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Ferrin Family Finds $45,000 In Attic Of New Home, Returns It To Previous Owners

Ferrin Family Fortune

First Posted: 05/20/11 01:26 PM ET Updated: 07/20/11 06:12 AM ET

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — When Josh Ferrin closed on his family's first home, he never thought he'd make the discovery of a lifetime – then give it back.

Ferrin picked up the keys earlier this week and decided to check out the house in the Salt Lake City suburb of Bountiful. He was excited to finally have a place his family could call their own.

As he walked into the garage, a piece of cloth that clung to an attic door caught his eye. He opened the hatch and climbed up the ladder, then pulled out a metal box that looked like a World War II ammunition case.

"I freaked out, locked it my car, and called my wife to tell her she wouldn't believe what I had found," said Ferrin, who works as an artist for the Deseret News in Salt Lake City.

Then he found seven more boxes, all stuffed full with tightly wound rolls of cash bundled together with twine – more than $40,000.

Ferrin quickly took the boxes to his parent's house to count. Along with his wife and children, they spread out thousands of bills on a table, separating the bundles one by one.

They stopped counting at $40,000, but estimated there was at least $5,000 more on the table.

Ferrin thought about how such a large sum of money could go a long way, pay bills, buy things he never thought he could afford.

"I'm not perfect, and I wish I could say there was never any doubt in my mind. We knew we had to give it back, but it doesn't mean I didn't think about our car in need of repairs, how we would love to adopt a child and aren't able to do that right now, or fix up our outdated house that we just bought," Ferrin said. "But the money wasn't ours to keep and I don't believe you get a chance very often to do something radically honest, to do something ridiculously awesome for someone else and that is a lesson I hope to teach to my children."

He thought about the home's previous owner, Arnold Bangerter, who died in November and left the house to his children.

"I could imagine him in his workshop. From time to time, he would carefully bundle up $100 with twine, climb up into his attic and put it into a box to save. And he didn't do that for me," Ferrin said of the man who had worked as a biologist for the Utah Department of Fish and Game.

Bangerter purchased the home in 1966 and lived there with his wife, who died in 2005.

After most of the money was counted, Ferrin called one of Bangerter's sons with the news.

Kay Bangerter said he knew his father hid away money because he once found a bundle of cash taped beneath a drawer in their home, but he never considered his dad had stuffed away so much over the years.

"He grew up in hard times and people that survived that era didn't have anything when they came out of it unless they saved it themselves," Kay Bangerter, the oldest of the six children, told the Deseret News. "He was a saver, not a spender."

Bangerter called the money's return "a story that will outlast our generation and probably yours as well."

"I'm a father, and I worry about the future for my kids," Ferrin said. "I can see him putting that money away for a rainy day and it would have been wrong of me to deny him that thing he worked on for years. I felt like I got to write a chapter in his life, a chapter he wasn't able to finish and see it through to its conclusion."

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SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — When Josh Ferrin closed on his family's first home, he never thought he'd make the discovery of a lifetime – then give it back. Ferrin picked up the keys earlier this week...
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — When Josh Ferrin closed on his family's first home, he never thought he'd make the discovery of a lifetime – then give it back. Ferrin picked up the keys earlier this week...
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12:22 AM on 05/29/2011
What a wonderful story and lesson for all of us: return what isn't yours"!

Jean"$1.98"
03:51 PM on 05/26/2011
Character is how you behave when tested and no one’s watching. Let’s be radically honest as often as we’re given the opportunity.
rlivingston10116
Argue not with the universe; it's a bad listene
05:46 PM on 05/25/2011
Easy to say what is right or not, but we know what we would do only if actually faced with the opportunity.
01:15 PM on 05/25/2011
I would have kept it. It's part of the purchase agreement. They had ample opportunity to remove all belongings from the house.

If it were trash in the attic, would the sellers have accepted that?

