Elbinger Shoe Co. v. Thomas

1 Tenn. App. 161, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 24
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 29, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1 Tenn. App. 161 (Elbinger Shoe Co. v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elbinger Shoe Co. v. Thomas, 1 Tenn. App. 161, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 24 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

CROWNOVER, J.

This suit was before us at a former day of this term, when the plaintiff in error was allowed 15 days in which to execute an appeal bond in this court. Said bond having been executed, the case is now before us on its merits.

This was an action on a probate account for $208.59, coming from the State of Ohio for shoes shipped to the defendant McKinley Thomas, and was originally instituted before a Justice of the Peace by the plaintiff in error against McKinley Thomas and Joe Cronk, the latter having purchased the stock of goods in violation of the Sales Bulk Statute, without having notified the creditors of the sale. The justice rendered a judgment against the plaintiff and the case was appealed to the circuit court, where it was tried by the judge without a jury, and resulted in a judgment for the defendants below. Plaintiff appealed to this court and has assigned several errors.

The plaintiff in error Elbinger Shoe Manufacturing Company, operated a shoe manufacturing plant in Lebanon, Ohio, but its offices were in the city of Cincinnati. It had a traveling salesman in the State of Tennessee, who took orders from the defendant Thomas for certain bills of shoes on April 23, 1920, which were sent to the company. A part of the shoes were to be shipped immediately and the balance in the summer or fall of that year. The salesman had certain samples which he exhibited to the defendant Thomas, and the sale was made by the samples with the oral agreement that if the shoes were not like the samples they might be returned. The *163 defendant Thomas did not sign the said orders. On April 28, 1920, the plaintiff shipped two packages of the shoes valued at $208.59 to the defendant Thomas at Cookville, R. F. D. No. 9, by parcel post mail. The defendant Thomas was operating a store at Baxter, Tennessee. These packages were delivered to the defendant Thomas, who opened them and sold one pair of shoes to a customer, who returned them because they were defectively made, in that the upper had not been securely fastened to the sole of the shoe. Thomas and his wife examined the packages of shoes and ascertained that they were not according to the samples shown them at the time they purchased the shoes. Thereupon Thomas interviewed a neighbor who had previously had some experience in the mercantile business and told him that.the shoes delivered were not like the samj)les, and by direction of Thomas this man wrote a letter to the company informing it of this fact, stating that the shoes were subject to its orders saying “please advise disposition of same.” The company replied suggesting that it would give Thomas more time to pay for the shoes. Thereupon Thomas placed all of said shoes back into the packages and returned them to the company. He delivered the packages to Comer Cannon, the mail carrier, and gave him the bill, and paid the postage for the return, -with instructions that the carrier address the packages and return them by parcel post to the company. The mail carrier hauled the packages from Baxter to Cookeville, where he placed the address of the company on the packages, 'paid the postage, and then returned the bill or invoice to the company by letter. The company claimed that it never received these packages and that they were evidently lost in transit: hence, this suit was instituted with the result above stated.

The plaintiff in error has assigned several errors predicated upon the action of the court in overruling a motion for a new trial and motion in arrest of judgment.

It is doubtful whether the plaintiff in error has complied with the rules of this court in formally assigning errors. Errors should be formally assigned, briefly sotting out the grounds with as much precision as in a motion for a new trial, and the argument should then follow as laid down by the rules of this court (150 Tenn. 812). Simply stating that the court erred in overruling a motion for a new trial is insufficient (3 Hig., 474). Each error relied upon should be assigned separately and specifically. The plaintiff in error has set out the grounds of the motion for a new trial, and stated that the court -erred in overruling the several grounds; and, in other places in the brief, he argued the'facts to substantiate the contention, but without citation of authorities to aid the court in determining the different questions. But this court desires, if possible, to decide the cases on the merits, hence, -we have treated the case as if. errors *164 had been formally assigned in accordance with the rule. However, attention is called to our rules and attorneys should familiarize themselves with these rules and practice accordingly, so that much time and labor may be saved the court.

The first three assignments of error, in substance, complain that the court erred in holding that the preponderance of the evidence was in favor of the defendant and because the court dismissed the suit.

It is well settled that this court does not weigh the evidence, and where there is some material evidence to sustain the judgment, in law eases, this court is bound by the findings of the lower court. Sec, 5 Michie’s Tennessee Ency. Dig’. 102, etc. It results that the assignments of error Nos. 1, 2 & 3 must be overruled.

The assignments Nos. 4 to 9, inclusive, are that the court erred in holding that the delivery of the packages to the mail carrier, with instructions for the mail carrier to address them and to pay the postage was a sufficient delivery to the company, and that the goods had been actually returned to their proper destination.

Under these assignments it is insisted that the defendant Thomas should have taken a receipt from the carrier and should have insured the packages against loss or sent them by express.

The proof shows beyond question that the goods were delivered to the carrier and that he hauled them to the post office at Cookeville, and addressed them to the company, paid the postage and mailed the original bill back to the company. The address of the company was taken from the bill, and later the same bill was returned to the defendant Thomas.

The buyer did not sign the orders, but purchased by sample, with the verbal understanding that the goods might be returned if not according to the samples. The order did not state whether the sale had been made by sample.

££If the written evidence of the transaction does not purport 'to be a complete transcript of the transaction, oral evidence is admissible to show that the sale was by sample and give rise to the warranty incident thereto. Where the bill of sale merely showed a sale of commodities by generic name without designation of quality, oral evidence of the exhibition of and sale by a sample has been held admissible for the purpose of establishing a warranty that the bulk will comply with the sample; and the broad view seems to have been taken that, though the contract is in writing and contains no reference to a sale by sample, oral evidence is admissible to show that the sale was a sale by sample on the theory evidently that this is in effect the use of oral evidence to identify the subject matter of the sale.” See 24 R. C. L. pages 216-17, Sec. 458; Williston on Sales (2 Ed.), Sec. 254.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Tenn. App. 161, 1925 Tenn. App. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elbinger-shoe-co-v-thomas-tennctapp-1925.