and to omit or forget to take it away, is not to lose it in the... | |
| 1920 - 956 pages
...644, Is this declaration: "To lose is not to place or put anything carefully and voluntarily in the place you intend and then forget it; it is casually...under circumstances to prove to the finder that the owner'* will was not employed in placing it there. To place a pocketbook, therefore, npon a table,... | |
| Abraham Clark Freeman - 1889 - 1018 pages
...propriety to have lost them. To lose is not to place or put anything carefully and voluntarily in the place you intend, and then forget it; it is casually...owner's will was not employed in placing it there ": Lawrence v. State, I Humph. 229; 34 Am. Dec. 644. The distinction to be noted is between the cases... | |
| 1889 - 968 pages
...propriety to have lost them. To lose is not to place or put anything carefully and voluntarily in the place you intend, and then forget it. It is casually...owner's will was not employed in placing it there." Lawrence v. State, 1 Humph. 229. The distinction to be noted is between the cases in which the thing... | |
| Oregon. Supreme Court, William Wallace Thayer, Joseph Gardner Wilson, Thomas Benton Odeneal, Julius Augustus Stratton, William Henry Holmes, Reuben S. Strahan, George Henry Burnett, Robert Graves Morrow, James W. Crawford, Frank A. Turner, Bellinger, Charles Byron - 1889 - 648 pages
...propriety to have lost them. To lose is not to place or put anything carefully and voluntarily in the place you intend, and then forget it; it is casually...to part from the possession, and the thing is then usuallv found in a place or under circumstances to prove to the Smler that the owner's will was not... | |
| 1889 - 908 pages
...intend, and then forget it. It ia casually and involuntarily to part from the possession; and the tiling is then usually found in a place or under circumstances...prove to the finder that the owner's will was not emploved in placing it there." Laioi\iice v. State, 1 Humph. 229. The distinction to be noted is between... | |
| International Correspondence Schools - 1903 - 636 pages
...given moment. To lose is not to place or put anything carefully and voluntarily in the place intended and then forget it. It is casually and involuntarily to part from the possession; the thing is then usually found in a place under such circumstances as prove to the finder that the... | |
| 1904 - 980 pages
...269, 8 Am. St Rep. 293. "To lose is not to place or put anything carelessly and voluntarily in the place you intend, and then forget it. It is casually and involuntarily to part from possession, and the thing is then usually found in a place or under circumstances to prove to the finder... | |
| William Ephraim Mikell - 1908 - 638 pages
...is not to place or out anything- carefully and voluntarily in the pi-ire you intend and then fqrg-et it. It is casually and involuntarily to part from the possession ; and the thTngistrTen usually found in a place or under circumstances to prove to the finder that the owner's... | |
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