First Ecclesiastical Society v. Besse

119 A. 903 | Conn. | 1923

It was plainly the intention of the parties to the contract set up in the complaint, that the exchange of lands and rights by conveyance from one to the other should be made under specified conditions. One of these conditions was that the defendant would pay to the plaintiff for the exchange of property the amount of money, if any, which should be agreed upon by them within ninety days after the conveyance *620 had been made, and if they could not agree upon this price within that time, they should select arbitrators to determine the question of the amount, if any, of benefits above damages accruing to the defendant's property by the transaction, and to make a binding award thereon.

This court said, in Hall v. Norwalk Fire Ins. Co.,57 Conn. 105, 114, 17 A. 356, that "it has always been held, both by the courts of England and of the United States, that arbitrations to settle particular questions which are auxiliary to the jurisdiction of courts, such as the amount of damages, or the amount of the loss by fire under policies of insurance, are binding in law, and indeed highly favored by courts." In many cases it appears that the agreements were designed to leave to the decisions of persons to be selected, questions of amount, quality, value or price which might come up during or after the performance of the contract. Of these it has been said that a reference agreed on for such a purpose is not an arbitration in the accepted legal sense of the word, because an arbitration is a method adopted to settle already-existing controversies, and a reference of this kind is intended to affect only possible future controversies; and that the latter, accurately speaking, is an appraisement or estimate.Fisher v. Merchants Ins. Co., 95 Me. 486, 50 A. 282;Noble v. Grandin, 125 Mich. 383, 84 N.W. 465; ToledoS. S. Co. v. Zenith Transportation Co., 106 C.C.A. 501, 184 F. 391; Collins v. Collins, 26 Beav. 306, 28 L. J. Eq. N. S. 184; Parsons v. Ambos, 121 Ga. 98,48 S.E. 396; Palmer v. Clark, 106 Mass. 373; Stout v. PhoenixAssur. Co., 65 N.J. Eq. 566, 56 A. 691. But it is undisputed, as these cases demonstrate, that a stipulation to submit such matters of future disagreement in a manner specified, by whatever name it may be called, is not of the substance of the contract, but is *621 merely an incident included in the contract to determine auxiliary, collateral, incidental, or ministerial questions which are considered as possible or likely to arise. Moreover, it has been generally held that while such an agreement is valid, it is not binding and irrevocable as long as it remains executory and has not been carried through to an award or decision. Reed v.Washington F. M. Co., 138 Mass. 572; HartfordFire Ins. Co. v. Bourbon County Court, 115 Ky. 109,72 S.W. 739; Welch v. Miller, 70 Vt. 108, 39 A. 749;Hobart v. Drogan, 35 U.S. (10 Pet.) 108, 9 L. Ed. 363;The Excelsior, 123 U.S. 40, 8 Sup. Ct. 33, 31 L. Ed. 75;Hamilion v. Home Ins. Co., 137 U.S. 370, 385,11 Sup. Ct. 133.

It seems also to be settled by the courts of the United States and Great Britain that an agreement to refer to third persons, to be chosen in the future, the decision of an anticipated disagreement relating to such questions, is not a defense to legal proceedings instituted by a party to the agreement who has ignored or revoked it, or failed to carry it out, unless the contract provides that it shall have such effect; but the courts will take jurisdiction and adjudicate the controversy just as if no such agreement had been made. As instances of such decisions, see cases above cited; also, Perry v.Cobb, 88 Me. 435, 34 A. 278; Holmes v. Richet, 56 Cal. 307;Frink v. Ryan, 4 Ill. 322; Gasser v. Sun Fire Office,42 Minn. 315, 44 N.W. 252; and others collected in note in 47 L.R.A. (N.S.) 358.

