so to sum up, escheat, judicial sale, rossession, and conversion are four of the ways by which propertyers can lose their property. there's another legal term, known as a bailment, that applies to personal property; not when property is lost, but en it's entrusted byhewn tsomeone else as when the owner of aicycle takes her bik to a store for repairs. a bailment is t a sale of property, a permanent transfer propey. e neof the bicle r example, wl wa hebike bk te i's en fixed. a banto ocr, e neof the bicle the owcondiol wa the bailor, generay the owner of the property, must retain title. in the case of the bike, a bailment wouldn't exist if the bike owner sold her bicycle to the shop owr. 's so necessary tt possession of the proper be delivered to the baee e rs who receives thpr. agcl ase ne 't ly drop the bikeff when theicyclehop islod orn there's no bailee pre to receive the prope thilee must al accept possession of the property. a standard receipt, haed to a customer by a shop owner, do mthcustomer with the item. it also estaishes that the bailee, the store owner, has accepted the prope