215 A.D. 130 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1926
The facts surrounding this controversy are as follows: Harry P. Friedman and Morris A. Friedman are brothers and had been engaged in business as copartners under the firm name and style of the Friedman Company. A corporation had also been formed, known as the Prince Knitting Mills Co., Inc., and in which the brothers each owned one-half of the capital stock. The corporation was carried on in the same manner as the copartnership between the brothers, each of whom was equally interested in both the copartnership and the corporation. It was determined to close the affairs of both organizations. Certain controversies arose between the brothers which they agreed to submit to arbitration, and an arbitration agreement was executed between them wherein they agreed to submit their differences to three arbitrators, namely, Nathan Schweitzer, David Schwartz and William H. Friedman. Schweitzer was selected by Harry P. Friedman, while Morris A. Friedman chose David Schwartz as an arbitrator. The two arbitrators selected William H. Friedman, a cousin of the parties, as the third arbitrator. By clauses of the arbitration agreement marked 'c second ” and “ third ” it was expressly agreed;
“ Second. The parties hereto agree to get to work on this investigation immediately, and Morris A. Friedman and Harry P. Friedman agree from this date not to pay out to themselves any of the funds now in hand or to be received by the Prince Knitting Mills Co., Inc., and the Friedman Company, and Harry P. Friedman agrees to notify all persons to pay any of the funds of the aforesaid corporations to the Arbitrators above named.
“ Third. It is furthermore agreed that no moneys whatsoever shall be paid out excepting only undoubted obligations, which are just debts of the companies to parties not connected with Morris A. Friedman in any manner whatsoever, and Harry P. Friedman agrees to do likewise.”
“ Sixth. It is distinctly understood and agreed by and between the parties hereto that they, and each of them will pay any amount so found by the award made by at least two of the Arbitrators above named, the parties hereto do covenant and agree to and with each other pursuant to the provisions of Article 84 of the Civil Practice Act of the State of New York, that a judgment in a Court of Record, to wit, the Supreme Court of the State of New York, in and for the County of New York, shall be entered upon the award made pursuant to their submission, thirty days after such award.”
After hearing the claims of the parties, on January 30, 1924, two of the arbitrators, David Schwartz and William H. Friedman, made and filed in the office of the clerk of the county of New York an award. Nathan Schweitzer, the third arbitrator, vigorously dissented from such award upon the ground that the arbitrators had ignored the report of accountants employed by them. It appeared from the affidavit of Schweitzer in opposition to the motion to confirm the award that his refusal to concur with the findings of his fellow-arbitrators was chiefly by reason of the partiality of one of the arbitrators, William H. Friedman, toward Morris A. Friedman, one of the contending parties. In his affidavit Schweitzer avers that his fellow-arbitrator, William H. Friedman, informed him time and again that Harry P. Friedman was not entitled to a dollar; that he knew Morris A. Friedman to be honest, and that all the testimony in the world would not convince him that Morris A. Friedman would do anything wrong. Schweitzer, in his affidavit, charges William H. Friedman with unfairness, injustice and prejudice against Harry P. Friedman; and that the award which was signed by the two arbitrators was the result of such prejudice and was without foundation of fact; that said arbitrator William H. Friedman favored Morris A. Friedman, showing evident partiality, and that he did not care to listen to any logical arguments in behalf of Harry P. Friedman.
In opposition to the confirmation of the report of the arbitrators it was charged in the affidavit filed by Harry P. Friedman that William H. Friedman was incompetent and ineligible to act as an arbitrator because of the fact that while so acting he became indebted to Morris A. Friedman, one of the parties, in large sums of money; and that prior to the fifing of the award Morris A. Friedman had indorsed notes and loaned his credit to William H. Friedman; and that at all times while acting as an arbitrator the said William H. Friedman was a debtor of Morris A. Friedman, all without the knowledge of the said Harry P. Friedman until
Under such admissions the justice to whom the motion to confirm the award of the arbitrators was addressed, first denied the motion and vacated the award by an order entered April 9, 1924. Subsequently the learned justice entertained an application for a reargument, and upon the reargument vacated his previous order denying confirmation and granted an order confirming the award. The ground upon which the court below reversed its prior action and finally confirmed the award was that Harry P. Friedman, after said award had been made wherein as a part thereof he was awarded the sum of $891.25, had accepted and cashed a check given him for said amount. (Matter of Friedman, 123 Misc. 809.) As a matter of fact, when the copy of the award of the arbitrators was left at the residence of Harry P. Friedman on January 29, 1924, it was accompanied by a check payable to his order and signed: “ The Friedman Co. David Schwartz, W. H. Friedman,” for the amount
I am of the opinion that because of asking and receiving from one of the parties, namely, Morris A. Friedman, the loan of $5,000 during the pendency of the arbitration, the arbitrator William H. Friedman became disqualified from serving further as arbitrator. The law is well settled that arbitrators exercise judicial functions, and while not eo nomine judges, they are, in fact, judicial officers and bound by the same rules as govern such officers (Matter of A. E. Fire Ins. Co. v. N. J. Ins. Co., 240 N. Y. 398, 405). In Fudickar v. Guardian Mutual Life Ins. Co. (62 N. Y. 392) it was said (at p. 399): “ The arbitrator is a judge appointed by the parties; he is by their consent invested with judicial functions in the particular case; he is to determine the right as between the parties in respect to the matter submitted, and all questions of fact or law upon which the right depends are, under a general submission, deemed to be referred to him for decision. The court possesses no general supervisory power over awards, and if arbitrators keep within their jurisdiction their award will not be set aside because they have erred in judgment either upon the facts or the law.” And as was said in Matter of Fletcher (237 N. Y. 440, 447), referring to provisions of law with reference to arbitration proceedings: “ These provisions are appropriate to proceedings where parties substitute judges of their own choice for judges chosen by the State in the determination of disputes otherwise cognizable by the courts alone * * *.” It was said in Oakley v. Aspinwall (3 N. Y. 547, 552): “ The law and the reasons which uphold it apply to the judges of every court in the State, from the lowest to the highest.” In the Aspinwall case it was argued that respondent, having requested the judge to sit, could not thereafter object. This contention was dismissed on the ground that jurisdiction could not be conferred by consent. And further the Court of Appeals said: “But where no jurisdiction exists by law it cannot be conferred by consent — especially against the prohibitions of a law, which was not designed merely for the protection of the party to a suit, but for the general interests of justice.”
