Do you want BuboFlash to help you learning these things? Or do you want to add or correct something? Click here to log in or create user.



Tags
#crime #law #theft
Question
Property is not abandoned just because the owner has stopped looking for it. David Ormerod and Karl Laird in Smith and Hogan’s Criminal Law p938 note that [...]. In Hibbert McKiernan [1948] 1 A;; ER 860 it was held that lost golf balls had not been abandoned by their owners. However, this does not mean that property cannot be abandoned. It will depend on whether the owner wants the property himself or to go to another party, or whether he does not mind what happens to it.
Answer
a husband who has lost his wedding ring and has long since given up looking for it, will not have abandoned it

Tags
#crime #law #theft
Question
Property is not abandoned just because the owner has stopped looking for it. David Ormerod and Karl Laird in Smith and Hogan’s Criminal Law p938 note that [...]. In Hibbert McKiernan [1948] 1 A;; ER 860 it was held that lost golf balls had not been abandoned by their owners. However, this does not mean that property cannot be abandoned. It will depend on whether the owner wants the property himself or to go to another party, or whether he does not mind what happens to it.
Answer
?

Tags
#crime #law #theft
Question
Property is not abandoned just because the owner has stopped looking for it. David Ormerod and Karl Laird in Smith and Hogan’s Criminal Law p938 note that [...]. In Hibbert McKiernan [1948] 1 A;; ER 860 it was held that lost golf balls had not been abandoned by their owners. However, this does not mean that property cannot be abandoned. It will depend on whether the owner wants the property himself or to go to another party, or whether he does not mind what happens to it.
Answer
a husband who has lost his wedding ring and has long since given up looking for it, will not have abandoned it
If you want to change selection, open original toplevel document below and click on "Move attachment"

Parent (intermediate) annotation

Open it
Property is not abandoned just because the owner has stopped looking for it. David Ormerod and Karl Laird in Smith and Hogan’s Criminal Law p938 note that a husband who has lost his wedding ring and has long since given up looking for it, will not have abandoned it. In Hibbert McKiernan [1948] 1 A;; ER 860 it was held that lost golf balls had not been abandoned by their owners. However, this does not mean that property cannot be abandoned. I

Original toplevel document (pdf)

cannot see any pdfs

Summary

statusnot learnedmeasured difficulty37% [default]last interval [days]               
repetition number in this series0memorised on               scheduled repetition               
scheduled repetition interval               last repetition or drill

Details

No repetitions


Discussion

Do you want to join discussion? Click here to log in or create user.