The People v. Barnett

179 N.E. 450, 347 Ill. 127
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1931
DocketNO. 20699. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 179 N.E. 450 (The People v. Barnett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The People v. Barnett, 179 N.E. 450, 347 Ill. 127 (Ill. 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Justice DeYoung

delivered the opinion of the court:

Maurice A. Barnett, Max Krakow, Laura B. Price, Joseph Baum and Ben Levin were indicted in the criminal court of Cook county for conspiracy to obtain $17,945.75 from the Corporation of the Royal Exchange Assurance of London, England, a corporation, by insuring certain jewelry and fur coats in the possession of Laura B. Price against loss and falsely pretending that they were taken from her in a robbery. Barnett and Krakow obtained a severance from the other defendants and were tried by a jury and found guilty. Barnett was sentenced to imprisonment in the penitentiary, and Krakow to a term of six months in the county jail and to pay a fine of $500. On a writ of error, the Appellate Court for the First District affirmed the judgment of the criminal court. The case is here for a further review.

The substance of the evidence introduced by the prosecution is that late in the spring of 1928, Baum met Krakow, a manufacturing jeweler, in the latter’s office in Chicago and proposed that they obtain an appraisal of jewelry, cause the jewelry to be insured and used in a pretended robbery of some third person, a party to the scheme, and procure satisfaction for the supposed loss from the insurance company. Krakow named Barnett, who had a desk in his office and had been engaged in the jewelry business, as a person who might be induced to enter into the arrangement. When the proposition was submitted to Barnett he suggested that Mrs. Price would probably be willing to supply the jewelry. Barnett afterwards learned that she was ready to join them but he told Baum and Krakow that she did not own sufficient jewelry for their purpose. Barnett and Krakow supplied the additional jewelry desired and Mrs. Price obtained an appraisal upon her own and the borrowed jewelry and also upon two fur coats. Baum then requested Oscar Serlin, an insurance broker of his acquaintance, to call at Krakow’s office. Serlin responded and there met Baum, Barnett and Mrs. Price. After negotiations with one company had failed, representatives of the Corporation of the Royal Exchange Assurance of London accepted the application and that company, on January 21, 1929, issued its policy to Laura B. Price in the sum of $22,150, covering a platinum watch, a pearl chain, a pearl necklace, two platinum diamond rings, two platinum diamond bracelets, a platinum diamond brooch, a platinum diamond and sapphire brooch, a mink coat and a mole coat. Levin, at Baum’s request, advanced $334 to Mrs. Price to pay the premium.

The approximate sum of money which Mrs. Price would receive from the insurance company for the pretended loss and how this money and the jewelry which would remain in their possession should be divided were subjects of discussion between Baum, Krakow and Barnett. According to their plan of division, Mrs. Price would receive one-third and Barnett, Baum, Krakow and Levin two-thirds of the money and Mrs. Price would surrender her mink coat and watch, but the other items of jewelry would be returned to her after they were re-mounted.

The plan of the pretended robbery was finally agreed upon about the middle of February, 1929. Mrs. Price had pawned one of the rings insured in order to obtain a loan of $500. It was deemed wise to redeem the ring before the robbery was perpetrated, but she did not possess sufficient money to malee the redemption. To assist her, Baum borrowed $325 upon his wife’s ring and gave the money to Barnett who turned it over to Mrs. Price. With additional funds of her own, she redeemed the ring on the morning of February 25, 1929. In the afternoon of the same day, Baum first drove his automobile to Levin’s restaurant on the West Side in Chicago, and later, at about 5:3o o’clock, accompanied by Levin, arrived at 61 East Goethe street, the address of Mrs. Price’s modiste. Mrs. Price had told them that a Lincoln automobile, bearing a Florida license, would be standing in the street at or near this point and they discovered the car upon their arrival. They stopped their automobile immediately behind the Lincoln car and waited for Mrs. Price. In about five minutes she appeared, crossed the street toward her automobile and upon seeing Baum began to remove her mink coat. Baum advised her not to do so in the street but suggested that she first enter her automobile. She complied with his suggestion and then removed her coat. Her hand-bag contained the jewelry and she gave the bag and her coat to Baum. She returned to the apartment building where her modiste resided, and upon reaching the lobby pretended to faint away and later reported her loss. Baum and Levin drove to the latter’s home on North Western avenue, the coat was left there, and Baum took the jewelry, wrapped in a handkerchief, to Krakow’s office and delivered it to Krakow at about 7 :oo o’clock that evening.

Mrs. Price submitted the usual proof of loss to the insurance company. Afterwards, at the request of the company’s attorney she furnished an additional detailed statement concerning the robbery, and received from the insuranee company $17,945.75 by two drafts one dated June 25, 1929, for $2000, and the other dated July 25, 1929, for $15,945.75, in satisfaction of the supposed loss. Baum, Krakow and Barnett again met and discussed the subject of the division of the insurance money and of the jewelry reported as stolen. Baum and his wife interviewed Mrs. Price concerning the portion Baum was to receive. Differences of opinion arose and on the next day Mrs. Price, by the delivery of currency to Mrs. Baum, refunded the advancements made for the insurance premium and to redeem Mrs. Price’s ring. Baum received from Krakow the pearl necklace, several small diamonds, three two-karat diamonds and the watch. Levin received some pearls and the mink coat. Baum and Levin were not satisfied with what they had received, and in October, 1929, confessing their part in the conspiracy, informed the attorney for the insurance company that the robbery was pretended and the loss fictitious. The attorney promised them that, in view of their confession, he would intercede in their behalf with the prosecuting authorities. Baum afterwards related the facts of the conspiracy to certain police officers of the city of Chicago. Both Baum and Levin, who are brothers-in-law, were called by the State and testified against the plaintiffs in error.

The coat, the watch and the necklace were identified by Baum, but he was unable to state whether certain diamonds shown him were in Mrs. Price’s hand-bag at the time of the pretended robbery. The supplemental statement made by Mrs. Price at the request of the insurance company’s attorney; records showing the withdrawal of $600 from her bank account about the time she refunded the advancements made for her, and a pawn ticket for a diamond ring signed by her were introduced in evidence.

The plaintiffs in error denied their guilt. Barnett admitted that he had been acquainted with Mrs. Price for ten or twelve years. Pie testified that in January, 1929, he met her in the Marshall Field Annex building, Chicago, when he introduced Serlin, the insurance broker, to her, but nothing was said about insurance; that he, Barnett, repaired some jewelry for Mrs. Price shortly thereafter; that on another occasion he went to her hotel to show, her some jewelry designs; that he had seen Baum in Krakow’s office, but held little conversation with him, and that he never saw Mrs. Baum and was not acquainted with Levin.

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Related

People v. Brand
114 N.E.2d 370 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1953)
The People v. Rife
48 N.E.2d 367 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
179 N.E. 450, 347 Ill. 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-barnett-ill-1931.