The People v. Nakutin

5 N.E.2d 78, 364 Ill. 563
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 27, 1936
DocketNo. 23327. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 5 N.E.2d 78 (The People v. Nakutin) 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. Nakutin, 5 N.E.2d 78, 364 Ill. 563 (Ill. 1936).

Opinion

Per Curiam :

A jury in the criminal court of Cook county found Ralph Nakutin guilty of the crime of receiving stolen property and fixed the value of the property at $93. After motions for a new trial and in arrest of judgment were overruled he was sentenced to the penitentiary. .He has sued out this writ of error. Present counsel did not try the case below.

The indictment charged that defendant, for his own gain and to prevent the owner from again possessing its property, did buy, receive and aid in concealing certain linen luncheon sets described, the property of Leacock & Co., Inc., a corporation, knowing that they had been stolen.

Samuel E. Golden testified that he worked for Leacock & Co., Inc., on December 16, 1934; that Robert S. Benepe was president, John, Julian and Lionel Leacock were directors and Frederick H. Grob was treasurer. His salary was paid by Leacock & Co., Inc., by checks signed by its president and treasurer. Leacock & Co., Inc., was an importer of fine linens and laces. Its board of directors met at its New York office. Golden had been its Chicago representative for four years. On December 16, 1934, at 4:00 P. M., he left two sample cases containing linens and laces valued, wholesale, at $474, in his automobile in a public garage. The car was not locked and the next morning tire sample cases, linens and laces were gone. He identified People’s exhibits 1, 2 and 3 as part of the merchandise that was in the sample cases and said their wholesale value was $93. The first time after December 16, 1934, that he saw these exhibits was on January 21, 1935, at the I. I. Litwinsky store. R. E. Getzelman, president of that concern, and Sergeant O’Connell and Sidney Bayer, were there. Golden visited the defendant’s store, at 1552 North Milwaukee avenue, on January 23 but did not talk with defendant. In February, shortly after the indictment was returned, defendant went to Golden’s office and said that if Golden would testify that he was not sure that this merchandise was his, defendant would make good the loss and in addition he would pay Golden $300 for his trouble.

Antoinette Getzelman, the wife of R. E. Getzelman, who is president of I. I. Litwinsky, The Linen Store, Incorporated, testified that she went to defendant’s store on January 9, 1935, to look for merchandise that had been stolen from Litwinsky. Before entering she looked at baby shoes and slippers in the window. She said she had a conversation with defendant. She asked him about the baby shoes that she had seen in the window, and after he had shown them to her she decided not to buy them. She spent about two hours in the store and shopped around in the different departments. A clerk showed her some linen tablecloths. Defendant talked to this witness about People’s exhibits 1, 2 and 3. He said, “Would you like to buy a tablecloth very cheap, something that is worth a hundred dollars?” She said that defendant did not know her before she went to the store that day and that she gave him her first name and her maiden name. She told him that she had never been in the store before but had shopped in the neighborhood and was attracted by his windows. Defendant offered her the three exhibits for $30 but refused to accept her check. She returned to defendant’s store that evening with Bayer, who posed as her son but who was, in fact, an assistant buyer for the Litwinsky store. Next day she came back and bought the three exhibits for $30. She asked defendant how he could sell the goods so cheap, and he told her that there was a syndicate that buys stolen merchandise and that he bought from it. He said, “I have a list of customers that buy my stuff from time to time.” She also told defendant that she was the widow of a tobacco planter in South Carolina and that she was visiting in Chicago. She gave him a fictitious address on Belmont avenue. She testified that the fair market value of the articles she purchased from defendant was $93. On cross-examination she admitted that she had guessed that they were worth about that and had been told this was correct. The court refused to permit counsel for defendant to inquire whether this witness had been shown a tablecloth marked defendant’s exhibit 3.

Sidney Bayer testified that he went to defendant’s store as stated by Mrs. Getzelman. He identified People’s exhibits 1, 2 and 3 as the articles which were purchased from defendant. He made his identification by looking at the words “bought by Bayer,” which were, placed on a tag by Sergeant Harry O’Connell.

Defendant’s written motion to instruct the jury to return a verdict of not guilty was overruled.

Defendant testified that he remembered the visit of the witness Getzelman. He stated that she wantéd a set of linens which were worth between $200 and $400. He told her he did not handle that kind of merchandise. He denied that he made the sale of the linens which Mrs. Getzelman finally purchased for $30 and insisted that one of the clerks sold them to her. He said he made it a practice to talk to most of his customers, and that he would go from one to another and try to help along the sales. He had no fixed prices and usually a price was reached by bargaining. He denied having a conversation with Mrs. Getzelman about taking a check for merchandise, and also denied having told her that he could sell the linens so cheap because they were stolen and that he bought them from a syndicate. He' also denied going to the office of witness Golden and asking him not to identify his goods, in return for his offer to pay for the stolen linens and to pay him $300 for his trouble. He testified further that the linens in question were kept in the front of the store in show-cases in the linen department and that the goods were wrapped by a clerk and sold in the usual manner. He testified that he bought these linens from a jobber named Melmuk. He had bought goods from this same man on previous occasions. He produced a receipted bill for $82.50 from B. Melmuk & Co., a jobber of general merchandise, 531 Elmiro street, San Antonio, Texas, dated December 27, 1934. This invoice covered one job lot of lace linens. He testified that the exhibits were included in the goods covered by the invoice. He paid between nine and ten dollars apiece for the linens. He denied knowing that it was stolen merchandise, and stated that after it was bought the girl put it in stock, and that it was never hidden. He also bought merchandise in job lots, at auction and at fire sales.

Evelyn Ferdinand was one of defendant’s clerks. She showed defendant’s linens to Mrs. Getzelman, who asked to see something better than defendant had in stock. This witness called defendant over to fix the price of the linens which had been selected by Mrs. Getzelman. .There was nothing unusual about this sale.

Morris Parvin had been a general merchandise jobber for twenty-five years. He said that a fair, reasonable jobbing price of one set of the exhibits was from $18 to $20 in January, 1935, and about $13 or $14 in December, 1934. Another exhibit was worth around $10 or $11 in January and $8 or $9 in December. On cross-examination he stated that he could not answer what the retail price would be, because linens are a very peculiar item. They are bought at as low a figure as possible and are sold for as much as can be obtained. Few men who are not manufacturers can tell their value. The retail price of exhibit "1 would depend on where it was sold and who sold it.

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Bluebook (online)
5 N.E.2d 78, 364 Ill. 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-people-v-nakutin-ill-1936.