34 Mich. 190 | Mich. | 1876
These parties agreed to .arbitrate and mutually gave bonds on the 28 th of January, 1874, to observe and perform the expected award..
. The transactions submitted must be gathered from the recitals and conditions of these bonds. They are not otherwise described, and since both of these instruments set out the same, matter by way of recital and conditions, so far as they serve to explain what -was agreed to be submitted, it is not material for our present purpose which bond is quoted from.
The recital and condition in the bond made by Davis read as follows: “Whereas a suit has been in litigation between the bounden E. H. Davis and said Bush & Patterson, in which suit it has been claimed by said Bush & Patterson that a certain amount, being a balance of account, wa¡s due them from the above bounden E. H. Davis on a contract according to plans and specifications and for extra material and labor furnished on the construction of the International hotel building, so called, in. said village of Kalamazoo. Now, therefore, the condition of this 'obligation is such that if the’ said bounden E. H. Davis shall abide
The arbitrators proceeded to a hearing on the basis of the submission here described, and on the 9th of February made and published their award.
Davis refused to perform it, and Bush & Patterson sued him to recover the amount awarded.
The action was tried before the court without a jury on a statement of facts set forth in a stipulation, and a recovery was allowed for the sum awarded, excepting, however, certain interest, which the court regarded as unwarranted and refused to include. Both parties excepted, and both have brought error. The arbitrators found by their award that there was due from Davis to Bush & Patterson the sum of four thousand one hundred and sixty-seven dollars and fifty-three cents on the 15th day of October, 1869, and awarded payment of it on or before March 1, 1874, with interest at the rate of ten per cent, per annum from the 15th of October, 1869, until payment. The stipulation which set out the facts for the court below, among other things, stated “that nothing was said by either of the parties before the
On the part of Davis it is urged that the arbitrators were required to find what was the balance due at the date of the award, and that the finding was defective and uncertain in this respect, inasmuch as it determined the amount due in October, 1869, and not at the time when the award was made. It is also maintained on his part, that in awarding interest the arbitrators exceeded their powers, and that the whole award is therefore bad. For Bush and Patterson it is insisted that these positions are respectively untenable, and not only so, but on the contrary, that the award was entirely good for the sum specified and the interest at ten per cent. These opposing view's explain tire objections on each side to the judgment of the circuit court.
As previously noticed, that court adopted a middle course and held the award good for the four thousand one hundred and sixty-seven dollars and fifty-three cents and the back interest at seven per cent., and bad for the additional back interest of three per cent.
The submission barely described the subjects to be arbitrated, by reference to them in general terms, and without setting forth their contents or provisions, and for certainty and distinctness it depended chiefly upon the showing and explanations to be made by the very matters to be acted on.
For example, the submission referred in the most general manner to a claim upon a named contract, but gave no information in regard to the shape and stipulations of that contract. The submission wont far enough to identify the
No critical discussion is necessary. An application of settled rules is enough to show that the first ground of objection raised by Navis has no force.
Granting, but not deciding one way or the other, that it was essential the finding should show the amount due at the date of the award, and still there is no serious difficulty. The elements are all found and set forth to enable any body to ascertain by the simplest calculation the exact amount due at the date of the award and without departing in the least from its scheme or principle. All that is required at the present day in such eases is certainty to a common intent, and that exists here. If an award is sufficiently definite to be obligatory as a contract it is sufficiently so as an award. — Clement v. Comstock, 2 Mich., 359; Purdy v. Delavan, 1 Caines R., 304; Akely v. Akely, 16 Vt., 450; Perkins v. Giles, 50 N. Y., 228. It is wisely settled that the mode of deciding disputes by judges chosen by the parties themselves for the very occasions, calls for every encouragement from the ordinary tribunals, and hence that formal matters and professional niceties are not to be regarded, and whenever by fair intendment the proceeding can bo upheld it will be.
The court committed no error in overruling the first proposition against the award.
In disposing of the second point, the first consideration is, whether it appears that in awarding interest at ten per cent, the arbitrators went beyond their power, because if it does not so appear, then Bush & Patterson were entitled to judgment for the amount the arbitrators determined to be their due, and the court below erred in cutting down the interest from ten to seven per cent. Now we cannot discover any plausible ground for the course of the circuit court in deciding that Bush & Patterson on the basis of the award were entitled to back interest at seven per cent, and were not entitled to it at ten per cent, as found. No such distinction can be founded on the wording of the submission or award. As presented in the court below, and as presented here, the point rests not upon any actual knowledge of the contents of the contract and other matters which measured the power of the arbitrators under the general submission in regard to the allowance of interest, but upon presumption and intendment under the established doctrine concerning arbitrations. This doctrine has been noticed already as to some of its applications. It may be mentioned
As before stated, the submission embraced a given contract but did not specify its terms or scope, and that contract may or may not have warranted the interest awarded, but whether it did so or did not do so, is a fact which was made obvious to the arbitrators, and yet could not be known to the court below and cannot bo known here. If the contract justified the allowance of the interest, then certainly its allowance was within the submission, since that contract was referred to the arbitrators and the submission contained nothing to prohibit the award of any interest proper under that contract. Suppose the submission had referred a promissory note by name simply and without any explanation of its terms, no one would maintain, on consideration of the submission alone, and without any legitimate knowledge concerning the contents of the note, that the allowance of interest upon it, or the allowance of interest at the rate of ten per cent.,
The established doctrine in such cases would require the court to intend in favor of the submission, and it was the duty of the court below, as it is the duty of this court, to presume that the contents of the matters submitted, and which "were .known to the arbitrators, but were not made known to the court below, and are not made known to this court, were such as to warrant the allowance of interest precisely as they allowed it. The , conclusion is, that in view of this record Bush & Patterson appear to have been entitled to the back interest as awarded, and that the circuit court erred in cutting it down.
The judgment should be reversed, and as all the facts .are conclusively ascertained, a judgment should be entered for the correct sum. No new trial,is necessary or Avould be proper. Both writs of error having been submitted on one record, and one brief on each side, Bush & Patterson will recover costs in this court as for one hearing.