79 Ky. 211 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1880
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion oe the court.
The appellant sued the appellee for the settlement of a partnership in merchandising, which had existed between his intestate and the appellee, J. P. Ringo.
The sum of two thousand dollars was alleged to be due to the plaintiff; but the petition concluded with a prayer for a settlement of all matters pertaining to said partnership.
The parties agreed out of court to submit the entire controversy to the arbitrament of R. W. D. Hunt and W. S.. Faut, and their umpire.
The arbitrators made an award, which concludes as follows: We do “hereby award that the said Joseph P. Ringo,. surviving partner, pay to the said Charles Dougherty, as the administrator, &c., of said John Adams, the sum of nineteen hundred and eighty-seven dollars and twenty-seven cents, with interest at six per cent, per annum from the-6th of July, 1876; and as to the uncollected notes of $390.97, and lot of accounts of $807.21, making of them-$1,198.18, we hereby also award that they be equally divided between plaintiff, who is to have half thereof, and the defendant one half, and to be so divided, having regard: to solvency and value, all probabilities considered. Given, under our hands the 6th of July, 1876.
[Signed] “Wm. S. Faut,
“R. W. D. Hunt,
‘ ‘ Arbitrators.
‘ ‘ As the umpire, and fully acting therein, I hereby concur in said award.
[Signed] Wm. Grannis.”
Appellee having refused to perform the award, appellant filed an amended petition, setting it up, and praying for the.money awarded.
1. That the arbitrators and umpire acted together in deciding all questions that arose before the arbitrators, whereas he should only have acted when there was a disagreement between them.
2. That the arbitrators took into account, and settled and reported upon matters not submitted and not brought into controversy by the petition.
3. That they did not settle all matters growing out of .said partnership which were unsettled.
4. That the decision of the arbitrators ‘ ‘ is palpably erroneous and unjust in re minime dubia."
The case was referred to the master, who took proof, and .reported a small balance in favor of the appellee. The court confirmed the report, and rendered judgment pursuant .thereto, from which this appeal is prosecuted.
1. The evidence fails to sustain the first objection. It •does not show that the umpire acted in the decision of any questions, except such as the arbitrators differed about, and this was the duty of his office. It is shown that he sometimes took part in the discussions, of questions that came .up, and that he made out the statement of the accounts by means of which the ultimate conclusion was reached. But fit does not appear that the part he took in discussions was of such a character as was calculated to influence the .decision of the arbitrators. All that appears is, that he .sometimes took part in their discussions. He made up the .account at the request of the arbitrators, and under their ^supervision, and they approved his work when done. The ■accounts seem to have been simple, and the arbitrators were ano doubt selected more on account of their good sense and
2. The facts relied upon to sustain the second objection! are, that the arbitrators charged the appellee with the whole-of the salary and board of the- oníy clerk employed by the-firm. This, it is claimed, was not involved in the suit, and therefore was not submitted to the arbitrators. We cannot' concur with the appellee in this-. Whatever claim either asserted against the other as growing out of the partnership,.' whether well or ill-founded, was a matter in controversy im the suit, and embraced in the submission, although not mentioned in the petition.
3. It is claimed that because the arbitrators did not divide-the notes and accounts found to remain uncollected, and1 because there .are uncollected notes and accounts not; reported by them, they did not settle all. the questions' submitted to their decision.
To ascertain how much the appellee had- collected om notes and accounts outstanding at the- death of Adams was: one of the matters submitted. The balance could- not be-struck between the partners without ascertaining- the amount of such collections. This we must presume was dbne.
The award directs how the $1,198''. 1:8 of notes-and1 accounts found to be uncollected shall be disposed of between' the partners, but it neither disposes of them by division, nor identifies them so that they may be distinguished! from other-notes and accounts shown by the pleadings filed! and: proof-taken since the award to be also uncollectedi.
4. In order to show that the award is erroneous and unjust,, the appellee alleges that numerous items of debits and credits-made and given by the arbitrators are improper. These will be considered seriatim.
He alleges that Adams gave himself credit on the firm1 books for $364 to which he was not entitled, and that the books also show that Adams paid a debt of $25.1.56, which another firm of which he was a member owed to John A
The fact that these matters were entered on the firm hooks during the continuance of the partnership was, after the death of one of the partners, sufficient evidence to warrant the arbitrators in treating them as correct, and especially so, unless evidence was produced before them to show that these credits were incorrect, which does not appear to have been done.
