Haslem v. Lockwood

Haslem v. Lockwood
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
Full case name Thomas Haslem v. William A. Lockwood
Citations37 (Conn.) 500 Connecticut, (1871)
Case opinions
Judge Park
Keywords
Conversion, property, tort, conversion, trover, nuisance

Thomas Haslem v. William A. Lockwood,[1] Connecticut, (1871) is an important United States case in property, tort, conversion, trover and nuisance law.

The plaintiff directed his servants to rake abandoned horse manure into heaps that had accumulated in a public street, intending to carry it away the next day. Before he could do so, the defendant, who had no knowledge of the plaintiff's actions, found the heaps and hauled them off to his own land. The plaintiff sued the defendant in trover demanding payment for the price of the manure. The trial court held for the defendant, stating he owed nothing to the plaintiff. The plaintiff appealed and the Appellate Court of Connecticut held for the plaintiff, remanding the case for a new trial.

The manure originally belonged to the owners of the horses that dropped it. But when the owners abandoned it on the road, it became the property of the man who was first to claim it. The Court found that the best owner after the act of abandonment was the borough of Stamford, Connecticut where the manure was found. In the absence of a claim to the manure by the officials of Stamford, the plaintiff was entitled to it by reason of trover. The plaintiff was entitled to damages because the defendant had committed a conversion. The manure had not become a part of the real estate, as the defendant had argued. It remained separate and unattached to the land, and hence was not part of the fee of estate. Comparing manure to seaweed and laws in the 19th century having to do with the scraping into piles of natural things of this sort, the court held that 24 hours was a reasonable time for the defendant to wait to take the manure. That by this standard, and the fruits of his labour of raking into piles, the plaintiff was granted a new trial over the issue of damages.

Issues

  1. Is manure abandoned on a road by passing horses property subject to the laws of trover?
  2. Does manure abandoned on the road by passing horses become a part of the land, and in essence attached to it as part of the fee of ownership?
  3. Does a person who gathers the manure into heaps improve it, and hence have claim to ownership?
  4. Does a third party who happens by and takes as his own the manure which has been placed in heaps by another commit a conversion?
  5. If the third party is guilty of committing a conversion, what are the damages to the plaintiff?

Facts

A case in trover for a quantity of manure, brought before a justice of the peace and appealed by the defendant to the Court of Common Pleas for the county of Fairfield, and tried in that court, on the general issue concerning the matter of ownership of the manure before Justice Brewer.

At trial it was proved that the plaintiff employed two men to gather into heaps, on the evening of April 6, 1869, some manure that lay scattered on the ground along the side of a public highway. Most of this manure was from horses passing by. The men continued their efforts through the town of Stamford, Connecticut. They started at 6 PM and by 8 PM, their efforts had resulted in eighteen heaps, which was enough to fill six cart-loads. While the heaps consisted largely of manure, there were also traces of soil, gravel and straw which are commonly seen along roadways. The defendant saw the piles the next morning. He inquired of the town warden to whom they belonged, and if he had given permission to anyone for their removal. The town warden did not know to whom the manure belonged and had not given permission to anyone for the removal. Learning this, the defendant removed the manure to his own land, where it was scattered on a field.

The plaintiff and defendant both averred that they had received permission from the warden to claim the manure. But testimony revealed that neither had any authority from any town official in Stamford for the removal. Neither plaintiff while gathering, nor the defendant while removing the heaps was interfered with or opposed by any one. The removal of the manure was calculated to improve the appearance and health of the borough. The manure was worth one dollar per cart full, six dollars in all. The plaintiff, upon learning that the defendant had taken the manure, demanded he pay six dollars. Defendant refused the demand. Neither litigant owned any of the land adjacent to the road.

On the above facts, the plaintiff prayed the court to rule that the manure was the personal property of the owners of the horses, and had been abandoned. By piling the manure into heaps, the plaintiff claimed ownership in trover. The only person who could reasonably have a greater claim to the manure would be the owner of the land in fee, and that barring any claim by the land owner, the plaintiff was the rightful owner.

