Dayvault & Newsome v. Townsend

244 S.W. 1108, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1376
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 28, 1922
DocketNo. 8707.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 244 S.W. 1108 (Dayvault & Newsome v. Townsend) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dayvault & Newsome v. Townsend, 244 S.W. 1108, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1376 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

VAUGHAN, J.

This suit was filed by ap* pellants to recover the sum of $590.50, alleged to be due them by appellee as the price contracted to be paid for a certain lot of overalls purchased June 14, 1920, to be shipped by August 30, 1920, from Greensboro, N. C., to appellee at Rockwall, Tex.

Appellants were partners, composing the firm known as Dayvault-Newsome Co., at Dallas, Tex., and Dayvault & Newsome at Chattanooga, Tenn. Appellee was a retail merchant doing business at Rockwall, Tex.

Appellants allege that on the 14th day of June, 1920, they sold $590.50 worth of overalls to appellee, f. o. b. factory. Terms, net, 30 days. Same to be shipped by freight, the shipping date specified to be August 30, 1920.

Appellee claimed, and the facts show, that the overalls were not shipped until September 15, 1920. The sole defense of the appel-lee was that, as the goods had not been shipped until September 15, 1920, he had the right to rescind the contract and refuse the goods.

Appellants pleaded a waiver of delay and estoppel by the appellee, and that the goods, under the existing conditions and within the contemplation of the parties, were shipped within a reasonable length of time. The above statement from the pleadings we believe to be sufficient to develop the issues presented on this appeal.

The following are the special issues submitted to the jury and answers thereto:

“Issue No. 1. Was the time for the final shipment of the goods in question of the essence of the contract made between plaintiff and defendant for the purchase and sale of-said goods? Answer: Yes.
“Issue No. 2. Did plaintiffs ship said goods at or before the time provided for in their contract with defendant? Answer: No.
“Issue No. 3. What was the date of final shipment of said goods as provided for in the contract between the parties? Answer: August 30, 1920.
“Issue No. 4. What was the date of shipment by plaintiffs of said goods? Answer: September 15, 1920.”

Judgment was rendered for appellee on said answers.

The following are the material facts established on the trial of the cause: The order was taken to ship said overalls from the factory at Greensboro, N. C., on August 30, 1920, and shipment was made on September 15, 1920; that the overalls arrived at destination and were delivered at appellee’s store on October 10, 1920, where same remained until October 14, 1920, on which date the appellee wrote appellants a letter stating he was returning said shipment to Chattanooga, Tenn., one of the offices of appellants, and, by way of explaining why he was returning said merchandise, stated:

*1109 “We regret very much that we are forced to take such action, but poor crops and low price cotton are eaiising almost no collections and very little selling. We are trying to save our credit and to pay our bills as promptly as possible and hope you can appreciate our position.”

On the 17th day of September, 1920, ap-pellee received a bill of lading and statement from appellants showing that said merchandise had been shipped on September 15, 1020. Appellee did not notify appellants, or any one acting for or representing them, that he intended to cancel said order on account of said delay.

This suit was filed by appellants on November 18, 1920. Prior thereto appellants and appellee had a conversation at appellants’ office in Dallas, Tex., in reference to said shipment of merchandise having been refused by appellee. In said conversation ap-pellee did not claim the right to cancel said order on account of said delay in the shipment. As shown by the record, this right was first asserted by appellee in his first amended original answer, filed in said cause on July 4, 1921.

On October 14, 1920, appellee consigned said goods to appellant at Chattanouga, Tenn., shipping same from Rockwall by freight. Said goods remained in Chattanooga until December 15, 1920, on which date appellee, without the knowledge or consent of appellants, had them reshipped to Rockwall, Tex., to appellee as consignee. Said merchandise remained in the freight office of the transportation company at Rockwall until April 4, 1921, where, by agreement without prejudice between the parties, said merchandise was from that date to be held- by the railroad company.without storage charges; that appellants have never had from the date of shipment from Greensboro, N. 0., possession of said merchandise or exercised any control over same.

The following testimony bears upon the issue as to whether or not time was of the essence of the contract: Wilbur A. Davis, witness for appellants, testified:

“I did not give Mr. Townsend anything in writing; I just took the order in a memorandum book; I do not find a copy of this order in my order book; I' do not know whether I mailed it to Mr. Townsend or not. The shipping date for the bill of goods was August SO, 1920; that was the last shipping date I had on the overalls. I couldn’t take an order for shipment any later than that. My instructions were that the factory wouldn’t accept any order for September. I had those instructions from Mr. Newsome and Mr. Dayvault. Mr. Townsend did not want the overalls shipped any sooner than August. 30, 1920; he just asked me what was the shipping date and I told him the last shipping date was August 30, 1920, and this was June 14th, which would give from June 14th to August 30th, two months and a half. Some of the merchants that I sold this stuff to wanted it shipped in September, but I couldn’t take an order that way. If I sent in an order that way they would have sent it back to me. The goods I sold Mr. Townsend were to be shipped August 30, 1920; that was the latest shipping date I had. That was the agreement between Mr. Townsend and myself; that was the last shipping date. I wrote on this order ‘Ship to Fair Drygoods Oo. 6-14-20, through Dayvault-Newsome Go. at Chattanooga; how ship, freight; when, Aug. 30; terms, net 30; salesman, W. A. Davis.’ ”

Appellee testified as follows:

■ “I remember him [Wilbur A. Davis] mentioning the fact to me that he had later shipping dates than most anybody else. I remember asking him what that shipping date was and he told me, as well as I remember, instead of saying August 30, 1920, he said up to September 1st, which would practically mean August 30th. I gave him the order in the regular way to be shipped on August 30th, or, as I remember, September 1, 1920; that was the last day it was to be shipped. I would say there was not a word mentioned about any shipping date later than August 30th or September 1st; that would be the extreme limit. I did not tell him he could ship them any time after September 1st. It was part .of the understanding and agreement that they were to be shipped not later than September 1st. I would not have ordered the goods if he had fixed the final shipping date later than September 1st, because it is a well-known fact in this country that, along about that time, a great many cotton pickers are shipped in here, and corn to gather, and gin work and so on, and that there is a big demand for overalls right about that time.

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Bluebook (online)
244 S.W. 1108, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dayvault-newsome-v-townsend-texapp-1922.