10 W. Va. 771 | W. Va. | 1877
delivered the opinion of the Court: .
In a chancery cause pending in the circuit court of Greenbrier county, entitled as above, the parties by written agreement under their hands and seals, made and filed June 18, 1872, did thereby “agree to refer all matters of difference between them involved in said suit to the arbitrament and award -of Allen T. Caperton and Samuel Price, and an umpire to be selected by the said Caperton and Price,” and “further agree, that the award of said arbitrators and umpire, or of any two of them, shall be made final and entered as the decree of the said court in this suit; Provided, That if said award shall not be made on or before the 1st day of October, 1872, this agreement shall become inoperative and void.”
Caperton and Price selected as umpire, A. F. Mathews, and an award was. made by said Caperton and Mathews, August 6, 1872, in their report of which they state that they “proceeded on the 6th day of August, both parties being present in person, and by counsel, to hear the cause upon the papers and the evidence. And after having mature 'y considered the same, make the following award according to the terms of the said submission, which is herewith returned, viz :
The arbitrator, Price, disagreed to the award, so far as it made “plaintiff and defendant equal partners in the contract between Alleghany Station and the White Sulphur Springs, being inclined to think that the plain tiff had but one-third interest. He also disagreed “ to so much as does not give costs against the plaintiff,” but agreed to the allowance of $25.00 to the umpire.
The circuit court, on the 12th day of October, 1872, ordered that the parties to the suit be summoned to appear on the first day of the next term of said court, to show cause why the award returned and filed in the cause should not be entered up as the decree of the court.
The arbitrator, Caperton, and umpire, Mathews, made affidavit, October, 15, 1872, stating “that after having decided the question as to the partnership between the said Henley and Menefee, on the work between Alleghany station on the C. & O. R. R., and the "White Sulphur Springs station, they stated the accounts between the partners, and in casting up the accounts by a clerical blunder, they failed to deduct from the credits on the books of the concern, an item of $2,216,00, in favor of T. H. Menefee, which was a mistake, and cleai’ly against the intention of the arbitrators.” They, therefore, asked that the award be recommitted to them to correct the mistake, as they would have made a different award had the mistake not have been made. The arbitrator, Price, also certified, that he was satisfied the mistake alluded to was made.
The circuit court, on the 7th day of June, 1873, by its decree, after reciting, that the cause came on to be heard that day, upon the bill of complaint, the answer of defendant, the replication thereto, the submission of the matters in difference involved in this suit, the award re-furned by the arbitrators, the order for a rule against the parties to show cause why the award should not be entered up as the decree of the court, rule thereon re
Notwithstanding the decree of recommitment is of date, June 7th, the amended award professes to have been made June 6, 1873. I suppose, however, that is a clerical error.
The amended award is signed by the said Caperton and Mathews, and states : “ The undersigned arbitrators who heretofore, returned the above award,” (meaning the original) “ in pursuance of a decree of this court, recommitting the award to us for the purpose of correcting the mistake set forth and referred to in the petition heretofore filed by us, do correct said award, and hereby award that the said plaintiff, Henley, recover from the said defendant, Menefee, the sum of one thousand and forty-eight dollars and ninety-two cents ($1,048.92) with interest thereon from the 6th day of August, 1872.”
Arbitrator Price, states in writing, of same date, “ I do not agree in the result of the judgment of Messrs. Caperton and Mathews, for reasons assigned in the original award, but believe the mistake complained of exists, and if the principles adopted by them are correct, the foregoing correction ought to be made. I believe that the mistake exists.”
The defendant, Menefee, on the 12th day of November, 1873, excepted to the award and amendment thereto, upon the following grounds :
Second. It is not in pursuance of the submission, and embraces matters not submitted.
Third. It does not settle the partnership, but refers to unsettled liabilities and outstanding debts; yet it awards a large sum to be paid by one partner to the other.
Fourth. The first award made was final. The court had no power to recommit, and consequently the correction is a nullity.
Fifth. By the terms of the submission, which was an act in pais, the authority of the arbitrators ceased on the 1st day of October, 1872; and
Sixth. The award is otherwise vague, incomplete, and unauthorized by the submission.
The court, by a decree of November 15,1873, overruled the exceptions to the award, &c., and confirmed the corrected award, reciting the statements thereof, and adjudged, ordered and decreed, “that the plaintiff, C. W. Henley, recover of the defendant, T. K. Menefee, the sum of $1,048.92, with interest from the 6th day of August, 1872, and that the said parties hold and enjoy in equal proportions, the said tract of land and all other assets belonging to T. K. Menefee, each party being liable for ány debts due, or yet ,to become due, from the said firm of T. K. Menefee & Co., and that each party shall pay his own costs in this suit expended.”
The defendant, Menefee, has appealed to this Court from those decrees and orders of the circuit court.
It is objected, first, that the motion to recommit the award, being a matter not in the ordinary prosecution of the case, and one which could not be anticipated, the defendant was entitled, as of right, to notice of the time said motion would be made; and that the notice given to appear at the November term, 1872, was no notice of a motion made at the June term, 1873.
I do not think that objection is of avail. The awai’d was recommitted upon the affidavit of one arbitrator and
The exceptions made to the corrected award were insufficient, and were properly overruled.
The'first exception was, that the award was uncertain and not final. . •
That exception itself is insufficient. It should show why the award is not certain and final. The court is not expected to examine for reasons to sustain exceptions to an award, when it appears upon its face to be regular, certain and final. ■ It is the duty of the objector to show wherein the award is not certain and final. This award upon its face shows a complete settlement of the partnership affairs ; it appears to have awarded all that the submission demanded, and so far as this record discloses it, embraced all that either of the parties contemplated, or desired the arbitrators should take into consideration, and that the arbitrators returned such award as the evidence warranted, and if not so, the party disputing must show wherein it is not so. Morse on Arb., 362, 363 and 446, 447; Pollock’s adm’r v. Lutherlin and Buford v; Pollock’s adm’r, 25 Gratt., 78.
The other exceptions to the award have been virtually considered, and will not be further reviewed.
It is objected that the corrected award was made by but one arbitrator and the umpire. That is true, and was authorized by the submission.
The sixth assignment, is that the arbitrators should have returned and filed with their award, the evidence
It is objected that the correction made and set forth in the corrected award, does not correspond with the error set out in the affidavit of the arbitrators. There being no evidence before the court to show that the correction is not correct in the amended award, this Court must presume the arbitrators have done their duty, and made the correction upon proper evidence, such at least, seems to be the weight of authority before cited, and that the party attacking must prove the contrary.
It is objected that the final decree is not warranted by the award, because it omits the item of $59.08, and also, because it adjudges to the plaintiff the one-half of all the estate of the defendant, T. K. Menefee. I can hardly believe the appellant was serious in making that assignment of error, it being obvious that the arbitrators did not intend to award $59.08 to Menefee, that in fact it was the result of the mistake made by them in omitting the item they asked to correct the award for, and did correct it by giving to Henley $1,048.92; and it is equally as obvious that the decree in adjudging to the plaintiff one-half of the estate of T. K. Menefee, means T. K. Menefee & Co., it being clearly a clerical error, as will appear by reference to the statement, or citation from the award previously made in the decree, and the decree should be corrected in that respect.
It was not error to award costs. Morse on Arb., 623.
Upon the whole, I am satisfied that the court below did not err in entering the award as the judgment of the court, and that there is no error in the decree complained of. The decree must be corrected in the man
Decree Affirmed.