Shawn,
As silly as it sounds,  there are people who believe there is a difference 
between a "fall" and a"find". And although these seven words (A "find" is owned 
by the landowner)  might define ownership of a find. It does not address the 
ownership of a fall. I think the Hodges case did address this issue but often 
times the courts do reverse previous decisions.For an example of real property 
ownership;
In real estate,  property is described based on ownership boundaries. For 
example;
 In ownership of a condominium you really only do own the air space ( sometimes 
they are high rise buildings). You own the paint on the wall but not the wall 
itself. You really don't own outright any real property (land) . The 
association which you are a part of owns the land but not a single individual. 
In a town home you do own the inside half of the walls that separate the units 
but not the exterior of the building or the roof. 
I guess we need to see the actual statute to see if it addresses falls or not 
to be sure and it might be more than seven words long.
But, lets say for argument sake that this meteorite never hits land. This is 
the case with Lorton but what if it hit a car parked on land and remained 100% 
within the car? What has the land owner to do with this? It never hit land. 
This is why air space comes into play. 
In the Lorton case it never hit land either. This makes it complicated. The 
doctors actually did not find the meteorite. It found them. 
Again, a find is clear but a fall is not. IMO At least not clear based on a 
weak seven words used above. Carl
--
Carl or Debbie Esparza
Meteoritemax


---- [email protected] wrote: 
> Carl and Listers,
> 
> The example I gave might be half weak in your eyes, but the fact of the 
> matter is that it states that the landowner is entitled to the meteorite. 
> 
> Now the answer to your question about who is entitled to the fall in question 
> and not the find is weak. What is in question is the ownership of the 
> meteorite not the fall of the meteorite. Can you please give me an example of 
> someone owning the fall of the meteorite? 
> 
> A meteorite comes into question of ownership once it has impacted the the 
> surface or there of not while its in flight.
> 
> Shawn Alan
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