The defendant claimed that the manure being dropped and spread out over the surface of the earth was a part of the real estate, and belonged to the owner of the fee, subject to a public easement; that the fee was either the borough of Stamford or the town of Stamford, or in the parties who owned lands adjacent; that therefore the scraping up of the manure, mixed with the soil, if real estate, did not change its nature to that of personal estate, unless it was removed, whether the plaintiff had consent of the owner of the fee or not; and that unless the heaps become personal property, the plaintiff could not maintain his action. The defendant further claimed that the plaintiff may have, indeed, turned the manure into a personal estate by the act of piling it up; but had abandoned his claim to the manure by leaving it unattended overnight and into the next day. This inattention was an abandonment of all rights to ownership of the manure. The trial court ruled adversely, and found for the defendant. The plaintiff had no property rights in the piles of manure. The plaintiff appeals this ruling to this court.

The case is appealed to this court, with the plaintiff seeking a new trial.

Argument of the plaintiff-appellant

Curtis and Hoyt (Counsel for the plaintiff-appellant) offered the following arguments in their brief:

(1) The manure in question was the personal property abandoned by its owners. (The owners of the horses.) [2][3]

(2) It never became a part of the real estate on which it was abandoned.[4][5][6][7][8]

(3) It being personal property abandoned by its owners, and lying upon the highway, and neither the owners of the fee nor the proper authorities of the town and borough having by any act of theirs shown any intention to appropriate the same, it became lawful for the plaintiff to gather it up and remove it from the highway, providing he did not commit a trespass, and removed it without objection from the owners of the land.[9] No trespass was in fact committed. No person was interfered with the plaintiff or made any objection. The court cannot presume a trespass to have been committed.[10][11]

(4) But if the manure had become a part of the real estate, yet when it was gathered into heaps by the plaintiff it was severed from the realty and became personal estate.[12][13] And being gathered without molestation from any person owning or claiming to own the land, it is to be considered as having been taken by tacit consent of such owner.[14]

(5) The plaintiff therefore acquired not only a valid possession, but a title by occupancy, and by having expanded labor and money upon the property. Such a title is a good legal title against every person by the true owner.

(6) If the plaintiff had a legal title then he had the constructive possession. If he had legal possession, and only left the property for a short time intending to return and take it away, then he might maintain an action against a wrong doer for taking it away.[15][16][17][18][19][20] The leaving of property for a short time, intending to return, does not constitute an abandonment. The property is still to be considered as in the possession of the plaintiff.

Argument of the defendant-respondent

Olmstead (Counsel for the defendant-respondent), contra.

(1) The manure mixed with the dirt and ordinary scrapings of the highway, being spread out over the surface of the highway, was a part of the real estate, and belonged to the owner of the fee, subject to the public easement.[21][22][23][24][25][26][27]

The defendant-respondent argued that abandoned horse manure had become a part of the real estate on which it was laid.

(2) The scraping up of the manure and dirt into piles, if the same was a part of the real estate, did not change its nature to that of personal property, unless there was a severance of it from the realty by removal, (which there was not), whether the plaintiff had the consent of the owner of the fee or not, which consent it is conceded the plaintiff did not have. (3) Unless the scraping up of the heaps made their substance personal property, the plaintiff could not maintain his action either for trespass or trespass on the case.

(4) In trespass de bonis asportatis, or trover, the plaintiff must have had the actual possession, or a right to the immediate possession, in order to recover.[28]

(5) If the manure was always personal estate, it being spread upon the surface of the earth, it was in possession of the owner of the fee, who was not the plaintiff.[29][30] The scraping of it into heaps, unless it was removed, would not change the possession from the owner of the fee to the plaintiff. The plaintiff therefore never had the possession.

