delivered the opinion of the court.
1. The first assignment of error relied upon by the defendant is based upon the ruling of the court in admitting the testimony of the plaintiff about a conversation which he claimed he had with Tom Ellis, in substance as follows: After the return of Tom Ellis from a trip away from home, the witness asked him if he had ever lost any money, and he said that he had not. Witness then asked him if he had ever put any money away. He said he had not, and asked: “Why ?” Plaintiff told him he had found some money. Ellis then asked him how' much he had found, and where. Plaintiff did not state the amount, but said he had found it in the warehouse. Ellis asked him how much he found, five or ten dollars. *223Plaintiff answered, “Yes, I found that much all right enough; and he said, 'twenty dollars?’ and I said there was $20, all right enough; and tnat’s all I said, and turned and walked away.” It is claimed by the appellant that because he was not present at that conversation it was purely hearsay, and on that ground was not admissible against him. This contention leaves out of consideration the defense pleaded here, which is, in substance, that the defendant took the money from the plaintiff and retained it for the benefit of the owner, all because the money was found in the defendant’s warehouse. The defendant thus assumed to act as the agent or bailee of Tom Ellis, who he claims to have been the owner of the money. So far as the conversation with Tom Ellis as detailed by the witness goes, it tends to show an admission by Tom Ellis that he was not the owner of the money in question. If Tom Ellis was the principal and the defendant his agent for the purpose of holding the money for the account of Tom Ellis (which is the substance of the affirmative defense), the admission of the principal would certainly bind the agent, and the doctrine of hearsay would not apply.
2. The only objection that can be urged against the admission of this evidence is that it was properly rebuttal testimony, which should be heard only in case the defendant entered upon his defense. This objection, however, involves only the order of proof; which is within the discretion of the court, and in the absence of an abuse of discretion this court will not disturb the ruling of the court below.
• 3. The appellant further complains that the court instructed the jury about abandoned property, as well as about lost property, and he contends that, because the complaint alleges that the money was lost, the jury is precluded from the consideration of abandoned property. However, it must be remembered that the gist of this *224action is in trover to recover damages for the detention of the money in question in breach of the contract of bailment between the parties. To sustain the action it was incumbent upon the plaintiff to allege and prove some property in the money.
4. In support of the allegation that he was the owner of the coin, he would be at liberty to prove either a general property or a special property within the meaning of the rule laid down in Reinstein v. Roberts, 34 Or. 87 (55 Pac. 90: 75 Am. St. Rep. 564). In that case it was held under an allegation of general ownership the plaintiff was entitled to show that he had a chattel mortgage upon the property in question, the condition of which was broken in that the debt for which it was security was overdue and unpaid. The rule is also laid down in general terms in Weeks v. Hackett, 104 Me. 264 (71 Atl. 858: 19 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1201: 129 Am. St. Rep. 390). The history of how the plaintiff came to be the owner of the money is evidential only, or a matter of testimony, the allegations concerning which might have been stricken out as redundant or as pleading evidence.
5. In this action it cannot concern the defendant whether the plaintiff proved a qualified property by means of the rules relating to treasure trove or lost property, which the modern authorities make practically synonymous, or whether he makes out an absolute ownership through the discovery of abandoned property. If the property is purposely abandoned by the original owner thereof, it is restored to the common stock, and after-wards becomes the property of the one who first discovers and takes it into his possession.
6. If it is really lost property which has become separated from the possession of the true owner without his knowledge, or if it is treasure trove where money is secreted and found by another, it becomes the property of the finder, as against every one except the true owner. *225For the purposes of this case, the result would be the same, whether the plaintiff proved his allegation of ownership by one means or the other.
7. There are circumstances in the case from which the jury would be authorized to conclude that the property had been abandoned. The defendant alleges that he and his brother were the only ones who had access to the warehouse in question, and there is testimony tending to show that both disclaimed any interest in the money in question. There is other testimony tending to show that many people stored furniture and household goods in the warehouse, and that roving steamboat hands and fishermen had access to it. The jury might have concluded that some of these transient people had left the money there designedly, and having gone away to sea or to some distant part of this or another country had found it inconvenient to return for the money, and so had abandoned it. It is possible to abandon property anywhere, even in a warehouse, and it is only when nothing else is shown except the place of finding, that attention must be given to the distinction of its being found upon the ground, instead of in some place of deposit. Hence there was testimony from which the jury might have concluded that the property was abandoned, and so to instruct upon that question was not error.
