Metal Detecting And The English Law - C-SCOPE CS9000 MK2 Operating Instructions Manual

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range. Similarly, if you work slowly and carefully you should be able to distinguish the faint
signals as well as the clear-cut signals and further increase your finds.
The technique of getting the best out of your detector is not learnt overnight. You need to get as
much experience as possible so that you can recognise every kind of signal. Indeed, a good
detector operator can often tell you what is being detected before it is unearthed.

METAL DETECTING AND THE ENGLISH LAW

The rights of the finder fall into two distinct classes. The first relates to objects that have been
recently lost, and the second to items of gold or silver which are subject, or might be subject, to
the laws of the Treasure Trove.
In the first place, where the object has been recently lost and found and is valuable, it should be
handed to the Police as soon after it has been found as possible. The Police will then attempt to
locate the owner. If they succeed in locating the owner, he has the legal right to the object and is
not legally bound to reward the finder. That is a matter for the owner's conscience.
In the event of the Police failing to locate the owner they will probably return the object to the
finder. If, however, the owner makes a claim for the object at a later date, the finder must return
the item to the owner. If the owner is not located the finder has the best rights to ownership,
provided that the object was not found on private property, in which case the owner of the land
has a better right than the finder. The solution here, of course, is to obtain permission beforehand
and to come to some agreement with the landowner with regards to the division of any finds.
If on the other hand, the find of gold or silver can be proved to have been deliberately concealed,
with a view to recovery at a later date, the find comes under the law of the Treasure Trove. If the
objects cannot be proved to have been deliberately concealed, the find cannot be declared
Treasure Trove.
Usually this point centres around the quantity of coins in a hoard, or whether the find is in a
container. Obviously, if there are a hundred coins in a pot, they were almost certainly deliberately
concealed. If, however, there are only one or two coins, it is more likely that they were lost
accidentally.
If the objects are declared Treasure Trove, the finder has no need to worry, for he is usually
rewarded with a cash settlement to the full market value of the find.
When the objects are not declared Treasure Trove, the owner of the land on which the find was
made usually has a better claim to ownership than the finder.
In Scotland all newly discovered ancient objects of all metals, whether deliberately concealed or
not are subject to the same procedure as Treasure Trove finds in England.
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