1 Tex. 497 | Tex. | 1846
This case comes up on an appeal from the district court for the county of Liberty.
The judgment was rendered on an award of arbitration under a rule of reference. The main ground relied on in this court to reverse the judgment is, the alleged misconduct of the referees in
The awards of arbitrators have always been looked upon with peculiar favor, as it is a conciliatory mode of adjusting disputes by persons specially chosen for that purpose. If the proceedings before
But, although much is conceded to their discretion, irregularities calculated to injure either party will not be tolerated. Whep they have been selected* and the matters and things in controversy between the parties have been submitted, the parties have a right to expect at their hands that due regard will be paid to their mutual rights. As to the time, place and mode of conducting the investigation of the matter submitted, neither party is supposed to waive a just regard and observance on the part of the referees of these essentials to a faithful discharge of the trust reposed; hence an abuse of those rights will always be considered such an irregularity as to justify the court in setting aside their award. The authorities read by the appellant’s counsel are ample and conclusive on this subject.
Those authorities were introduced and relied on in support of an assumption that those irregularities had occurred and appeared manifest from the record. "We will never presume anything against an award; so far from it we are bound to support it by every presumption in its favor not contradicted by proof. Now the propositions on which it has been sought to set aside the award in this case are, that the arbitrators hurried into the investigation without giving notice to the appellant on the fifth day after the entry of the rule of submission ; that they refused to give the defendant time to procure his testimony when he had been surprised in the course of the investigation by the discovery of a very important paper being absent. Those are grave charges, and if sustained by the record would disclose a degree of moral delinquency on the part of the arbitrators that would have merited and no doubt received a signal rebuke from the court in, promptly setting aside the award.
The record, however, does not afford the slightest grounds on which to raise a presumption that the investigation was premature or unseasonably commenced without notice to the appellant. On the other hand it is fair to presume that the time and place was a matter of amicable arrangement between the parties, as they met and commenced the investigation without the appearance of any objections. There is as little foundation for the other charge that on the discovery of an important paper being absent, he had been refused time to-procure it. Mr. Abbott, one of the counsel for the appellant, who-seceded from the cause for the purpose of intrenching himself on his reserved rights, says, that Mr. Branch, his partner in law and associate for the appellant, differed with him, and insisted, together with the friends and agent of the appellant, that the arbitrators should