The petitioner is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the empire of Japan. The material allegations of its petition are admitted, which are, that the petitioner and the Pierce Company, a domestic corporation, entered into a written contract in and by which the petitioner agreed to sell to the Pierce Company a quantity of castor oil, to be shipped from the Orient to the buyer at the buyer’s place of business at East Rochester, N. Y.; that the agreed terms of payment were ‘ ‘ net cash, sight draft against railroad bill of lading;” that the petitioner shipped the oil from the Orient to East Rochester, N. Y., as agreed; that it duly presented to the buyer a properly indorsed bill of lading and sight draft for the purchase price; that the buyer refused to accept the bill of lading and pay for the oil upon the stated ground that the oil was not of the quality ordered; that the contract contained the following provision: “ Any differences arising between the parties to this contract do not invalidate same, but shall be settled by arbitration at New York, unless otherwise specified herein, and decision by such arbitration shall be final and binding on both parties, each shipment to be considered separately;” that the petitioner has offered and demanded arbitration, but the buyer has refused and refuses to arbitrate; and the prayer is that the buyer, the Pierce Company, be directed to proceed to arbitrate. The petitioner bases its application upon the provisions of chapter 275 of the Laws of 1920, designated the “ Arbitration Law,” and constituting chapter 72 of the Consolidated Laws. The Pierce Company raises no question as to the constitutionality of the Arbitration Law, and seeks to justify its refusal to arbitrate solely upon the grounds (1) that the agreement to arbitrate does not comply with the requirements of section 2366 of the Code of Civil Pro
Ordered accordingly.