This is not a moral issue. Watching a child suffucate and you do nothing to help is a moral issue.
Keep the money like the a treasure hunter would. Only, this time the treasure is in your house.
05:16 PM on 05/24/2011
I can't believe the police haven't seized this money yet! It's obviously drug money. Like every other dollar they see.
03:57 PM on 05/24/2011
"They stopped counting at $40,000, but estimated there was at least $5,000 more on the table."

Uh-huh, whatever. So you have a bunch of cash you just found in an attic and you spread it out to count it. But you don't finish the count? Really? I can't believe that for a second. Knowing human nature I can say that this part of the story is very very unlikely. So how much cash was really found? Looks like a case of "almost" honest (which might still be better than dishonest I suppose).
01:54 PM on 05/24/2011
It's nice to see there are still some very honest people out there. I believe this family just bought their pass to heaven when their time comes. Who knows how much the children of the man who saved FOR THEM needed it?

A big thank you from me to the man who gave it back. I am a victim of inheritance rip off and it hurts very much.
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columbusbuck
LGBT/Veteran
01:21 PM on 05/24/2011
Of course you return it. You don't know if the Brady bunch lived there before you or if it was the Manson family. Can't take chances like that.
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loggerboots
WELL RETIRED UAW.
12:13 PM on 05/24/2011
Gave the money back, sure ite the right thing, Stupid is keeping 45,000.00 in a hole in the garage,
He really had no legal reason to give it back,the family probably didn't know the $$$$$ was there.
and had plenty of time to search and clean out the property.
10:36 AM on 05/24/2011
Let's say I decided to sell a $500k house by owner, and was asking $45k less than the market value of a home because I didn't bother to do any research. It it the ethical responsibility of a potential buyer to inform me of this oversight?

I do agree that giving the money was a good thing, because it's always a good thing to be generous, especially to the poor. However, I question whether or not Mr. Ferrin had an ethical responsibility do to what he did.
11:36 AM on 05/24/2011
Leaving money on the table in a real estate deal is hardly comparable to this situation. The heirs of the estate sold the house and did not realize that they left some of the estate in that property.

As for your question, in any business dealing (like your real estate scenario), it is presumed that both sides have onducted due diligence on their own behalf prior to entering the contract.

This story involves no contract... just good people doing the right thing. It is very refreshing to read a story like this. Sure, the family could have kept the money (and their mouths shut) and nobody would be the wiser, but they KNEW the money was the property of the previous owner... there was no question of possession and control of a residential house, the money belonged to the person who owned and resided in the house prior to the Ferrin family purchase of it. So, there is no question that the money belongs to the heirs of the estate.... no matter how needy the Ferrin family is and/or how well to do the Bangerter heirs are.
11:55 AM on 05/24/2011
Hardly comparable? In fact you support my example in two cases: The heirs "did not realize that they left money" because they didn't do 'their research'. Mr. Ferrin performed his due diligence when he bought the house; it's assumed he did because he is still responsible for any problems he didn't see beforehand. Can not Mr. Ferrin assume that the sellers did their due diligence when they sold it?

A buyer of my 500k house might "KNOW" that I'm underselling my house and that the $45k is really mine; again, does that make them ethically responsible to tell me?
02:11 AM on 05/24/2011
I once found a money bag in a grocery parking lot one evening. It had several hundred dollars in cash and some checks to a travel agency in town. The next day I returned the bag and its contents to the agency and mentioned to the secretary that if there were any reward it would go to my Cub Scout den.

I told my scouts about it to teach them a lesson in honesty and that if there were any reward, we would spend it on a special treat. The next day the owner of the agency came to my door with a police officer and accused me of keeping some of the cash! I was so angry. He wanted to search my house! So I told him what I thought of him and what I had told my scouts. He gave me $2 and left. I took money out of my own pocket to get my den their treat because I sure didn't want to tell them all I got was $2!

Of course, I would do the same again, and I admire Mr. Ferrin for doing what he thought was right, but it used to be a custom to give a small reward for the person's trouble to do it. I hope the children read some of these comments and do the right thing by Mr. Ferrin, also.
04:34 AM on 05/24/2011
"[A]ll I got was $2"?! Are you kidding me?

