OPINION
Appellee, General Universal Systems, Inc. (GUS), sued appellants, Transoceanic Shipping Co., Inc., a Texas corporation, and Transoceanic Shipping Co., Inc., a Louisiana corporation, 1 for breach of contract. The trial court entered a post-answer default judgement in favor of GUS. We reverse and remand.
BACKGROUND
GUS sued Transoceanic for breach of a contract under which GUS agreed to deliver, and Transoceanic agreed to pay for, certain computer equipment and associated services. During the pendency of the case, counsel for Transoceanic moved its offices. There is nothing in the record indicating Transoceanic notified the court of the new address.
In June of 1995, the court issued a trial setting notice that the case was set for trial on October 5, 1995. Transoceanic never received the notice by mail, and the notice was returned to the court undelivered. GUS appeared before the court on the date of trial, and, after hearing evidence, the court entered a default judgment against Transoceanic.
Transoceanic learned of the adverse judgment when it received a notice of default judgment from the county clerk’s office. That notice was successfully delivered to Transoceanic’s counsel’s new address.
DISCUSSION
In two points of error, Transoceanic brings this writ of error arguing the trial court erred in granting the default judgment in favor of GUS, and in not signing a written order granting Transoceanic’s motion for new trial after orally granting that same motion.
In
Stubbs v. Stubbs,
In its first point of error, Transoceanic contends the trial court erred in entering judgment for GUS and in dismissing Transoceanic’s counterclaim because the face of the record indicates Transoceanic did not receive notice of the October 5, 1995, trial setting. Transoceanic contends error is facially apparent in the record because the transcript indicates the notices of trial setting mailed to Transoceanic’s counsel were *420 returned undelivered to the clerk’s office. Transoceanic argues that, because Tex.R. Civ. P. 245 requires parties be given notice of trial setting dates, 2 evidence in the record indicating that Transoceanic did not receive the trial setting notice mailed by the clerk constitutes error on the face of the record. We agree.
In
Robert S. Wilson Investments No. 16 Ltd. v. Blumer,
The reasoning of Blumer leaves open the possibility that error may be apparent on the face of the record where there is evidence that the address to which a trial setting notice is mailed is not, in fact, the correct address of an appellant’s counsel. That is precisely the situation this Court now addresses.
The record before us indicates that the address to which the trial setting notice was mailed was no longer the correct mailing address for Transoceanic’s counsel — the envelopes in which those notices were mailed were returned to the court stamped “RETURN TO SENDER; UNDELIVERABLE AS ADDRESSED; FORWARDING ORDER EXPIRED.” Therefore, unlike in Blu-mer, the record in this case affirmatively reflects that Transoceanic’s counsel did not receive the trial setting notice mailed by the court. As such, we hold that there is error on the face of the record.
GUS argues that Transoceanic should not be allowed to prevail on its writ of error because it is the fault of Transoceanic’s counsel that the court did not have a current mailing address to which the court could mail the trial setting notice. However, “[a]ppeal by writ of error is not an equitable proceeding.”
Texaco v. Central Power & Light Co.,
Transoceanic’s first point of error is sustained.
Having sustained Transoceanic’s first point of error, we need not address its second. The judgment of the trial court is reversed, and this cause remanded.
Notes
. We refer to the two corporations collectively as Transoceanic.
. A court may set contested cases for trial on motion of any party, on the court’s own motion, with reasonable notice to the parties of not less than 45 days. Tex.R. Civ. P. 245. Failure to give this required notice constitutes a denial of a party’s due process right to be heard in a contested case.
Wilson v. Industrial Leasing Corp.,
