257 S.W. 308 | Tex. App. | 1923
Appellant, as plaintiff below, sued appellee on April 25, 1922, in the justice court, on a written order signed by appellee, for a set of law books, entitled "Standard Encyclopedia of Procedure." This order was dated May 23, 1916. The order called for delivery of the books as published at $6.50 per volume, all volumes in excess of 26 to be furnished free, and provided payment of $8 on September 1, 1916, and $3 per month for the remainder, with privilege of paying $9 each three months. Appellee defended on three grounds, as follows: First, that the order was procured through fraud; second, failure of consideration; and, third, the *309 statutes of limitation. Appellant, by supplemental petition, pleaded waiver by appellee on any question of fraud or failure of consideration, and that appellee had tolled the statute of limitation by a renewed written promise to pay in a letter to appellant, dated May 30, 1917, all of which supplemental pleadings were properly excepted to and denied by appellee. The case was tried before the justice of the peace and judgment rendered for defendant. On appeal to the county court, it was tried before a special judge, the appellee being the regular county judge, and Judgment again rendered for defendant. From this judgment plaintiff appeals.
We think appellee's testimony clearly establishes his pleas of fraud and limitation unless same were defeated by his letter to appellant, dated May 30, 1917. This letter as shown in the record, and omitting the parts not pertinent to our inquiry, contained the following language:
"I want to make you the proposition to pay you $25.00 and reship you the books, and I will pay freight on same. The books are in as good condition as when I opened them, for the reason that they are not suited to my practice and therefore have not been used.
"I am inclosing you my check for $10.00. If you will accept my proposition I will immediately send you the other $15.00. If you do not accept this, then I will pay you for the books as I can. At any rate do not ship me any more of the books, I cannot use them."
It appears that when this letter was written appellee had paid nothing on the books and that, due to failure to pay the installments called for in the order, the appellant had exercised its option, provided for in the order, of declaring the full amount due, and had demanded payment in full. Appellee testified that it was in response to threats to sue him made in letters of appellant that he wrote the letter above quoted from, and that such offer was made only as a compromise. This is not denied nor contradicted by appellant. The undisputed testimony shows that appellant did not ship any more books to appellee, that it kept the $10 sent, and that it sent the local expressman for the books to be reshipped to it. He declined to receive same from appellee because not properly boxed, but we think this immaterial. We think that there was sufficient evidence to authorize the trial court in finding that appellant accepted appellee's offer of compromise and that it could not, therefore, sue upon the original contract. This would sustain a judgment against appellant.
If the trial court did in fact find that the order sued upon was supplanted by a compromise between the parties on May 30, 1917, inasmuch the suit was not filed until April 25, 1922, nearly five years later, we think he could also have found for the appellee on his plea of limitation even as applied to the new agreement, which would also support his judgment.
Appellant contends, however, that appellee's letter was not a compromise offer, but a renewed promise to pay for the books, in the following language of his letter: "If you do not accept this, then I will pay for the books as I can" — and urges that this defeats his plea of limitation. In order for a new promise to pay to toll the statutes of limitation it must contain an unqualified admission of a just subsisting indebtedness and express a willingness to pay it. Krueger v. Krueger,
Where the trial court files no findings of fact, the judgment must be sustained if there is testimony supporting any theory authorizing the judgment. McCoy v. Mayer (Tex.Civ.App.)
We have taken occasion in this opinion to set out some of the issues on which the trial court, under the evidence, could have found against the appellant. It is not the province of this court to pass upon the weight of testimony. There being evidence to support the *310 judgment of the trial court, in the absence of his findings of fact and conclusions of law, this court must affirm the judgment below.
Affirmed.