Gerdetz v. Central Oregon Irr. Co.

163 P. 980 | Or. | 1917

Mr. Justice Burnett

delivered the opinion of the court.

It is important to note the extent of the submission. By that document the parties stipulated:

“That said arbitrators shall decide all questions coming before them by a majority vote, except legal questions, which shall be decided by the said John B. Cleland, whose decisions upon the legal questions shall be final, and the decision of the arbitrators upon all questions of fact shall be final between the parties hereto, their successors and assigns.”

We note that no restriction is placed upon the arbitrators in any degree within their respective provinces. No reservation is made for reviewing any decision of law or fact. The case is not like many of those cited in the plaintiff’s brief where the arbitrators were required to determine questions of law according to legal rules and the decisions of the courts on identical matters. Neither is it like other instances where the statute requires the award to be made agreeable to certain precepts or in pursuance of an order or rule of court where the award must be subject to the approval of the tribunal making the order. In the instant case the unrestricted terms of the submission *580differentiate it from all such precedents. It is said in 5 C. J. 183:

“In the absence of a special requirement the arbitrators are not bound to decide according to law, and, therefore, in such case, a mistaken construction of the law has been held not sufficient ground of avoidance of an award except it is made clearly to appear that the arbitrators intended to decide according to law, or unless it is shown that the misconstruction of law is so perverse as to work manifest injustice. In case the submission is in general terms, however different the judgment of the arbitrators may be upon the law of the case from the opinion entertained by the court, if the arbitrators have acted honestly, the award will not be set aside.”

In Smith v. Boston & Maine R. R. Co., 16 Gray (Mass.), 521, 529, we read:

“For aught that appears, this board of arbitrators intended to make an award based upon their own views of the law and facts of the case, irrespectively of the law of the books. That they had under this submission a right to do so is unquestionable.”

In Snohomish County School Dist. v. Sage, 13 Wash. 352 (43 Pac. 341), the syllabus reads:

“As to matters of law, arbitrators are not bound in all cases to follow the strict rules of law governing courts, unless restricted by the agreement to submit, but may decide in accordance with their views of the equitable rights of the parties.”

Again in Johnson v. Noble, 13 N. H. 286 (38 Am. Dec. 485), the rule is announced thus according to the head note:

‘ ‘ If, under an unlimited submission, referees, intending to assume the whole responsibility of determining the law, without referring the same to the court, decide differently from what the court would, on a point of law, nevertheless the award will be regarded as au*581thorized and conclusive, and will not be set aside for that cause.”

In Brown v. Green, 7 Conn. 536, we find that:

“ Where an award is witbin the submission, a court of chancery will not set it aside, except for partiality and corruption in the arbitrators, mistakes on their own principles, or fraud and misbehavior in the parties.”

The arbitrators were not restricted in their consideration of the case to the pleadings in either of the actions commenced by the respective parties. The agreement to arbitrate constitutes the sole limitation upon their powers. .Each party in the several actions was claiming the right to recover money from the other. Each imputed to his adversary infractions of the contract in question. Which broke his covenant first we know not. It may be that both were to blame. Without limiting the authority of the referees they submitted their disputes to them empowering them to decide all questions coming before them by a majority vote, except legal questions, which they left to the final decision of one of the three. It is not made to appear that the arbitrators failed to examine and determine upon the various charges in his favor which plaintiff claims were left out of the calculation. For aught that the pleading discloses all these items were considered, albeit adversely to the contention of the plaintiff. No actual fraud is imputed to the umpires, but the substance of the complaint is only that they decided against the plaintiff.

2. There was some question in the testimony abont a mistake in computation appearing on the face of one of the sheets attached to the award itself, but this is not included in the complaint as a ground of attack upon the award, neither is it assigned as error on *582appeal. Besides this the united testimony of the members of the board is substantially to the effect that they gave attention to the item, that for 5,055 cubic yards of riprap at eighty-four cents and allowed $3,192.06 for it, notwithstanding the apparent rate noted. It seems, therefore, that they decided on that charge as they in fact intended and this being true, their finding on that point must be respected on the merits without reference to whether it was attacked in the pleadings. Practically the entire argument in the brief of the plaintiff was devoted to the contention that having allowed the plaintiff upwards of $12,000 as compensation for infractions of the contract by the defendant, it was plain as a matter of law that the latter had broken the covenant and could recover nothing on its part. Based on this the plaintiff would draw the conclusion that the arbitrators were in error as a legal deduction in allowing anything to the defendant. He contends also that the arbitrator to whom the decision of the law was committed, having stated as a witness that he intended to decide according to the law, the court is bound to set aside the award becanse it would conflict with a rule that would be followed by the court in refusing to allow. a delinquent party to recover for the breach of a contract. The precedents are numerous, however, that arbitrators are not bound by the strict rules of law, but may decide according to the substantial equities 'of the parties, both of whom possibly may be in default under strict rulings on legal questions. There is ample ground, therefore, to say that the legal referee was within the precedents in ignoring the strict letter of the law and predicating his conclusion on the real equity existing between the parties and thus carried out his intention to decide according to the law. In *583other words, Ms disregard of the strict rules of law is justified by the authorities so that his determination was in truth according to the law. In brief, the parties choosing to ignore the ordinary judicial procedure, have selected a tribunal of their own, agreeing irrevocably to abide by its decision both on the law and the facts. Having so stipulated we can but enforce their agreement with its results however harsh it may seem to either party. We are compelled to affirm the decree of the Circrnt Court sustaining the award.

Affirmed.

Mr. Chief Justice McBride, Mr. Justice Benson and Mr. Justice Harris concur.