(6) If the heaps were personal property the plaintiff never had any right in the property, but only mere possession, if anything, which he abandoned by leaving the same upon the public highway from 8 o'clock in the evening until 12 o'clock the next day, without leaving any notice on or about the property, or any one to exercise control over the same in his behalf.[31][32][33]

Opinion of the court

Opinion delivered by Judge Park.

We think the manure scattered upon the ground, under the circumstances of this case, was personal property. The cases referred to by the defendant to show that it was real estate are not on point. The principle of those cases is, that manure made in the usual course of husbandry upon a farm is so attached to and connected with the realty that, in the absence of any express stipulation to the contrary, it becomes appurtenant to it. The principle was established for the benefit of agriculture. It found its origin in the fact that it is essential to the successful cultivation of a farm that the manure, produced from the droppings of cattle and swine fed upon the products of the farm from the land should be used to supply the drain made upon the soil in the production of crops, which otherwise would become impoverished and barren; and in the fact the manure so produced is generally regarded by farmers in this country as a part of the realty and has been so treated by landlords and tenants from time immemorial.[34][35][36][37][38][39][40][41]

The court found the plaintiff had improved the manure by piling it up into heaps.

But this principle does not apply to the droppings of animals driven by travelers on the highway. The highway is not used, and cannot be used, for the purpose of agriculture. The manure is of no benefit whatsoever to it, but on the contrary is a detriment; and in cities and large villages it becomes a nuisance, and is removed by public officers at public expense. The finding in this case is, "that the removal of the manure and scrapings was calculated to improve the appearance and health of the borough." It is therefore evident that the cases relied upon by the defendant have no application to the case.

But it is said that if the manure was personal property, it was the possession of the owner of the fee, and the scraping it into heaps by the plaintiff did not change the possession, but it continued before, and that therefore the plaintiff cannot recover, for he neither had possession nor the right to the immediate possession.

The manure originally belonged to the travelers whose animals dropped it, but in being worthless to them was immediately abandoned; and whether it then became the property of the borough of Stamford which owned the fee of the land on which the manure lay, is unnecessary to determine; for if it did, the case finds that the removal of the filth would be an improvement to the borough, and no objection was made by any one to the use of that the plaintiff attempted to make of it. Considering the character of such accumulations upon highways, in cities and villages, and the light in which they are everywhere regarded in closely settled communities, we cannot believe at the borough in this instance would have had any objection to the act of the plaintiff in removing a nuisance that affected the public health and the appearance of the streets. At all events, we think facts of the case show a sufficient right in the plaintiff to the mediate possession of the property as against a mere wrong doer.

The defendant appears before the court in no enviable light. He does not pretend that he had a right to the manure, even when scattered upon the highway, superior to that of the plaintiff; but after the plaintiff had changed the original condition and greatly enhanced its value by his labor, he seized and appropriated to his own use the fruits of the plaintiff's outlay, and now seeks immunity from responsibility on the ground that the plaintiff was a wrong doer as well as himself. The conduct of the defendant is in keeping with his claim, and neither commends itself to the favorable consideration of the court. The plaintiff had the peaceable and quiet possession of the property; and we deem this sufficient until the borough of Stamford shall make complaint.

It is further claimed that if the plaintiff had a right to the property by virtue of occupancy, he lost the right when he ceased to retain the actual possession of the manure after scraping it into heaps.

We do not question the general doctrine, that where the right by occupancy exists, it exists no longer that the party retains the actual possession of the property, or till he appropriates it to his own use by removing it to some other place. If he leaves the property at the place where it was discovered, and does nothing whatsoever to enhance its value or change its nature, has right by occupancy is unquestionably gone. But the question is, if a party finds property comparatively worthless, as the plaintiff found the property in question, owing to its scattered condition upon the highway, and greatly increases it value by his labor and expense, does he lose his right if he leaves it a reasonable time to procure the means to take it away, when the means are necessary for its removal?

