40 N.H. 130 | N.H. | 1860
A submission to referees at common law of any matters in dispute, not made in court, but en pais, may be revoked before award. If the submission be by parol, the revocation may be by parol; and a revocation by deed is good when the submission is by deed. If parties enter into a bond to each other, with a penalty, conditioned to submit and stand to the award of arbitrators, where the matters referred are not in suit in court, the party refusing to submit, by revocation or otherwise, or if an award is properly made, the party refusing to perform it, becomes liable upon his bond. And the same holds true where a suit in court is referred iu the same way, when the condition of such bond is not made a rule of court. 1 Cromp. Prac. 260. But when a suit in court is referred under a rule of court, a different principle has been held to apply.
The English statute, 9 and 10 ¥m. 3, ch. 15, recited, that “Whereas it hath been found by experience that references made by rule of court have contributed much to the ease of the subject, in the determining of controversies, because the parties become thereby obliged to submit to the award of the arbitrators under penalty of im
It is said that this statute was made to put submissions, where no cause was depending in court, upon the same footing with those where there was a cause depending, and that it is only declaratory of what the law was before in the latter case; 1 Cromp. Prac. 262; so that at this time it was considered as having been long established that when a cause in court had been thus referred by a rule of court, the party who should undertake to revoke the submission, or neglect or refuse to perform and execute the same, or any part thereof, was to be treated as guilty of a contempt of the court, and an attachment at once issued. Bac. Ab., Arbitrament and Award, B. This amounted in practice to declaring that such submissions by rule of court, were irrevocable; and hence it is said that when the submission be made a rule of court according to the statute, the party can never revoke it. 1 Cromp. Prac. 262.
Where parties had agreed to refer the cause of action in a pending suit, and a rule of reference had been entered by the court on their submission, though one of them filed his revocation on the next day, it was held to be irrevocable, as the submission had become a rule of court. Ferris v. Munn, 2 New-Jer. 161. When parties to an action in court have entered into a rule of court in common form,
The Revised Statutes, chapter 210, make submissions entered into with certain formalities before a justice of the peace, irrevocable by either party without the consent of the other. This was done no doubt with a view to give to such submissions as nearly the character, force and effect of submissions by rule of court as it was possible to do under the circumstances. And aside from the authorities, upon this subject, there would seem to be good reason for holding that a submission, thus made and entered of record, and upon which a rule of reference or an order as to the disposition of the cause has been entered by the court, should be irrevocable by the parties, except by leave of court, and that such rule of court should not be allowed to be rescinded, except by order of such court, and for good cause.
If such agreements, entered into the progress of a civil cause, made in open court by parties over whom the court has jurisdiction, which agreements are made a matter of record, and upon which, as the agreement of each party, the other has acted, and also upon which the court have acted in making an order or entering a rule upon the parties — if such agreements could be revoked at the caprice of either party, or if it was understood that either party in such case had the power, of his own mere motion, to rescind a rule or order of the court thus made, it would
Courts will, upon the motion of either party, upon a hearing and for good cause, rescind the rule, and dispose of the cause in some other way. The court may also, if the parties or the referees should delay proceedings unreasonably, rescind the rule and order the cause tried by jury. But it was clearly within the discretion of the judge holding the term to extend the rule, as he did ; and as there was no ground of objection stated to the referee, nor any other cause assigned for wishing to revoke the submission in this case ; and as it appeared to the court that a hearing had been commenced before the referee, which had made very considerable progress toward a termination, we see no reason why that discretion was not in this case properly exercised.
Exceptions overruled.