DAVID B. COHEN, J.
Blue River Gems Inc. (plaintiff) owned a gold and diamond necklace, that plaintiff valued at approximately $400,000. On August 8, 2013, plaintiff consigned the necklace to defendant S.V. & V. Diamond Corp. (SV & V) pursuant to a written memorandum. When SV & V obtained the necklace, the memorandum of consignment stated that the necklace "remained the property of Blue River Gems" and that SV & V acquired "no right or authority to sell, hypothecate or otherwise dispose of the merchandise."
On August 22, 2013, SV & V transferred the necklace to defendant Michael Gross Diamonds Inc. (MGD). The nature of that transfer is the subject of dispute between the parties. Plaintiff and SV & V contend that the necklace was consigned (wrongfully) by SV & V to MGD and have attached a memorandum of consignment attesting to such. MGD disputes that the transfer was a consignment and states that the memorandum is a forgery. Instead, Michael Gross, the president of MGD, states that SV & V was indebted to MGD for more than $1,000,000 for diamonds that had been consigned by MGD to SV & V. MGD agreed that if SV & V gave the necklace to MGD, MGD would return $340,000 worth of memoranda of consignment in "satisfaction of a corresponding amount of [its] debt to MGD." Upon delivery of the necklace, MGD gave it three memoranda "signifying the forgiveness of $339,456.30" of debt. Thus, MGD argues that the transfer was not a consignment at all but an exchange of the necklace for the diamonds.
At some point, plaintiff learned that MGD had possession of the necklace and sought return of the necklace from MGD. Upon MGD's refusal to return the necklace, plaintiff commenced the instant action. The complaint alleges against MGD two causes of action, one for conversion and one for unjust enrichment. The instant motion seeks summary judgment against MGD on the two causes of action.
It is undisputed that plaintiff was the owner of the necklace and that MGD now has possession of the necklace and refuses to return it to plaintiff. The only question is whether MGD has some right to retain the necklace.
Uniform Commercial Code § 2-403(2) provides "[a]ny entrusting of possession of goods to a merchant who deals in goods of that kind gives him power to transfer all rights of the entruster to a buyer in ordinary course of business" (emphasis added). This provision protects a buyer in the ordinary course of business who purchases goods from a merchant. It is undisputed that plaintiff entrusted the necklace to SV & V, however, the parties dispute both whether SV & V is a merchant and whether MGD is a buyer in the ordinary course of business. Thus, for MGD to defeat the motion for summary judgment and raise a genuine question as to whether it has a right to retain the necklace under the entrustment statute, the court must find a genuine issue of fact whether SV & V is a merchant and whether MGD is a buyer in the ordinary course of business.
A merchant under the UCC is defined as:
A buyer in the ordinary course of business is defined as:
In Porter v Wertz (68 A.D.2d 141 [1979], affd 53 N.Y.2d 696 [1981]), in examining the entrustment statute of a merchant buyer, the Court held that buyer in the ordinary course of business "should not — and cannot — be interpreted to permit, countenance or condone commercial standards of sharp trade practice or indifference as to the `provenance,' i.e., history of ownership or the right to possess or sell an object d'art, such as is present in the case before us" (id. at 146). Given their knowledge of the practices of their trade, merchants or dealers, when acting as purchasers, are held to a "heightened standard" of commercial reasonableness in part to prevent them from shielding their purchase of stolen or misappropriated goods behind the assertion that they acted in good faith (Dorothy G. Bender Found., Inc. v Carroll, 40 Misc.3d 1231[A], 2013 NY Slip Op 51362[U] [Sup Ct, NY County 2013], amended 2013 WL 4506248 [Sup Ct, NY County, Aug. 23, 2013, Kornreich, J., index No. 601375/2009], affd 126 A.D.3d 585 [1st Dept 2015]). In affirming Justice Kornreich, the Appellate Division, First Department held, that "by going forward with the transaction despite these red flags, [defendant] did not observe the reasonable commercial standards of the art trade" and was not a buyer in the ordinary course of business (Dorothy G. Bender Found., Inc. v Carroll, 126 A.D.3d 585, 587 [1st Dept 2015], lv denied 26 N.Y.3d 905 [2015]; see also Overton v Art Fin. Partners LLC, 166 F.Supp.3d 388 [SD NY 2016]; Davis v Carroll, 937 F.Supp.2d 390 [SD NY 2013]).
