UrbanFox wrote: » Situation 1. D passes a skip situated on the public road. D removes and keeps something from the skip. D has no permission to do so. Situation 2. As for situation 1 but the skip is in the driveway of a house. Q. Does D commit any stateable offences ? If so, what are they ?
Deleted User wrote: » In situation 1, could you not argue that the binman/skip collector doesn't have express permission to remove the skip and its contents either?
Allinall wrote: » Not a legal person in any way, but I would have thought the principle that you cannot just take something that doesn't belong to you would apply. Would it not be theft in both scenarios?
coylemj wrote: » I don't believe it would constitute theft. Your defence would be that the owner had effectively abandoned the property. And this defence would apply ....(2) For the purposes of this section a person does not appropriate property without the consent of its owner if— (a) the person believes that he or she has the owner's consent, or would have the owner's consent if the owner knew of the appropriation of the property and the circumstances in which it was appropriated.... Which is the same as saying that you would have knocked on the door to ask permission to take the goods but as it was a skip and not something like a charity bag full of clothes and bric a brac, why bother?http://www.irishstatutebook.ie/2001/en/act/pub/0050/sec0004.html#sec4
ZX7R wrote: » The act of removing items from a skip is not illegal in Ireland even if the skip is on private property. You can be done for trespassing on to private property. Also where a skip is on public ground the had been cases where the skip diver's have been prosecuted for criminal damage while removal of items. One a person places an item or wast into a skip it becomes the property of the refuge company same as the weekly bins people put out
Strumms wrote: » So I could have a bag of clothes left out for a charity, beside but outside my porch door in my garden, on my property.... if that gets half inched, that constitutes theft, but if the bag is in a skip, they can walk onto my property, remove said bag from the skip and walk off ? No crime committed apart from trespass ? Seems mad. Entering a property and removing items that don’t belong to you, by this logic somebody could go ring my doorbell, walk into my house when I answer and go through my bins ?
ZX7R wrote: » But your missing the point if you place it in the skip the bag of clothes do not belong to you either,it belongs to the waist company. As far as leaving bag of clothes out for charity you are not paying a waist company to remove it different kettle of fish altogether.you are gifting the clothes so if someone Rob's it yes it theft as it's still your property till collected by the charity. And as far as the bins in the you're home that's your private property and bin that is not comparable to the question of the skips
Ger Roe wrote: » ..... what is the point of me paying for the temporary holding of the material in a large metal container, just so that it can be emptied by anyone passing by?
Ger Roe wrote: » I also once had to order a skip for a work premises that was gone through so often that we filled it three times, before it was collected.
Ger Roe wrote: » I had a skip in my garden once and had a random caller to the door asking if he could go through it. I said 'no' for the following reasons : I was paying to dispose of waste material - what is the point of me paying for the temporary holding of the material in a large metal container, just so that it can be emptied by anyone passing by? If material was taken from it, how would I know where it ended up? Again, part of my cost and obligation is to ensure that it is disposed of responsibly. Also, I wouldn't want to be giving any random caller an implied permission to be looking around my home. That's my take on it anyway. I also once had to order a skip for a work premises that was gone through so often that we filled it three times, before it was collected. It was gone through every night and was less full again in the morning. There was always a worry about where the waste had gone and where it might end up, but we didn't have the facilities to secure it or place a guard watch on it.
listermint wrote: » No offense but folks aren't talking invaluable stuff to dump it. It's because of this attitude we have a throw away society. I put this attitude as simply what's in it for me....
Musa Screeching Specialist wrote: » how can he be prosecuted for removing it from the skip on the public road so?
brightspark wrote: » Apologies if too far off topic, but who owns the coins in a toll booth coin reject? (obviously if not collected by the driver who put them in)
looksee wrote: » I had a skip in the front drive that I was filling. A traveler family came by and started rooting in it. I had no objection to them taking anything, but they were shifting stuff around that I had carefully slotted in to make maximum use of the skip. I would have ended up with a tangled heap of stuff that filled the skip instead of organised packing that gave me another third to fill. So I showed them where to find a couple of items of metal value then shooed them off. I would like to see more recycling opportunities from skips, but at the same time people have no business grubbing around turning over and dis-organising the contents of a skip.
nuac wrote: » Noticed that in Berlin on Sunday mornings books and other articles are left out on doorsteps for collection by anyone interested.