Accepting as generally valid the functus officio principle relied on by the defendant (Chubb) — i.e., the principle that an arbitrator is without power to modify his final award except where the controlling statute or the parties authorize modification, see La Vale Plaza, Inc. v. R.S. Noonan, Inc.,
Here the court did not itself correct the mistake but suggested to the parties that they first seek reconsideration by the arbitrator. Section 9 of G. L. c. 251 authorizes a direct submission from the court to the arbitrator for a modification or correction of the type described in § 13 (a)(1). While a direct, formal submission might have been preferable, the informal procedure followed here did not jeopardize the substantial rights of Chubb (which participated in the resubmission, at least initially", by sending its
Without determining the outer limits that may control the new evidence that may be considered by an arbitrator on a resubmission under § 9, we hold that Ciampa did not overstep bounds in furnishing the arbitrator with a printout prepared by a financial publishing company computing (or shedding light on) the amount of a direct reduction loan at twelve percent interest that could be supported by a weekly payment of $150 per week for 925 weeks. Chubb had ample opportunity to contest the relevance of the printout or to present alternative computations based on the determinants found by the arbitrator. On appeal it is the procedure, hot the relevance of the printout, that is contested.
The record does not indicate that other contentions argued or touched on in Chubb’s brief and reply brief were raised below. See Royal Indem. Co. v. Blakely,
Judgment affirmed.
