Court Opinion

ID: 3936224
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:00:44.137292+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:43:12.821538
License: Public Domain

Appellant sued appellee in one of the justice courts of Hardin county on a verfied account for merchandise amounting to $170.50. Appellee answered, denying the account in toto, and this was verified, and further answered that the order which appellee had given for the merchandise was canceled by him before the merchandise was shipped. Judgment in the justice court was in favor of appellee, and appellant appealed to the county court, where the trial was upon the same pleadings, and the judgment there was in favor of appellee. Hence this appeal.
The trial in the county court was without a jury, and no findings of fact or conclusions of law were prepared and filed by the court. Counsel for appellant, however, makes the statement in his brief that the trial court was requested to prepare and file findings of fact and conclusions of law, but there is no bill showing that any such request was made and refused, in the absence of which we cannot review the assignment on this point. Springfield Fire  Marine Insurance Co. v. Whisenant,245 S.W. 953, recent decision by this court, and authorities there cited.
By another assignment appellant complains that the judgment is without support in the evidence, in that appellee failed to prove a cancellation of the order for the merchandise prior to its shipment to him, and that in the absence of such proof the court was in error in rendering judgment for appellee. This contention we must sustain. The evidence shows that in the early spring of 1920 appellee ordered from appellant, at St. Louis, Mo., through the latter's salesman, the merchandise, the price of which was sued for here, the order calling for shipment on July 30th following. The merchandise was shipped by appellant to the appellee in accordance with the order, and reached appellee, but he refused to accept the shipment, which consisted of a number of raincoats, and refused to pay for same, and requested appellant to order the merchandise shipped back to St. Louis, which appellant declined to do. Upon the trial there was no denial by any proof that the merchandise was shipped by appellant in accordance with the original order, but the only attempt at defense by proof was that appellee, on June 2, 1920, which was before the goods were shipped, by letter, canceled the order. In support of this defense, appellee, on the trial, introduced what he testified was a copy of a letter to appellant, dated June 2, 1920, stating to appellant that appellee desired to cancel the order, and instructing appellant not to ship the goods. There was no proof that this letter was ever placed in the mail, properly addressed to appellant and properly stamped, and in the absence of such proof the defense of cancellation of the order was not sustained. Where a contract for the sale and purchase of merchandise is made, and shipment to the purchaser is to be made at some later date, the purchaser, if he desired to cancel his order, and undertakes to do so by letter, must, before he can successfully defend against the seller's suit for the price, on the ground of cancellation of the order, show that the letter of cancellation was placed in the mail, properly addressed to the seller, and properly stamped, and that this was done at such date as would afford time for the letter to reach the seller in due course of mail before the shipment was made. Where such proof is made, the presumption attaches that the seller received the letter of cancellation *Page 111 
before shipment, and, if he would show the contrary, the burden is upon him to do so. 21 R.C.L. §§ 36, 37, pp. 764, 765; Bruck Bros. v. Lipman, etc. (Tex. Civ. App.) 228 S.W. 303.
In this case appellee did not show by any evidence that the claimed letter of cancellation was ever placed in the mail properly addressed to appellant, or that there was ever placed upon the letter the necessary postage, or that, if mailed at all, when. Failure to make this proof might have been an oversight, and we will not, therefore, reverse and render the judgment, as prayed by appellant, but have ordered reversal of the Judgment and remand of the cause for another trial.