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You buy a dilapidated house and in the course of renovations
you find a huge amount of money hidden in the walls. The cash is yours,
right? Not according to an Arizona appeals court, which recently ruled
that $500,000 found in the walls of a house belongs to the heirs of the
man who put it there, not to the house’s current owners.
Robert A. Spann had a habit of hiding cash and other
valuables in unusual places in the homes he lived in. His two daughters
knew of his pattern, and for seven years after he died in 2001 they
found stocks and bonds, as well as hundreds of military-style green
ammunition cans, some of which contained gold or cash, hidden throughout
his Paradise Valley, Arizona, home.
In 2008, the daughters sold the rundown house “as is” to a
couple. The couple did some remodeling, in the course of which a worker
for the contracting company found two ammunition cans full of cash in
the kitchen wall and another two inside the framing of an upstairs
bathroom. The cash totaled $500,000. After the worker
reported the find to his boss, the boss took the cans but did not tell
the couple who owned the house about them. The worker, however,
eventually informed the couple of the discovery and the police
ultimately took control of the $500,000.
The couple and the contractor sued each other for the money.
In the meantime, Robert Spann’s daughter Karen Grande, who was the
personal representative of his estate, filed a petition in probate court
on behalf of the estate to recover the money. The two cases were
consolidated in June 2009.
The trial court ruled that the money belonged to the estate and
the couple appealed, claiming that Mr. Spann’s family had abandoned the
cash by leaving it in the house when it was sold “as is.”
In a May 31, 2012, ruling, the Court of Appeals of Arizona
agrees with the trial court. The court rules that while “finders
keepers” may work on the schoolyard, in Arizona in order to abandon
personal property, “one must voluntarily and intentionally give up a
known right.” The court finds that because there is no evidence
that Mr. Spann’s estate intended to relinquish any valuable items in the
house, the money is more properly characterized as “mislaid” and still
belongs to the estate.
To read the full text of the Arizona appeals court’s decision in the case, Grande v. Jennings, click here.
Interestingly, an Oregon appeals court came to a different conclusion in a very similar case four years ago. For details, click here.
(Reprinted with the permission of ElderLawAnswers.com)
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