Digital publication | Page 9

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the companions and by his

unwillingness to part with the TARDIS. The

Doctor has satisfied the second factor of

adverse possession.

Open and notorious possession requires that the possession

must be visible and obvious so that the owner is made aware

via a reasonable inspection into the property. The Doctor may think

that he is clever enough to go unnoticed, but that world has seen the Doctor

and his magic blue box. Gallifrey has also been put on notice. The Doctor’s antics have gotten the attention of Gallifrey and therefore the true owners

of the TARDIS know that the Doctor has it.

Adverse and hostile possession varies on a state-by-state

level but we will apply the majority rule, so the mindset of

the Doctor is irrelevant to this case. The rule states

that the Doctor must possess the TARDIS in

a manner that is hostile.

Continuous possession

requires that the possession needs to be

as continuous as possible given the nature

and character of the property at hand. Since there

is a lack of information about how other time lords used

their TARDIS, we will work under the assumption that the

Doctor has met this requirement. The Doctor stole the TARDIS when

he was 236 years old and he is still traveling space and time well past his

900th birthday. The TARDIS has never left the Doctor for any substantial length

of time. This factor is also met.

To meet the statutory period requirement, the possession of the property must meet the time set by law. This can range from 5-20 years. The Doctor has

clearly met this standard. Gallifrey may have a longer standard but

it is safe to assume that the Doctor does in fact own the TARDIS.

In The Doctor’s Wife, the TARDIS told the Doctor that

she stole him. So the TARDIS could own the

Doctor in a sense. But that is a subject

for another day.

Allons-y and Geronimo,

till next time.