If you're looking for a reward of any kind--a pat on the back, money--then you aren't doing the right thing, at all. You're doing something worse: being selfish while pretending to be altruistic. You ought not set yourself up as an example to children. And no, the owner's bad behavior is not an excuse for your selfish motives.
03:19 PM on 05/24/2011
I feel you are wrong on two points, 1: "If you're looking for a reward of any kind--a pat on the back, money--the­n you aren't doing the right thing, at all." - What should we 'reward' if not appropriate behavior? Especially in light of current economics circumstances and the amount of temptation, or personal/familial needs that could be met. 2: "You're doing something worse: being selfish while pretending to be altruistic­." - Not at all. If he would have kept the money and said "finders, keepers, I have needs of my own that prevent me from leaving cash laying around", that would be true. We all (hopefully) try to do the right thing, a little acknowledgement that we did overcome and do the right thing is all it takes to make this a better world sometimes. Thank you for your opinion, it was informative to say the least.
05:19 PM on 05/24/2011
I partly agree with catspree07, but only because you should never expect an award or tell someone rewarding others is the right thing to do. If it happens then be gracious, if not, then the person whose money it belongs to maybe needed it. Obviously the owner in your situation lost money out of the bag before it was in your hands, and he shouldn't have given you an award. All that money from that traveling agency were probably client's money for their personal trips, and who knows how much money was lost that the company had to make up so these trips could happen. Hmm give you an award or pay the bills, employees their earnings and make sure the clients get what they paid for.

As for the article, you don't know the circumstances of the children. Obviously he didn't have a bank account, and planning funerals and arrangements, not counting travel is expensive. That money probably went to paying off any debt due to that. They may have sold the house, he had six kids and who knows how many grandchildren and we don't know their life circumstances, maybe they needed every penny.
01:33 AM on 05/24/2011
He should have kept it.
03:50 AM on 05/24/2011
Well, we know your morals now, don't we?
04:57 PM on 05/24/2011
You don't know me well enough to be certain of my morals, but I have demonstrated a paradoxical display of honesty.
07:39 PM on 05/23/2011
I hoped they offered to fix their vehicles......
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anti politricks
better to light 1 candle than curse darkness
04:59 PM on 05/23/2011
this article was probably emailed as a funny forwarded to wall street....where they responded "that was hilarious, i needed that on this monday morning, thnx"
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baxtron
tek phlarpt
03:27 PM on 05/23/2011
Hopefully, the family it belongs to gave you $10-15K of the $45K. Maybe their grandfather wanted someone who wasn't related to him to find it. If he wanted his own grandchildren to find it, he would have said, by the way, there is money hidden in the attic.
04:26 PM on 05/23/2011
I agree. It would be nice to be rewarded once in a while for doing the right thing.
06:14 PM on 05/23/2011
..... or how about just knowing you've done the right thing with an enormous temptation weighing on you to do the wrong thing as a reward.
10:26 PM on 05/23/2011
Not at all. My grandmother hid valuables that way all the time. I was shocked to see where she kept money and silver and even alerted my father because I was worried about her. Who knows what she might have hidden that she didn't get around to moving before she became too ill to do so or even remember. People of that age did not trust banks and did things like this all the time. It has nothing to do with the person they want to find it. It just means they didn't get around to doing whatever they needed to do or they forgot about it before they died. It would be nice if they helped the finders to fix their cars, but from an ethical point it was theirs and the finders did the right thing by returning it to the family. It's a shame that this type of behavior is even newsworthy.
11:46 AM on 05/24/2011
When we helped move my grandparents to an apartment in an "active senior living" community, we found $1,000 in large bills hidden inside a "decorative" doorstop. My grandmother only vaguely remembered putting it there years and years before. Someone had come by on a weekend (before ATMs and weekend hours at banks) to pay their doctor bill. Mind you, my grandfather had been retired for over 25 years by the time we found it! She was so worried about having that much money in the house and no way to get it in the bank for a couple of days that she cleverly hid it... so well, she never found it again... her grandkids did! It was a great laugh, but we started examining everything and every nook and cranny of that house before selling it.