8. It is also urged by the appellant that the court below erred in overruling his motion for nonsuit at the close of the plaintiff’s case, on the ground that the plaintiff had not proved a cause sufficient to be submitted to the jury. The question is, then, was there any evidence in the case which the jury had a right to consider? The defendant contends that the plaintiff was his employee, and that his taking possession of the money was in law and effect the defendant’s possession. The allegation of the answer is in substance, that the plaintiff was employed by the defendant to remove from the warehouse certain *226goods, wares, and merchandise which the defendant had on storage there. This was the scope of the employment of the plaintiff. The handling of the property of other people, not connected with the defendant, was not in the line of the plaintiff’s employment, and would neither impose responsibility nor confer privilege upon the defendant.
9. The defendant also contends that, the money having been found in the warehouse of which he was the tenant, that fact establishes a qualified property in the defendant as against the plaintiff. In support of this contention he cites sundry cases where customers casually left property in such places as barber shops, stores, and banks: McAvoy v. Medina, 11 Allen (Mass.) 548 (87 Am. Dec. 733); State v. McCann, 19 Mo. 249; Loucks v. Gallogly, 1 Misc. Rep. 22 (23 N. Y. Supp. 126); Lawrence v. State, 1 Humph. (Tenn.) 228 (34 Am. Dec. 644); Kincaid v. Eaton, 98 Mass. 139 (93 Am. Dec. 142). In this class of cases a quasi privity of property arises between the proprietor and his customers who attend at his place of business for the purpose of trade. They are clearly distinguishable from the ease in hand. There is some testimony in the case tending to show that both the defendant and his brother for whom he professes to act disclaimed any connection with the money in the first instance. Moreover, it was a private place to which the defendant alleges only he and his brother had access. These circumstances are sufficient to take the case to the jury as against the contention of the defendant that, the money having been found in his warehouse by his employee, would give the defendant at least a qualified property in the money.
10. The case is rather like the case of Hamaker v. Blanchard, 90 Pa. 377 (35 Am. Rep. 664). In that case a chambermaid found $60 on the parlor floor of the hotel in which she was employed. On reporting it to the landlord, he said perhaps the money belonged to a certain *227guest of the hotel. The maid thereupon deposited the money with the landlord, to be given to the guest or returned to her, if it was not the property of the guest. It proved to be not the property of the guest, and the court sustained the maid in her action to recover the money from the landlord, holding, in substance, that the landlord owned no duty to any one not his guest, and that the place of finding, although in his hotel, conferred no right in his favor as against the chambermaid respecting property lost by a stranger. The testimony is abundant on the question of this money being treasure trove, for, in the language of Danielson v. Roberts, 44 Or. 108 (74 Pac. 913: 65 L. R. A. 526: 102 Am. St. Rep. 627):
“It was money or coin found hidden or secreted in the earth or other private place; the owner being unknown.”
It seems to be the principle respecting treasure trove, owing to its peculiar nature of being coin, that the present property is in the finder, as against every one but the true owner, provided that the true owner is unknown, and it matters not where or when the same is found, so that it is secreted in the earth or other private place. This court laid down this rule in the above case:
“The fact that the money was found on the premises of the defendants, or that the plaintiffs were in their service at the time, can in no way affect the plaintiffs’ right to possession, or their duty in reference to the lost treasure.”
11. The defendant seeks to avoid the effect of that case, as applied to the case in hand, by the fact that the coin in question there had been in the place where found for a great length of time. This, however, only affects the weight of the testimony concerning the circumstances of the finding and the condition of the money when found. There is testimony in this case that the comb cases in which the money was found were mouldy and covered with dust, indicating that the money had been placed *228where found within no very recent period. We cannot say as a matter of law how ancient the deposit must be in order to include it within the rule of Danielson v. Roberts, or how recent it must be to take it out of the operation of that decision. It is sufficient to say that there is evidence on that question which must be left to the jury as against the motion for nonsuit. The case is distinguishable from Ferguson v. Ray, 44 Or. 557 (77 Pac. 600: 1 L. R. A. (N. S.) 477: 102 Am. St. Rep. 648: 1 Am. & Eng. Ann. Cas. 1). That case was concerning gold-bearing quartz which had been mined and buried on the property of a landlord, who, when nothing else was shown, was declared to be entitled to its possession as against his tenant. The quartz was not treasure trove, which alone would serve to distinguish that case from this.
The rulings and instructions of the circuit court were substantially correct. There was evidence in the case sufficient to go to the jury for its decision on the questions of fact involved.
The result is that the judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed. Affirmed.