Court Opinion

ID: 6830617
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-23 19:51:59.53721+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:04:32.312384
License: Public Domain

EVAN A. EVANS,
Circuit Judge. Leo Koretz, the alleged bankrupt, was a resident of Chicago until December 1, 1923, when he absconded, leaving personal obligations of $2,000,000. A couple of days before his disappearance, he went to appellant’s place of business, and asked to see some diamond bracelets. He selected two valuable ones to show to his wife, and stated that, if she selected one, he would return the other, and, if she did not like either, he would return both. Appellant entered the transaction upon its books as a “memo, charge.”
Bankrupt did not show the bracelets to his wife, but went to New York, where he visited numerous jewelry stores and obtained possession of several pieces of jewelry, worth approximately $75,000. A few days thereafter a letter arrived in Chicago addressed to Milton Simon, a brother-in-law of bankrupt, which read: “I am inclosing check and key, and am sending suit ease on the Broadway Limited. Please go to the station and get the suit ease. Leo Koretz.”
Mr. Simon was' not at home, and the letter was turned over to his wife, a sister of Mrs. Koretz. A key and a baggage check were also in the envelope, and Mrs. Simon secured possession of the suit case which she took to Mrs. Koretz. The bag was not opened until the next day, when in the presence of the district attorney and others its contents were examined. In a smaller grip were several long white envelopes, each of them addressed to a jewelry concern. Upon one of these envelopes appeared the words, “Lewy Brothers, State and Adams Street, Chicago,” and in it were the two diamond bracelets.
Appellant sought the property through these reclamation proceedings, while appellee, as the receiver and afterwards the trustee of the bankrupt estate,' successfully resisted the application before both the referee and the District Court.
One of two theories of bankrupt’s *226dealings with appellant must be adopted. Either the transaction was a sale, or possession of the bracelets passed to bankrupt as bailee. If bankrupt was a bailee, then, under the facts recited, appellant could recover its property. In re Wright-Dana Hardware Co., 211 F. 908, 128 C. C. A. 286. There is no merit in the contention that the property passed to a third party (his wife) before the bankruptcy proceedings were instituted. The evidence clearly refutes such a position. Bankrupt did not send the suit case, to his wife. He sent it to a brother-in-law. The fact that the bracelets were in an envelope bearing the name and address of appellant would indicate that Koretz expected the brother-in-law to return the jewelry to appellant.
If we view the transaction between appellant and bankrupt as a sale on approval, then appellant is likewise entitled to a return of the goods, for bankrupt never made the selection or approval required to pass title. The evidence fails to show the “approval” necessary to bring the case within section 19, rule 3, paragraph 2, of the Illinois Sales Act (Smith-Hurd Rev. St. 1923, c. 121½).
Finally, if the court should find the transaction between appellant and bankrupt to be a sale (either outright or upon approval), then it was voidable at appellant’s option for the obvious fraud practiced by Kor-,etz in the negotiations leading to its consummation.
The decree is reversed, witji costs,.and with directions to enter an order directing appellee to turn over to appellant the two bracelets in controversy.