Common honesty of purpose on the part of the arbitrator
No distinction is made between relationship of consanguinity of a party to the judge and the relationship of debtor and creditor between a party and the judge. Every litigant is entitled to have his case heard and adjudicated by a fair and impartial tribunal without bias or prejudice, and when a judge places himself in such a position as to deny a litigant such right, the judge becomes disqualified. If blood or marital relationship disqualifies a judge from sitting in a case, far more so should the fact that the judge had received a financial favor from a party and had become the party’s debtor disqualify him. This court has always been jealous of the impartiality of judicial officers whose acts were under review. In Topia Mining Co. v. Warfield (145 App. Div. 422) the late Mr. Justice Scott, writing for this court, said (at p. 423): “ The court below was quite justified in removing the referee, and in view of the precedents in this court, could scarcely have done otherwise. (Smith v. Dunn, 94 App. Div. 429; Fortunato v. Mayor, etc., 31 id. 271.) We do not attribute to the referee any improper motive in asking each party to the litigation before him to advance a sum on account of his fees. It was doubtless only injudicious, but it was none the less improper. Nor do we believe that the refusal or inability of one of the parties to make the proposed advance would, in fact, have prejudiced the referee against him. But the party so refusing might not be so.certain, especially if the decision finally went against him. A referee stands in the place of the court, and it is as essential that litigants before him should be assured of his absolute impartiality as it is that litigants before the court should feel an assurance of its impartiality.”
During recent years arbitration "has been more and'more resorted to for the settlement of business controversies. It, therefore, becomes of the utmost importance that in statutory proceedings of this character where the rights of parties are adjudicated, not by trained lawyers and judges, but by fellow-businessmen, every safeguard possible should be thrown about the proceeding to insure the utmost fairness and impartiality of those charged with the determination of the rights of the parties. Nothing should be permitted to throw suspicion even upon the entire impartiality of arbitrators. The finality of an award of arbitrators as compared with the reviewable decision of a judge or a referee makes this all the more important, and that the tribunal which is to pass upon the rights of the parties be not subject to the slightest suspicion as to its fairness. Not only was the conduct of the arbitrator, William H. Friedman, such as to disqualify him, but if the aver
I do not believe that the appellant waived his right to move to set aside the award by cashing the check sent to him by the arbitrators accompanying their award. In the first place, the award was absolutely void. It was more than voidable. It was made by a judge disqualified to act. Without his concurrence the award never could have been made. In making the payment the arbitrators transcended all authority given them under the submission. In fact, the submission agreement expressly provided “ that no moneys whatsoever shall be paid out excepting only undoubted obligations, which are just debts of the companies to parties not connected with Morris A. Friedman in any manner whatsoever, and Harry P. Friedman agrees to do likewise.” Notwithstanding this provision of the arbitration agreement, the arbitrators themselves assumed to make a payment of the sum awarded to Harry P. Friedman before the award had become effective by the entry of judgment under the Civil Practice Act. By the 6th clause of the agreement it was provided that the parties were each of them to pay any amount found due by the award, and that judgment should be entered pursuant to the provisions of article 84 of the Civil Practice Act. It was, therefore, the duty of the arbitrators to hear the matter submitted to them, take the evidence, and determine all controversies. Thereupon it was their duty to file their award in the office of the county clerk and deliver a copy thereof to each of the parties. This was all the arbitrators could do. With the performance of such acts their duties were
It would, therefore, seem that in making the payment the arbitrators exceeded any possible authority vested in them.
Moreover, it appears perfectly plain from the papers on appeal that Harry P. Friedman was entitled to the moneys which he received, not at the hands of the arbitrators, but as rentals received by the arbitrators during the course of the proceedings under agreement' of the parties made after the submission and which they held as trustees for the parties. These moneys were never subject to arbitration. The arbitrators, while the proceeding was pending, collected approximately $9,000 of rentals, and it was against such fund that they issued their check to Harry P. Friedman for $891.25, and awarded Morris A. Friedman $6,687.32. It is not denied by Morris A. Friedman but that the moneys thus received for rentals of the premises were agreed to be deposited with the arbitrators subsequently to the submission, and that there was no controversy between the parties as to the lease or
We are, therefore, of the opinion that the judgment and order appealed from should be reversed, with costs, and that the order of the Special Term of April 9, 1924, which vacated the award and denied the motion to confirm, should be reinstated.
Clarke, P. J., Finch, Martin and Burr, JJ., concur.
Judgment and order reversed, with costs, and order entered April 9, 1924, granting motion to vacate award and denying motion to confirm the same, reinstated,