Suppose a teamster with a load of grain, while traveling the highway, discovers a rent in one of his bags, and finds that his grain is scattered upon the road for the distance of a mile. He considers the labor of collecting his corn of more value the property itself, and he therefore abandons it, and pursues his way. A afterwards finds the grain in this condition and gathers it kernel by kernel into heaps by the side of the road, and leaves it a reasonable time to procure the means necessary for its removal. While he is gone for his bag, B discovers the grain thus conveniently collected into heaps and appropriates it to his own use. Has A any remedy? If he has not, the law in this instance is open to just reproach. We think under such circumstances A would have a reasonable time to remove the property, and during such a reasonable time his right to it would be protected. If this is so, then the principle applies to the case under consideration.

A reasonable time for the removal of this manure had not elapsed when the defendant seized and converted it to his own use. The statute regulating the rights of parties in the gathering of sea-weed, gives the party who heaps it upon a public beach twenty-four hours in which to remove it, and that length of time for the removal of the property we think would not be unreasonable in most cases like the present one.

Holding

We therefore advise the Court of Common Pleas to grant a new trial. In this opinion the other judges concurred.

Discussion

The Connecticut Court found the argument of the defendant-respondent to be exceptionally weak in terms of the law. The idea that horse droppings abandoned along the road became a part of the real estate in fee is an interesting argument. But it was soundly rejected by the court. Even following this theory, the borough of Stamford, Connecticut would have been the new best owners of the manure. When the plaintiff-appellate began to rake the manure into neat piles for reclamation, he did it in clear sight of one or more of the officials of Stamford. Also, presumably, any citizen of the town could have observed him. No one objected to his activity, or came forward to claim superior rights to the manure. The plaintiff had "improved" what was otherwise a nuisance to the town. In this act, he also had some legal standing to claim a superior ownership to anyone else. The existing laws allowing persons who piled up seaweed to have a legitimate claim of possession for 24 hours was invoked. The court had nothing good to say about the defendant-respondent, stating he had not placed himself in an enviable light.

See also

References

  1. ^ Halsem v. Lockwood, 37 (Conn.) 500, 1871
  2. ^ Bla. Com-, 387, 402
  3. ^ 2 Kent Com. 356
  4. ^ 2 Smith Lead. Cas., 252, 258
  5. ^ 1 Washb. R. Prop., bk. 1, ch.10 see 11 § 6
  6. ^ Parsons v. Camp; 11 Conn., 525
  7. ^ Needham v. Allison, 4 Frost., 355
  8. ^ Plumer v. Plumer, 10 id., 558
  9. ^ Church v. Meeker, 34 Conn., 421
  10. ^ 1 Greenl. Ev., § 34
  11. ^ 1 Swift Dig., 173
  12. ^ 1 Swift Dig., 534
  13. ^ Bouvier Law Dict., "Real Property."
  14. ^ Martin v. Houghton, 45 Barb., 258
  15. ^ 1 Swift Dig., 530
  16. ^ 1 Smith Lead. Cas., 473
  17. ^ Bird V. Clark, 3 Day, 272
  18. ^ Williams v. Dolbeare, id., 498
  19. ^ Bulkeley v. Dolbeare, 7 Conn., 232
  20. ^ Heath v. Milward, 2 Bing., N. C., 98
  21. ^ 1 Swift Dig. 107
  22. ^ Emans v. Turnbull, 2 Johns., 322
  23. ^ Fay v. Muzzey, 13 Gray, 53
  24. ^ Goodrich v. Jones, 2 Hill, 142
  25. ^ Daniels v. Pond, 2 Pick., 367
  26. ^ Parsons v. Camp, 11 Conn. 525
  27. ^ 1 Wms. Exrs., 615
  28. ^ 1 Hilliard on Torts, ch. 18 § 8
  29. ^ Church v. Meeker, '04 Conn., 432
  30. ^ 1 Swift Dig., 107
  31. ^ 2 Hilliard on Torts, ch. 18, § 19, note c,
  32. ^ idem., ch. 18, § 14
  33. ^ Church v. Meeker, idem.
  34. ^ Daniels v. Pond, 21 Pick., 367
  35. ^ Lewis v. Lyman, 22 Pick. 437
  36. ^ Kittredge v. Woods, 3 N. Hamp., 503
  37. ^ Lassell v. Reed, 6 Reed, 6 Greenl., 222
  38. ^ Parsons v. Camp, 11 Conn., 532
  39. ^ Fay v. Muzzy, 13 Gray, 53
  40. ^ Goodrich v. Jones, 2 Hill, 142
  41. ^ 1 Washb. on Real Prop., 5, 6

