5 A.D.2d 818 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1958
Orders granting defendant’s motions to stay two actions and naming a substitute arbitrator reversed on the law and the motions denied, with costs to plaintiff-appellant on this consolidated appeal. The rule with regard to the power of the court to name a substitute arbitrator pursuant to section 1452 of the Civil Practice Act, and the occasion for its exercise, is clear. (Matter of Marchant v. Mead-Morrison Mfg. Co., 252 N. Y. 284, 294 et seq.; cf. Matter of Golenbock [Komoroff], 2 A D 2d 742.) Applying the rule to this ease, it is evident that the appointment of Mr. Levine — lawyer, accountant and long-standing business intimate of these former partners — was an appointment sui generis. To him alone were the partners willing to entrust such extraordinary power to make all decisions and perform all acts necessary to disentangle the complicated and numerous business enterprises owned by the parties. In a lengthy and detailed agreement concluded only after months of negotiations between the parties and their respective counsel, Mr. Levine was granted what amounts to the powers of receiver, liquidator and arbitrator. The power to arbitrate was an integral part of his larger duties as “ receiver and liquidator”. Not only was Mr. Levine empowered to perform these numerous acts, with or without hearings, and based solely upon such investigations as he saw fit to make, but he was also granted continuing jurisdiction for a period of 10 years to decide all disputes between the parties. Mr. Levine having now resigned as arbitrator, it would not be consonant with the parties’