It is next alleged that the arbitrators charged him with $311.88 as collected from John A. Dougherty, although there was before them plain evidence that Dougherty denies that he owes any such balance, and is suing him (appellee) as surviving partner for a large sum claimed against the firm.
It is not alleged that this sum was not in fact collected from Dougherty, and this is a sufficient answer to this allegation.
It is also alleged, that although he (appellee) shows uncollected debts due to the firm amounting to $2,4x0.74, the arbitrators only deducted from the gross assets $1,198.18. Although it is not anywhere alleged that the arbitrators charged him with more than he collected, this allegation may have been intended to so charge, and we will treat it in that light.
The arbitrators were to act upon the evidence before them, and it was the duty of each party, unless prevented by casualty or misfortune, or the action of the arbitrators, to bring before them all his evidence touching the several matters to be decided by them. The appellee does not say he produced uncollected debts to the amount of $2,419.74 to the arbitrators, or that there was not sufficient evidence
It is further alleged that Mrs. Adams, who was the original administrator of the deceased partner, collected $857.59 due the firm, with which the arbitrators did not charge her in making up their award. But it is not alleged that knowledge or proof of this, fact was brought before the arbitrators. Moreover, it appears from the evidence now in the record that the firm held a debt against two sisters of Mrs. Adams, and that the. appellee collected as much on one of them as Mrs. Adams collected on the other; and it does not appear, by either allegation or proof, whether the amount collected by the appellee was charged to him. But if we assume that it was, the result must be the sanie. Mrs. Adams denies that she made any such collection, and while the evidence before the master shows that she did, she testifies that she did not, and there is nothing to show that on the evidence before the arbitrators they were not fully justified in deciding as they did.
It is complained that the arbitrators charged the appellee with interest for several years on sums charged to him, and 'failed to allow him interest on money paid out by him in discharge of firm debts.
It does not appear that he was charged with interest on : anything more than the balance found in his hands; and as he must be presumed to have paid those debts out of money ' belonging to the firm, it does not appear that any injustice -was done in charging him with interest.
These were all matters clearly within 'the scope of the-submission, and there is no pretense that he did not have a full and fair hearing and opportunity to present every item now presented, and to offer whatever evidence he had to-support them; and it is as true of hearings before arbitrators, as of trials in court, that it is the duty of each party to bring forward his whole case and the proofs to sustain it. Any other rule would render arbitrations worse than useless, and' open a door by which the defeated party would generally be able to escape from the award by withholding a part of his case, and setting it up to show that the award was erroneous and unjust. Conceding for the present that a mere mistake of law or fact may authorize the chancellor to set an award aside, the question whether there wás mistake- or not must be determined from a view of the case as presented to the-arbitrators, and not as it may appear upon a different presentation and different proofs in the suit to set it aside.
Tested by this principle, none of the items above adverted to under this head would authorize the interference of the court to set aside the award. It does not appear as to any one of them that the action of the arbitrators was even erroneous, if tested by the case as presented to them.
But as to two items, the record shows that the arbitrators-made a mistake of law in deciding the case as it was presented.
The firm employed but one clerk, and he seems to have-been boarded by Adams and paid by the firm..
Should the award have been set aside for this mistake ?
Some elementary authorities, and two cases decided by this court, Callant v. Downey, 2 J. J. Mar., 348, and Burnam v. Burnam, 6 Bush, 392, and one English case, Ridout v. Pain, 3 Atkyns, 494, are cited to establish the proposition-that an award may be set aside for mistake of law by the arbitrators.
The case in Atkyns was decided during the last century.
‘1 The mode of settling controversies by arbitration has in modern times become a peculiar favorite of the law, and the-ancient niceties and technicalities applied to it have given way to a more rational and liberal construction, with a view to encourage and sustain this mode of putting an end to litigation. Hence it is that many of the more ancient adjudications upon the subject are found not to be good authority.” (Strockey v. Glassford, 6 Dana, 11.)
In Callant v. Downey this court incidentally, in the course-of its opinion, says that an arbitration cannot be revised* except it be shown that the arbitrators were guilty of fraud, or made a palpable mistake in the law or facts. But there was no discussion of the principle involved, and what the court said seems rather to have been intended as a concession to the party seeking relief, made with a view to show the utter absence of equity in his bill, than as the announcement of a recognized rule of law.