External references

Read other articles:

Fusili Fusili merupakan salah satu jenis pasta dengan bentuk spiral. Fusili biasanya diolah dengan saus krim dan kacang polong. Fusili dapat dihidangkan dengan bahan lainnya, seperti daging ayam, sayur-sayuran, daging sapi dan berbagai bahan lainnya. Fusili terbuat dari tepung terigu. Namun, fusili dengan warna lain juga dapat dibuat dengan mencampurkan bahan lain di dalam adonan yang mempengaruhi rasa, misalnya, beetroot untuk merah, bayam untuk hijau, dan tinta sotong untuk hitam. Fusili se...

 

2006 film by Steve Pink This article is about the film. For the general concept, see acceptance. AcceptedTheatrical release posterDirected bySteve PinkScreenplay by Adam Cooper Bill Collage Mark Perez Story byMark PerezProduced by Tom Shadyac Michael Bostick Starring Justin Long Blake Lively Anthony Heald Lewis Black CinematographyMatthew F. LeonettiEdited byScott HillMusic byDavid SchommerProductioncompanyShady Acres EntertainmentDistributed byUniversal PicturesRelease date August 18,&#...

 

Anggota Batalyon Infanteri V (KNIL) Andjing NICA sedang menonton pertandingan sepak bola Batalyon Infanteri V (Belanda: 5e Bataljon Infanterie),[1] atau terkenal dengan sebutan Batalyon Andjing NICA,[2] adalah sebuah batalyon dari Tentara Kerajaan Hindia Belanda (KNIL) yang beroperasi antara tahun 1945-1950, di bawah komando Administrasi Sipil Hindia Belanda (NICA),[2] terutama di Jawa Barat dan Jawa Tengah. Batalyon ini disegani keberanian dan kekejamannya dalam opera...

Artikel ini perlu diterjemahkan ke bahasa Indonesia. Artikel ini ditulis atau diterjemahkan secara buruk dari Wikipedia bahasa selain Indonesia. Jika halaman ini ditujukan untuk komunitas berbahasa tersebut, halaman itu harus dikontribusikan ke Wikipedia bahasa tersebut. Lihat daftar bahasa Wikipedia. Artikel yang tidak diterjemahkan dapat dihapus secara cepat sesuai kriteria A2. Jika Anda ingin memeriksa artikel ini, Anda boleh menggunakan mesin penerjemah. Namun ingat, mohon tidak menyalin ...

 

Синелобый амазон Научная классификация Домен:ЭукариотыЦарство:ЖивотныеПодцарство:ЭуметазоиБез ранга:Двусторонне-симметричныеБез ранга:ВторичноротыеТип:ХордовыеПодтип:ПозвоночныеИнфратип:ЧелюстноротыеНадкласс:ЧетвероногиеКлада:АмниотыКлада:ЗавропсидыКласс:Пт�...

 

Klasifikasi ilmiah beralih ke halaman ini. Untuk penggunaan dalam bidang ilmu lain, lihat Klasifikasi ilmiah (disambiguasi). Halaman ini berisi artikel tentang metode pengelompokan mahluk hidup. Untuk cabang ilmu biologi, lihat Taksonomi (biologi). Urutan peringkat taksonomi dari tingkat terendah (paling spesifik, yaitu spesies) hingga tingkat tertinggi (paling umum, yaitu domain dan kehidupan).Bagian dari seriPaleontologi Fosil Fosilisasi Fosil jejak (Ichnofosil) Mikrofosil Persiapan fosil F...

