157 A. 272 | Conn. | 1931
This action grew out of an order given to an agent of the plaintiff by the defendant for certain supplies to be used in advertising the latter's optical business in Meriden. Later the defendant wrote the plaintiff cancelling the order and refused to receive or pay for the supplies. The order was addressed to the plaintiff at New York and closed with this provision: "This agreement is subject to your acceptance at New York." This same case was before us at an earlier term. See
The finding, which cannot be corrected in any material respect, states the following facts: The order was given on September 3d 1925, and received by the plaintiff in New York on or about September 4th. On September 5th the defendant, becoming dissatisfied with the transaction because of certain information he had received, wrote and placed in the mail a letter to the plaintiff at New York cancelling the order, and this letter was received by it in the usual course of mail. We take judicial notice of the fact that Meriden is by railroad only about one hundred miles from New York and there are daily mails between the two cities. On September 15th the plaintiff replied to the defendant's letter, refusing to recognize his right to cancel the order. The plaintiff claimed to have proved that it sent to the defendant an accepted copy of the order before its letter of the 15th, but the trial court upon the evidence might reasonably refuse to find this to be so. Its conclusion that the plaintiff had failed to prove by a fair preponderance of the evidence an *15 acceptance of the order and any such communication of that acceptance before receipt of the defendant's letter of cancellation as would create a contract, must stand. Assignments of error not involved in the matters discussed do not merit attention.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.