My mom found a boyfriend at her previous assisted living home and they spent a lot of time together. When he moved out, he left a locked dresser behind in my mother's possession. When my mom moved out, I took the dresser along with her belongings- it was either that or the staff would pick it up and throw it away or donate it. All her stuff has been in my living room since the move- I assumed I'd only be housing it for a couple of weeks, but now it's been months.
So, I guess the guy moved a second time and then got mad I had his dresser. He demanded I return it to him. I told him he could send someone to get it, but that I wasn't paying to rent a U-Haul to transport it and I couldn't lift it on my own anyway. He threatened to have me arrested for theft. I laughed at that and told him to go ahead. I never heard another word.
All that being said, the guy passed away this week and his family isn't returning my mother's calls. I really don't have any way to get in touch with his family beyond her. But... I have this dresser sitting in my living room and the lock on it is cheap. It would be easy to break. And... I'm really curious to know what was so important that he locked it. This is a serious aftermarket gig- he screwed a padlock holder onto a wooden dresser. I could either unscrew it or just break the lock.
But... it's not mine. And, it's not my mother's. That makes it bad to open it. But... the guy is dead and I have no way of getting his dresser to his family. And... I'm curious. Really, really curious. I once asked my mom what was in it that was so important and she said she didn't know, so this is a mystery.
If I'm not allowed to open it (and we're talking ethics here, not law), what am I supposed to do with it? How long should I hold it for? And, if it goes unclaimed, am I then allowed to open it? Or out of respect, should I leave it locked and then dispose of it? For what it's worth, nobody but the decedent had a key.