23 Wend. 363 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1840
*By the Court, The question is on the legal effect [* 366 ] of the proceedings before Dwight. The written submission could not, perhaps, have been pursued to a binding award by six men, without the co-operation of both parties ; though I should think that one of them might have proceeded before Dwight alone. His award on an ex parte hearing would have been valid, unless the power conferred on him had been revoked by the adverse party. The stipulation was to submit the matters in difference to him, or to a jury if cither party should demand one. The latter alternative was, perhaps, void for uncertainty; and no award-was ever made by Dwight. It was difficult to say what the parties meant by a jury before an arbitrator. The terms have no legal meaning or application except as connected with a court which proceeds by a jury. Shall it be twelve, or six, or what number ? For the purpose of a submission which would, in itself, sustain the award, or what is so called, the stipulation must, therefore, perhaps be laid out of view.
But though the submission be void when taken by itself, it may undoubtedly be looked at in connection with the subsequent acts of the parties; and the whole be resorted to as evidence that the six men who finally sat, heard the evidence, and made an award, were acting in effect as arbitrators, in whatever language they may have been spoken of; in whatever character regarded ; or in whatever phrase their award may have been pronounced. The stipulation in its terms contemplated an award, not a verdict or judgment. Following out its express meaning, in this respect, the parties appeared before the men called a jury, and introduced their allegations and proofs, on which an award was pronounced, as they intended it should be. No matter what the forms under which the parties ostensibly proceeded. They were present, mutually assenting to, and promoting the whole, with the obvious intent to settle their controversies. These acts of themselves operated as a submission, an authority to the six for proceeding as arbitrators. The award is sustainable, like that in Matson v. Trower, Ry. & Mood. N. P. Cas. 17, where it was made by an *umpire, where [ *367 ] the arbitrators had no authority to appoint. The parties having
As to the objection for variance: 1. Arbitrators are agents of both parties. Hence their acts are considered as the acts of the parties themselves ; and a balance found by the arbitrators is considered as a balance [ *368 ] struck by the parties *on an account stated by themselves. It is on this theory, to an award, made pursuant to a submission not under seal, has been held admissible in evidence under the count on an insimul computassent. Keen v. Batshore, 1 Esp. R. 194, went upon that theory. Eyre, Ch. J. said, “that, as there was no arbitration bonds, he should take the transaction respecting the reference as a statement,of accounts between the parties ; and an admission of the balance due to ihk plaintiff; and that it could therefore be given in evidence under the money counts, and particularly as an account stated.” There the plaintiff being summoned for his particulars, furnished for his bill the sum awarded. ‘That was done hero." There the objection was, that it could not be received under the money counts, to which'the answer already mentioned was given. It is said that an account stated may be opened and corrected; whereas an award is á bar to all actions concerning matters comprehended in the submission. Many
The principle of this action was, therefore, correct, and the evidence for the plaintiff below properly received by the court of common pleas. It was, at least, sufficient to go to the jury. It was competent for them to say that the action of the parties throughout bore reference to, and the alleged award took its character from the original stipulation — in that no verdict, no judgment, no limitation of amount was mentioned. And if none of these was intended by the parties, it is difficult to consider the self styled verdict in any other light than as an award. There was nothing in Dwight’s evidence conclusively to characterize the proceedings as those of a justice’s court, under the statute. The alleged arbitrators -were unanimous in their award, and it was otherwise sufficiently formal for the purposes of the general count. No formal issue or issues appeared to have been joined, or intended to be joined ; no formal pleadings interposed ; no original process issued. The jurors departed from the most familiar notions of jurisdiction in a justice’s court, finding for the plaintiff $67,29, and for themselves one dollar each. Such was the ease as it stood on the proofs of the plaintiff below. True the justice entered a judgment for the whole ; but that was on a misconstruction of the submission, which he thought contained, in effect, a conditional confession of judgment for the amount of the award. On a valid confession he is not'confined to fifty dollars, but may enter judgment for any sum between that and $250.
[ *371 ] *If a party will proceed in a? manner which bears every essential mark of a regular law suit, it seems to me he cannot complain that the question shall, at least, be submitted to a jury whether it was not really a suit, when he comes to claim that it was something else. It was easy for the plaintiff below to have defined his position, before the justice, by denying to him and his antagonist, that he intended to proceed under the statute. John R. Hays plight then have revoked what was thus considered
But if, as the defendant below offered to show, there were in truth pleadings, and an issue on which every thing proceeded, and no one understood the matter to be an arbitration, we then have a court of justice ; not only in form, but substance. The stipulation, or any other act or agreement of the parties to submit, would not prevent their waiving the submission, and instituting and pursuing a regular suit. A joining of issue by consent, is as ef. fectually the commencement of a suit, as if coerced by process of la,w'. The stipulation could neither take away jurisdiction, nor be used as conclusively giving to a regular law-suit the character of an arbitration. The evidence offered would have brought into the proceedings a more distinct feature, viewed in connection with which, the plaintiff’s case must, perhaps, have been considered an entirely different thing from what he had presented in his declaration — a verdict and judgment; not an award ; not an account stated. I say a verdict and judgment. The case might have been that, if any thing. But, as thus presented, the proceedings might well be thought to have enured neither, as an award nor judgment ; for both the pretended verdict and judgment were in amount considerably beyond the jurisdiction of the court, and therefore void. The radical error of the court below, lay in holding that the stipulation gave a hue to all the subsequent proceedings so fixed that it could not be changed. We think clearly, therefore, the offer to prove an issue joined was improperly overruled. And even *inde- [ *372 ] pendently of that, the case seems to have been proper for the jury.
The judgment must therefore be reversed ; a venire de novo to issue from the court below : the costs to abide the event.