Having set aside the award on that ground alone, and thus opened every question in the cause, the court said:
“Another objection to it (the award) may be noticed, as •it may avoid further difficulty,” and then proceeded to point ■out the mistake made by the arbitrators; but the award was hot set aside because of the mistake, nor did the court decide, that the award would have been set aside on that ground ■alone. What the court said on this point was intended for ■the guidance of the court below in the further progress of •the case, and not as a reason for setting aside the award.
The statute of 1798 provided that no award should ever be set aside, unless it should be made to appear that such ■•award was obtained by corruption, evident partiality, or •other undue means.
The decisions in Baker v. Crockett, Hardin, 388; Ewing v. Beauchamp, 2 Bibb, 456; Lillard v. Casey, Ib., 459; Wigglesworth v. Morton, Ib., 160; and Ewing v. Beauchamp, 3 Bibb, 44, were all made while that statute was in •force. The provision above referred to of the act of 1798 was omitted from the- Revised Statutes, the corresponding section only providing that ‘ ‘ no award shall be set aside for want of form, but courts of chancery shall have power over •awards as heretofore;” and this section is continued in force ■in the General Statutes. (Sec. 6, ch. 4.)
It might be plausibly contended that the phrase ‘ ‘ courts -of chancery shall have power over awards as heretofore,” was intended to restrict them as they had been restricted by the •act of 1798. But waiving this, we think it clear that only .•such powers as courts of chancery might have exercised
In Baker v. Crockett it appeared on the face of the award that the arbitrators had made a-mistake of law, and this,, too, when the law relating to the very subject about which-the arbitrators had been called to act had but recently been* passed upon by this court.
In that case the court said:
“We are therefore of opinion that either, as at the common law or in equity, with or without the statute, this award: cannot be set aside for mistake of law apparent in the body or face of the award.”
In Ewing v. Beauchamp, 3 Bibb, 45, the court quoted', and approved the language just quoted from the opinion in Baker v. Crockett.
Although these cases were decided while the statute was. in force, the quotation supra, and much more that was said,, applies as well now as it did then.
In Ewing v. Beauchamp, 2 Bibb, the court said: ‘ ‘ The very object of submitting a cause-to arbitration ought to prevent too easy an ear by the courts to overset awards. It is a mode of decision preferred by the parties, in which, from its nature, they agree to risk the event of the decision-on the judgments and integrity of men of their own choosing. ” And again: “It would at once prostrate this mode of trial, by the consequent subjection to a suit in chancery, and instead of a cheap and speedy administration of justice,, would produce precisely the reverse.
These authorities warrant us in holding'that if arbitration is to continue to be one of the modes of settling litigation, a mere mistake of law, such as that made by the arbitrators in this case, furnishes no sufficient ground for setting aside
If arbitrators should decide that the children of a deceased person, admitted to have been born in lawful wedlock, were -not his heirs, we should not hesitate to set aside their award. All reasonably intelligent men know that such is the law, and a decision that such children were not the heirs of the •deceased parent would be satisfactory evidence of corruption.
But when arbitrators decide that if one partner gives his whole time to the business of the firm, and the other gives it none, or only a small part of his time, the latter shall pay the hire of a clerk, so as to make u p for the loss of his own services, and thus equalize the partners, it would be going a great way to say that such decision furnishes evidence of ■partiality or corruption.
Mere mistakes of computation may no doubt be corrected, but mistakes in matters of judgment, whether upon questions of law or fact, which do not prove partiality or corruption, cannot be corrected.
Tested by these principles, there is no sufficient ground for setting aside the award; and the judgment is reversed, and cause remanded for judgment for the amount found by the arbitrators.
Rehearing
delivered the following response:
In his second amended petition the appellee said, “that if his said award is not and cannot be enforced herein (as) ■demanded, then he claims the right to, and does, amend, .state, and aver that said defendant was indebted to the estate ■of John Adams in the further sum of $3,954,” &c.
This was not a waiver of the award. The claim to set up :and recover the larger amount claimed to be due was expressly made to depend upon his inability to enforce the award.
Nor was there any waiver in failing to object to a reference to the master, or in appearing before him without objection.
That the hire of Sanders was paid by the firm and entered on the firm books was not a settlement between the partners .as to whether the appellee should pay his hire as an offset to ‘■the personal services of Adams for the firm.
The petition must be overruled.