69 Ga. 708 | Ga. | 1882
The plaintiff in error brought suit agáinst the defendant on a promissory note. To this action the defendant pleaded the general issue, and at the April term, 1881, a consent order was agreed on and taken, whereby all questions of law and facts in said case, were referred to the decision of a referee, and F. H. Miller, Esq., was selected as such referee, and the instructions were, “ that he return his decision or award to the (then) next October term of the court, to be entered of record, and stand as the judgment of the court in said cause.” Afterwards the order of reference was extended and enlarged, so as to permit the return of the award.to the next April term of the court. The hearing was had before the referee in February, 1882, and after amendment of pleadings, by consent, and hearing all the evidence on both sides, the decision of the referee was made in favor of plaintiff for the amount claimed, with interest thereon. After the referee had made his award, but before it was filed, it was submitted to the defendant. Whereupon he served a written notice upon the referee, “that in consequence of an inability to agree upon the terms of the order of reference in the case, the defendant would apply to the judge of the superior court,
The report of the referee being filed soon thereafter, counsel for plaintiff moved anordermaking the award of the referee the judgment of the court. This motion was refused, and in the absence of all exceptions filed to said award, by the defendant, the court, on mere motion, granted an order reciting “that said referee misconstrued said order of reference,” that was taken by consent, and directing said order of reference, and the report made thereon, to be set aside, and the cause to be placed upon the docket of the court and stand for trial at the next October thereafter. To which refusal to make said award the judgment of the court, and in vacating and setting aside said order of reference and decision of the referee, plaintiff excepted.
This award was made (being a case pending in court, and referred by its order) under the judiciary act of 1799, and not under the arbitration act of 1855-6. Code, 4249. An' arbitration and award under the act of 1799 is not entered upon the minutes of the court, as is required by the arbitration act of 1855-6, prior to the filing of exceptions thereto. The proper motion on the return of such an award is to make it the judgment of the court, and if any exceptions are made, they should then be considered and decided before any further action is taken. If the exceptions, or any of them, are sustained, that vitally affect the award, it should be set aside; otherwise, the motion to make it the judgment of the court should be allowed ; and it is only in this way-^the judgment reciting the award and thus making it a part of the judgment — that the award is entered upon the minutes, of the court. It goes upon the minutes as a judgment, and not merely as an original award.
On the other hand, an arbitration and award under the act of 1855-6, on the return of the same into court, goes
There being no objections filed to this award, we see no reason why the court should not have granted the motion to make the same the judgment of the. court. The court, on the contrary, on motion of defendant, set aside said rule of reference and vacated said award upon the ground “that the referee misconstrued said order of reference.” The order of reference was made with the consent of the parties, and duly placed on the minutes, and referred both questions of law and fact to the referee. Under it, the referee proceeded to hear the evidence, and rendered a decision both upon the law and facts, and we find no error in his construction of the order of reference; nor do we find any error in his decision, upon the law and facts as submitted to him.
To an award thus made, a mere suggestion in the form óf a notice to the referee, that “he had misconstrued the order of reference,”, without stating wherein or in what respect, in our opinion is no sufficient ground of exception for vacating or setting aside the award, and especially when, after the most careful examination, we are at a loss to determine how, or in what manner the referee has so misconstrued the order of reference.
Awards are to be favored by the courts, as they are designed to terminate controversies, and they should be sustained when made in conformity to law, unless vicious or defective for some manifest cause, properly made known to the court.
The act of 1876, relied upon by defendant in error and embodied in section 4242 of the Code, does not change
Judgment reversed.