Although New York law does not expressly identify the parameters of red flags to be considered by a merchant buyer, the Overton and Davis cases have articulated four possible red flags in this context: (1) whether the sale price is obviously below market, (2) whether the negotiations or procedure of the sale differed from previous transactions between buyer and
Here, MGD has satisfied its burden of raising a genuine issue of fact as to whether SV & V is a merchant. MGD has submitted the affidavit of Michael Gross and his former employee stating that SV & V engaged in consignment and selling activities. Indeed, the very consignment memoranda relied on by plaintiff as proof of SV & V's alleged consignment of the necklace to MGD has a box that indicates that SV & V may engage in sales or consignment. Additionally, in the affidavit of Kalman Klein submitted by plaintiff, despite retaining final approval of any proposed sale, Mr. Klein admits to asking SV & V whether the necklace "had been sold or when [he] could expect its return." Thus, it appears that SV & V was entrusted with possession and that SV & V deals in jewelry such as the necklace and would fall under the category of a merchant for these purposes. Although plaintiff argues that Zaretsky v William Goldberg Diamond Corp. (820 F.3d 513 [2d Cir 2016]) is instructive, there the court found that a celebrity fashion stylist was not a jewelry merchant because he did not deal in goods of the kind. Here, MGD has satisfied its burden of raising a genuine issue of fact as to whether SV & V is a merchant and deals in jewelry.
However, MGD does not satisfy the buyer in the ordinary course of business prong of the entrustment statute. According to the Gross affidavit, SV & V was "indebted to MGD for over $1 million" for diamonds which had been consigned to SV & V, claimed to have been sold and not paid for. Further, the necklace was exchanged "as partial satisfaction of that debt." On August 22, 2013, the date that SV & V delivered the
It is clear from Mr. Gross's affidavit that no actual exchange of goods took place on August 22, 2013, that the notes he handed to SV & V were in satisfaction of a debt, that MGD was releasing its claim relating to goods that it believed were previously sold and now indebted for and that exchange of the necklace was in forgiveness of debt to MGD. As buyer in the ordinary course of business specifically excludes a person that acquires goods in "partial satisfaction of a money debt," MGD cannot be deemed a buyer in the ordinary course of business (see Sherman v Roger Kresge, Inc., 67 Misc.2d 178, 180 [Broome County Ct 1971], affd 40 A.D.2d 766 [3d Dept 1972]).
MGD also fails the good faith test under the UCC and under Porter. Under the UCC "[a] person buys goods in the ordinary course if the sale to the person comports with the usual or customary practices in the kind of business in which the seller is engaged or with the seller's own usual or customary practices" (UCC 1-201[b][9]). Here, although MGD argues an invoice from the transaction is not necessary for proof of ownership, MGD concedes that invoices and billing statements are customary to record the details of transactions. Further, MGD does not dispute that while not necessary as proof, it is nevertheless the "custom and practice of the jewelry industry to issue an invoice in order to evidence that a purchase of jewelry was effectuated and that ownership interest transferred." Here, MGD failed to take any action to ascertain the true ownership of the necklace, and then failed to adhere to custom by obtaining an invoice or other proof of ownership. Permitting MGD to use the entrustment statute as a shield despite its own inactions and the clear red flags would violate the principle set forth in the UCC and Porter.
Further, using the standards set forth in Overton as guides, it is clear that there were "red flags." Despite the knowledge that SV & V dealt with jewelry not owned by SV & V, that SV & V was having financial problems as evidenced by SV & V's lack of payments to MGD and, through its own experiences that SV & V would sometimes sell a consigned piece and not remit the payment, MGD still took the necklace without any investigation. By going forward with the transaction despite these red flags, MGD did not observe the reasonable commercial standards and did not proceed in good faith.