In the present suit, the complaint sets up a contract for the exchange of property. That was the subject and object of the contract, and it has been performed. For this exchange, the defendant agreed to pay to the plaintiff an amount of money which should be equivalent to the benefit he should receive from the transaction. That amount was not stated, but was *622 left to be agreed on within a limited time after the contract had been carried out. Then, in anticipation of a failure to agree within that time, the parties made a stipulation to select arbitrators to fix the price to be paid by a prescribed method and to make a binding award. The arbitrators were accordingly selected, but have not made an award. Here, then, is set out an agreement distinct and collateral to an executed contract and relating merely to an incidental and auxiliary question, and this agreement has not been carried into effect. In all cases "where there is, first, a covenant to pay, and, secondly, a covenant to refer, the covenants are distinct and collateral, and the plaintiff may sue on the first, leaving the defendant . . . to bring an action for not referring," or to seek a remedy under statute. Dawson v. Fitzgerald, L. R. 1 Ex. D. 257, 260, 24 Week. Rep. 773. This statement of the rule of law is quoted with approval in Hamilton v.Home Ins. Co., 137 U.S. 370, 11 Sup. Ct. 133. See, too,Connors v. United States, 130 F. 609; Seward v.Rochester, 109 N.Y. 164, 16 N.E. 348; Reed v. WashingtonF. M. Co., 138 Mass. 572; Anderson v. OddFellows' Hall, 86 N.J.L. 271, 273, 90 A. 1007; BirminghamFire Ins. Co. v. Pulver, 126 Ills. 329, 338, 81 N.E. 804.

It is manifest that, standing alone, this agreement in the contract before us could not be set up by itself as a bar to this suit. It must be kept in mind that this agreement in this contract stands alone. For this contract contains no express provision that no suit shall be brought unless and until there has been an arbitration and award, or that no action shall be brought except for a sum fixed by arbitration and award, or that defers the right to sue, or that performance of or compliance with the stipulation for arbitration shall be a condition precedent to a suit. In this respect it differs materially *623 from the contract which this court had under consideration in the case of Bernhard v. Rochester GermanIns. Co., 79 Conn. 388, 65 A. 134, wherein it was held that the obligations of the parties were fixed by an express concurrent stipulation that the arbitration and award should be a condition precedent to a suit. In the absence of such an express provision, however, it is unquestionably the law that a provision for arbitration may be construed to be a condition precedent to suit by implication. But that implication must be so plain that a contrary intention cannot be supposed nor any other inference made. It must be a necessary implication. 5 Corpus Juris, 45. "A necessary implication is always quite as obvious from the terms of the contract as if the words expressed it in fact."Green v. American Cotton Co., 112 F. 743, 744. A contract which is relied upon to deny, restrain, limit or put conditions on, the right to appeal to the courts, will be strictly construed; language must be interpreted according to the rules and principles of the law respecting the subject, as they have been laid down and explained in such decisions of the courts as those to which we have referred; and its terms will not be extended by any construction or inference that can reasonably be escaped. Western Assur. Co. v. Decker, 39 C.C.A. 383, 98 F. 381; Smith v. Preferred Masonic MutualAcc. Asso., 51 F. 520; Adams v. Haigler,123 Ga. 659, 51 S.E. 638; and the omission of conditions, restrictions, or qualifications may be most significant.

Observing these accepted principles in examining the contract set up in the complaint in this suit, we find "first, a covenant to pay, and, secondly, a covenant to refer," to use the words of the Master of the Rolls in Dawson v. Fitzgerald, L. R. 1 Ex. D. 257, 260. These covenants "are distinct and collateral." Idem. By the first, the defendant became bound to pay an amount *624 of money for the exchange of lands and rights particularly described. What the amount would be was to be determined by agreement of the parties after the contract had been performed, or if such an agreement could not be reached in ninety days, by arbitrators to be selected to determine the amount in a specified manner. The "covenant to pay" is absolute. Nothing is left except the auxiliary question of amount or price, and that is the subject of the collateral "covenant to refer." This stipulation is like those which have been considered in many of the cases above mentioned, and which have almost uniformly been held not be to conditions precedent. Compare also Cavanaugh v. Dooley,88 Mass. 66; Grosvenor v. Flint, 20 Rawle I. 21,37 A. 304; Read Traversy v. State Ins. Co., 103 Iowa 307,72 N.W. 665; Crossley v. Connecticut Fire Ins. Co., 27 F. 30. We do not discover anything peculiar in this stipulation which would suggest that it should be considered differently. There is no apparent indication of an intention that the defendant's liability was to be dependent upon an award. On the contrary, it appears that his liability to pay was fixed upon him by the performance of the contract of exchange, when he received and began to enjoy the benefits of the transaction. If the contract had provided merely that the defendant should pay a price to be agreed on within ninety days after he took possession of the lands and rights, it might fairly be implied that the plaintiff must wait ninety days for its pay, and then might sue for the amount agreed on, or in case of failure to agree within that time, might forthwith sue to recover whatever the benefits were reasonably worth. But we find no reason for a necessary or reasonable implication that the plaintiff is bound to wait until the arbitrators had made an award. If this stipulation should be construed to be a condition precedent to an action *625 by the plaintiff, it would be at the mercy of the defendant or of any of the three arbitrators who might be chosen; for any one of them, for either good or bad reasons, may block the proceedings indefinitely, while the defendant will continue to enjoy the benefits of the transaction. We think that we have here merely a subsidiary contract for fixing a price by reference or arbitration, which is not a bar to this action by necessary or reasonable implication. The defendant admits that more than two years and a half before this suit was brought he received the plaintiff's lands and rights, and that he agreed to pay for them soon after they were delivered, and also that the reasonable value of those lands and rights is $15,000. Evidently justice may be done speedily by allowing this suit to take its course. The trial court erred in sustaining the demurrer on the ground that the resort to arbitration should be construed by implication as a condition precedent.

