269 A.2d 295 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1970
In the file, there is a "Motion for Confirmation of Arbitration Award" (hereinafter, "the motion"), dated May 12, 1970; an "Objection to Motion for Confirmation" (hereinafter, "the objection"), dated May 20, 1970; and an "Application for Confirmation of Arbitration Award"1 (hereinafter, "the application"), dated May 28, 1970. The parties have treated as the presently effective parts of the file the application and the objection, even though the latter was filed in response to the motion rather than to the application. The court will treat the pleadings as the parties have.
Summarized, the application recites that arbitration proceedings were held pursuant to the arbitration clause of the uninsured motorist provisions of an insurance policy issued by the defendant; that an arbitration award was rendered; and that in connection with the proceedings the parties had entered into the following stipulation:2 "It is hereby stipulated and agreed between the parties that arbitration of the issues of liability and damages may proceed but without prejudice to either party with respect to the issues of coverage and compliance with the terms and conditions of the insurance contract. *24 It is understood that coverage and contract compliance are not waived and may be judicially determined at a later time at the instance of either party. Such voluntary submission to arbitration of the questions of liability and damages is done so with reservation of the right to contest at a later time the carrier's duty to pay the amount of the arbitrator's award on account of non-coverage or non-compliance with contract provisions."
Instead of making an award on these two issues, the arbitrator made, in part, the following award: "The undersigned arbitrator . . . award[s], as follows: The St. Paul Insurance Company shall pay to Charlene Kilby the sum of two thousand three hundred fifty dollars ($2,350.00)."3 This award is clearly outside the submission, for the submission required the arbitrator to determine the amount due, if any, from the uninsured motorist, not from The St. Paul Insurance Company. "It is not the right to recover damages from the defendant insurance company which is made arbitrable but the right to recover damages from the uninsured motorist."Frager v. Pennsylvania General Ins. Co.,
Because the award went beyond the submission, the defendant had grounds for a motion to vacate, modify or correct the award under General Statutes §§
It is to be noted that the defendant claims that the breach of contract by the plaintiff excused the defendant only from paying the award. The defendant does not claim that the alleged breach excused the defendant from performing its agreement to arbitrate "the issues of [the uninsured motorist's] liability and damages" referred to in the stipulation. If the award had conformed to the submission and had decided only those issues, confirmation of the award would have determined, by judgment, the liability of the uninsured motorist, not of the defendant. See General Statutes §
Since the application to confirm is part of our statutory arbitration, as distinguished from common-law arbitration,9 the statutory provisions alone govern the resolution of the issue in this case.Marsala v. Valve Corporation of America,
These provisions might have been relevant to motions by the defendant under General Statutes §§
For those cases where the amount of the judgment is smaller than the award, the foregoing quotation provides a more nearly equitable result than complete loss of coverage. Whether such an equitable result would be barred by the express provisions of the policy, and whether, if it was so barred, the provisions are valid, are questions not presently before the court.