Australian cricketer Monty NobleNoble in about 1905Personal informationFull nameMontague Alfred NobleBorn(1873-01-28)28 January 1873Chinatown, Sydney, AustraliaDied22 June 1940(1940-06-22) (aged 67)Randwick, New South Wales, AustraliaNicknameMA, Alf, Mary AnnHeight1.85 m (6 ft 1 in)BattingRight-handedBowlingRight-arm medium paceRoleAll-rounderInternational information National sideAustraliaTest debut (cap 76)1 January 1898 v EnglandLast Test9 August...

 

Historical role of the UK House of Lords Appellate Committee of the House of LordsEstablished1 November 1876Dissolved30 September 2009LocationPalace of Westminster, LondonComposition methodAppointed by Monarch on advice of Prime Minister.Chosen name recommended to PM by a selection commission.Authorized byConvention; Appellate Jurisdiction Act 1876Judge term lengthLife tenureSenior Law LordSecond Senior Law Lord This article is part of the series: Courts of England and WalesLaw of England and...

 

Questa voce sugli argomenti linee ferroviarie e trasporti in Libia è solo un abbozzo. Contribuisci a migliorarla secondo le convenzioni di Wikipedia. Bengasi-BarceStati attraversati Libia InizioBengasi FineBarce Attivazione1914 (Bengasi–Benina)1916 (Benina–Regima)1926 (Regima–el-Abiar)1927 (el-Abiar–Barce) Soppressione1965 Precedenti gestoriFS? Lunghezza108 km Scartamento950 mm Elettrificazioneno Ferrovie Modifica dati su Wikidata · Manuale La ferrovia Beng...

Black KnightPoster promosiHangul택배기사 ArtiDelivery Driver GenreFiksi ilmiahDistopiaLagaPembuatNetflixBerdasarkanWebtun Delivery DriverDitulis olehJo Eui-seokSutradaraJo Eui-seokPemeranKim Woo-binEsomKang Yoo-seokNegara asalAmerika language = KoreanProduksiPengaturan kameraMulti kameraDistributorNetflixRilis asliJaringanNetflixFormat gambar4K (Ultra HD)Format audioDolby DigitalRilis2023 (2023) Black Knight (Hangul: 택배기사; RR: Taegbae Gisa; lit....

 

Music festival in England Glastonbury Festival 2013Date(s)28 June 2013 (2013-06-28) – 30 June 2013 (2013-06-30)Location(s)Worthy Farm, Pilton, Somerset, EnglandPrevious eventGlastonbury Festival 2011Next eventGlastonbury Festival 2014Participants135,000 tickets + performers and crewWebsitewww.glastonburyfestivals.co.uk The 2013 Glastonbury Festival (Glastonbury Festival of Contemporary Performing Arts) was held from 28 to 30 June 2013. It followed ...

 

 烏克蘭總理Прем'єр-міністр України烏克蘭國徽現任杰尼斯·什米加尔自2020年3月4日任命者烏克蘭總統任期總統任命首任維托爾德·福金设立1991年11月后继职位無网站www.kmu.gov.ua/control/en/(英文) 乌克兰 乌克兰政府与政治系列条目 宪法 政府 总统 弗拉基米尔·泽连斯基 總統辦公室 国家安全与国防事务委员会 总统代表(英语:Representatives of the President of Ukraine) 总...

Leibniz Universität HannoverGottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Universität HannoverNama sebelumnyaKönigliche Technische HochschuleTechnische Hochschule HannoverTechnische Universität HannoverUniversität HannoverMotoMit Wissen Zukunft gestalten[1]Moto dalam bahasa InggrisShaping the Future with KnowledgeDidirikan1831Anggaran€ 383,8 juta(2012)PresidenVolker EppingStaf akademik2.690 (2012)[2]Staf administrasi1.600 (2012)[2]Jumlah mahasiswa22.236 (2011/12)[3]Lok...

