Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap Swedish appeals court rules space rock should stay with the owner of the property where it landed !

Swedish appeals court rules space rock should stay with the owner of the property where it landed

Time:2024-05-21 12:42:17 source:International Idiom news portal

STOCKHOLM (AP) — A Swedish land owner won a legal battle Thursday to keep a 14-kilogram (31-pound) meteorite when an appeals court ruled that such rocks should be considered “immovable property” and part of the land where they are found.

The property on which the meteorite landed contains iron and the meteorite is made of iron. Therefore, it ”cannot be easily separated from what is usually regarded as (immovable) property,” the Svea Court of Appeals ruled.

On Nov. 7, 2020, an iron meteorite fell on a private property in Uppland, north of Stockholm. In December of that year, two geologists found it and eventually handed it over to the Swedish Museum of Natural History in the Swedish capital.

Swedish news agency TT said the owner of the private land where it was found, Johan Benzelstierna von Engeström, appealed a December 2022 ruling by the Uppsala district court. That ruling gave the rock’s finders Andreas Forsberg and Anders Zetterqvist the right to the stone because the meteorite was not part of the property, and was a movable property without an owner.

Related information
  • Everybody may love Raymond, but Ray Romano loves Peter Boyle
  • Nikki Haley Wins District of Columbia's Republican Primary, Gets Her First 2024 Victory
  • Customs seize $20m meth and MDMA in two bags at Auckland Airport
  • Future of Picton overbridge up in the air
  • Siblings trying to make US water polo teams for Paris Olympics
  • coronavirus: Donald Trump defends 'China virus' term for covid
  • Hubei eases limits but new China cases up
  • Uber's 'shambolic' agreements with drivers highlights power imbalance
Recommended content
  • College baseball notebook: Conference tournaments to decide NCAA automatic bids and many at
  • US House passes bill that could ban TikTok nationwide
  • UN mission probing Islamic State crimes forced to shut in Iraq
  • Free lunch scheme has made 'huge difference' for Wainuiomata school
  • Yu Darvish extends scoreless innings streak to 25 in Padres' 9
  • Jehovah's Witness Church takes case over Abuse in Care ruling to Court of Appeal