The trial court also erred in assuming to decide as a matter of law that the conduct of the plaintiff does "not measure up to the required standard of fair effort, in good faith, . . . to procure a determination of the controversy in the manner contemplated by the contract." We do not think that the facts alleged in the complaint and admitted by the demurrer disclose any failure of the plaintiff to make a fair effort or to act in good faith. It appears that the contract obliged it simply to "select an arbitrator." That it has done. By no terms in the contract is it to be held responsible for the actions of the arbitrator selected by it, and much less for the conduct of the arbitrator chosen by the defendant. It is set forth that the two arbitrators selected failed to agree upon a third person to act with them as arbitrator, but no reason for their failure is stated. It appears that about a year and a half after the exchange of property had been completed, the *626 arbitrator selected by the plaintiff resigned because of this failure to agree; but no reason for this failure is given. There is no averment in the complaint, and no allegation from which it may reasonably be inferred, that the failure was due to any misconduct or bad faith of the plaintiff. In fact, no fault nor bad faith nor misconduct on the part of the anyone is suggested. The complaint is silent about the actions of the parties after the plaintiff's arbitrator resigned, and it may be fairly inferred that it did not select another, but whether for good or bad reasons we may not speculate. Certainly the contract does not call on it to make a second selection, nor does the law. Jerrils v. German AmericanIns. Co., 82 Kan. 320, 108 P. 114; Spring GardenIns. Co. v. Amusement Syndicate Co., 102 C.C.A. 29, 178 F. 519; Lancashire Ins. Co. v. Lyon, 124 Ill. App. 491;Western Assur. Co. v. Decker, 39 C.C.A. 383, 98 F. 381. The complaint contains no averment from which we may reasonably draw the inference that there has been any lack of fair effort or good faith on the part of anyone, or which lays a basis for the reason, stated in the demurrer, that it was the plaintiff's "duty, under the agreement, to name another" person as arbitrator. Pearl v. Harris, 121 Mass. 390, 393; Franklin v. New Hampshire Fire Ins. Co., 70 N. H. 251,47 A. 91. If the defendant wished to raise the defense that the proceedings for arbitration had failed because of the plaintiff's bad faith or failure to act further, he should have set it up in an answer. Carp v. Queen Ins.Co., 104 Mo. App. 502, 79 S.W. 757; Bergman Co. v. Commercial Union Ins. Co., 12 Ky. L. Rep. 942. The complaint, in language which should be liberally construed to give effect to the pleading according to the theory upon which it proceeded and to do substantial justice between the parties (Price v. Bouteiller, 79 Conn. 255,257, 64 A. 227), sets out a substantial compliance *627 by the plaintiff with the requirements imposed upon it by the stipulation for arbitration. If it is claimed that there are facts consistent with these statements which show, notwithstanding, that the plaintiff has no cause of action, they should be alleged specially in an answer. Practice Book, 1922, § 200, p. 290.

There is error and the cause is remanded to be proceeded with according to law.

In this opinion the other judges concurred.

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