 

ترتيب العمليات الحسابية ترتيب العمليات الحسابية (التي تسمى أحيانًا أسبقية المعامل) في علوم الرياضيات وبرمجة الحاسوب، هي قاعدة تستعمل لتوضيح أي العمليات الحسابية يجب تنفيذها أولًا في جملة حسابية معينة. وفي علم الرياضيات ومعظم لغات الحاسوب، يتم تنفيذ عمليات الضرب قبل الجم�...

 

American politician Jan JonesSpeaker pro tempore of the Georgia House of RepresentativesIncumbentAssumed office January 11, 2010Preceded byMark BurkhalterSpeaker of the Georgia House of RepresentativesIn officeNovember 16, 2022 – January 9, 2023Preceded byDavid RalstonSucceeded byJon G. BurnsMember of the Georgia House of RepresentativesIncumbentAssumed office January 13, 2003Preceded byRoger HinesConstituency38th district (2003–2005)46th district (2005–2013)47th distri...

Scenic road in Colorado, United States Peak to Peak Scenic Byway National Forest Scenic BywayRoute informationMaintained by CDOTLength55 mi[1][2] (89 km)Existed1989–presentMajor junctionsSouth end SH 119 Black HawkNorth end US 34 / US 36 / SH 7 Estes Park LocationCountryUnited StatesStateColoradoCountiesGilpin, Boulder, Larimer counties Highway system Scenic Byways National National Forest BLM NPS Colorado...

 

Saudi royal and politician (born 1942) In this Arabic name, the surname is Al Saud. Ahmed bin Abdulaziz Al SaudMinister of InteriorTenure18 June 2012 – 5 November 2012 Prime MinisterKing Abdullah PredecessorNayef bin AbdulazizSuccessorMohammed bin NayefDeputy Minister of InteriorTenure16 December 1975 – 18 June 2012 Prime MinisterKing KhalidKing FahdKing Abdullah SuccessorAbdul Rahman Al RabiaanDeputy Governor of Mecca ProvinceTenure1971–1975 Appointed byKing Fais...

 

هذه المقالة بحاجة لصندوق معلومات. فضلًا ساعد في تحسين هذه المقالة بإضافة صندوق معلومات مخصص إليها.   لمنظمة الاشتراكيون الثوريون المصرية، طالع الاشتراكيون الثوريون (مصر). جزء من سلسلة حولالاشتراكية تطورها تاريخ الاشتراكية مناظرة الحساب الاشتراكي اقتصاد اشتراكي أفكا...

This article is about the 1915 Major League Baseball season only. For information on all of baseball, see 1915 in baseball. Sports season1915 MLB seasonLeagueAmerican League (AL)National League (NL)Federal League (FL)SportBaseballDurationRegular season:April 14 – October 7, 1915 (AL, NL)April 10 – October 3, 1915 (FL)World Series (AL vs. NL):October 8 – October 13, 1915Number of games154Number of teams24 (8 per league)Pennant winnersAL championsBoston Red Sox  AL runners-upDe...

 

1996 European Athletics Indoor ChampionshipsTrack events60 mmenwomen200 mmenwomen400 mmenwomen800 mmenwomen1500 mmenwomen3000 mmenwomen60 m hurdlesmenwomenField eventsHigh jumpmenwomenPole vaultmenwomenLong jumpmenwomenTriple jumpmenwomenShot putmenwomenCombined eventsPentathlonwomenHeptathlonmenvte The men's 1500 metres event at the 1996 European Athletics Indoor Championships was held in Stockholm Globe Arena on 9–10 March.[1] Medalists Gold Silver Bronze Mateo Cañellas Spa...