34 Mo. App. 223 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the court.
On the eighth day of December, 1887, the plaintiffs and defendant entered into the following agreement
Only two of the arbitrators qualified. They met on the eighth day of December and all parties were present. No objection was made by either party, to the matter being heard and determined, by the two arbitrators who were present, and had qualified. An adjournment was had, and on the tenth day of December, the two acting arbitrators agreed upon the following award : “We the undersigned arbitrators selected by John Fullbright, Daniel Hinkle and Marion Drum, of the one part, and Robert W. Harris of the other part, to settle and adjust certain matters of dispute between them, met at Oak Ridge, Missouri, on the eighth day of December, 1887, all parties being present, exhibited their accounts, and claims as follows : Robert W. Harris presents note dated June 3, 1887, for the sum of eight hundred and
At the May term, 1888, of the' circuit court for Cape Girardeau county, plaintiffs filed in said court a motion for affirmance of said award, and that judgment be entered thereon.
At the same time defendant appeared and filed in court a pleading or motion, objecting to the affirmance of said award and urged among other reasons why this should not be done: “ That only two, of the arbitrators selected, had qualified, and that the third arbitrator did not act, and that in the investigation of the matters in dispute or controversy between the parties, the arbitrators exceeded their authority, and considered matters of business about which there was no controversy, and were not contemplated by the parties at the time of the submission.” The case was heard by the court, and resulted in the finding of the issues for the defendant Harris. In due time the plaintiffs filed their motion for
I. The first contention by counsel for appellants, is, that the court refused, to strike out defendant’s motion or objections to the affirmance of the award, for the reason, that the evidence tended to prove that a copy of the award was served on defendant between the tenth and twentieth days of December, 1887, and that as defendant’s motion was in the nature of a motion to vacate or modify the award, that the same should have been filed at the January term, 1888, of said circuit court, that being the next term of said court after the publication of said award. (Section 337, R. S.) Plaintiff ’s counsel has mistaken the exact nature of the paper filed by defendant. It is more in the nature of an answer or equitable defense to plaintiff’s motion for judgment. The supreme court in Shores v. Bowen, 44 Mo. 396, has passed directly on this question. The court said in substance: “That although the party objecting to an award- had failed to file his motion to modify or vacate the award within the time prescribed by the statute, yet he could defend against the motion of his adversary to have the award affirmed and judgment entered thereon, and that he could not be driven to a court of equity for redress.” We can see no good reason why defendant should not be permitted, in this proceeding, to show the invalidity of this award, and urge this as a reason why judgment should not be entered thereon. This assignment must be ruled against plaintiffs.
II. The testimony introduced by defendant, tending to show what matters were, and what were not the subject of dispute and controversy between the parties at the time of the submission, was admissible. The principle reason urged by defendant’s counsel, why the award was invalid, and why judgment should not be
We think that the testimony in this case clearly shows that the pretended indebtedness of eleven hundred dollars against defendant, and which was allowed plaintiffs in the award, was not the subject of any doubt or controversy, at the time of the submission, and that no such indebtedness existed or was claimed by the parties, at the time of the submission. Nor did any such indebtedness accrue after the submission, and was, by consent, submitted to the arbitrators. The only connection that defendant had with this matter, grew out of a partnership between the parties to this litigation. Six months before the submission this co-partnership was closed up. There was a final and complete settlement of all partnership business, and this indebtedness of eleven hundred dollars, which was held by a third party, was in said settlement assumed by plaintiffs, a new note given by them for the amount, and the old note taken up and cancelled. Defendant says that the only matter in dispute or controversy between him and plaintiffs and which rendered the arbitration necessary, was a charge made by plaintiffs, that he (defendant) as a member of said firm, had used about five hundred dollars of the firm’s money, and had failed to charge himself with it. Defendant denied this. They could not agree, and the arbitrators were selected for the purpose of adjusting this matter of difference. While this controversy was going on, defendant, for the purpose of securing the plaintiffs, in the event it should subsequently appear that he had used any portion of the firm’s money, and had failed to account for it.
There was nothing said about the indebtedness for eleven hundred dollars, and no intimation that the former settlement of the business of the firm should be set aside. Rut on the contrary, it appears that plaintiffs offered to pay their note for eight hundred and twenty-five dollars, if defendant would consent to account for five hundred dollars of the firm’s money, which plaintiffs claimed that defendant had embezzled. And it also appears, that about a month after this controversy began, plaintiffs paid defendant on the note he held against them one hundred dollars. This conduct on part of plaintiffs, is inconsistent with the idea or theory, that plaintiffs were claiming that defendant was under any legal or equitable obligation to pay the old debt of eleven hundred dollars, which they had assumed to pay. It may be here remarked, that in the selection of the arbitrators, in the preparation of the articles of submission and in the proceedings before the arbitrators, the plaintiffs were represented by able counsel and the defendant acted without legal advice. Plaintiffs’ attorney was the only witness who testified in their behalf,, and while his testimony has some tendency to prove that the partnership’s settlement was intended to be set aside, and the indebtedness for eleven hundred dollars considered and re-adjusted, yet his testimony is so unsatisfactory, that we think the trial court was fully warranted in coming to the conclusion, that no such matters were contemplated by the parties at the time of the submission. Nor can it be said that the defendant consented to the consideration of this item of eleven hundred dollars, because defendant swears that
Under the view we have taken of this branch of the case, it becomes unnecessary to notice other objections and exceptions urged upon the attention of this court by counsel for both plaintiffs and defendant. But in reference to the objection made by defendant that only two of the arbitrators qualified and that they alone heard the case, and made the award, we will say, that the facts in the case at bar, are different from those in the case of Bowen v. Lazalere, 44 Mo. 383, cited and relied on by defendant. In that case, it appears from Shores v. Bowen, 44 Mo. 396 (which was a branch of the same case), that the defendant Bowen, who was objecting to the award, was not present at any of the meetings of the arbitrators. In such a case we think a party would not be bound if only two of the arbitrators assumed to act. But we do not think that the supreme court, in the case cited, intended to decide, that a party could not waive the right to have his case passed on by the number of arbitrators agreed on in the submission.
In entering judgment in this case, the trial court, not only overruled plaintiffs’ motion to affirm the award, and entered judgment thereon against the plaintiffs, but granted defendant affirmative relief by vacating the award. In this proceeding, the circuit court was confined simply to a disposition of plaintiffs’ motion for judgment and that part of the judgment below vacating the award was erroneous. While we are of the opinion that the award is invalid for the reasons stated in this opinion, yet this was a proceeding under the statute, and as defendant had failed to file his motion to vacate or modify the award within the time prescribed by the statute, his defensive pleading to plaintiffs’ motion for
The judgment of the circuit court as rendered, is hereby set aside and reversed, and judgment will be entered in this court overruling plaintiffs’ motion to affirm the award and for judgment thereon, and dismissing said motion at plaintiffs’ cost.
it will be so ordered.'