12 A.2d 471 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1939
Argued November 15, 1939. These are appeals from the order of the Municipal Court of Philadelphia County vacating an award of arbitrators.
On November 7, 1937 plaintiff under a written contract, *540 completed repairs to a building owned by defendants, and upon their refusal to pay the balance claimed to be due, brought an action in assumpsit. The defendants then entered a rule to stay proceedings pending submission to arbitrators, as provided in the written contract.1 The court so ordered. Plaintiff thereupon named as his arbitrator B.J. Krakow and defendants named Louis Rosenberg. Rosenberg, after examining the premises over which the dispute arose, declined to join Krakow in appointing a third arbitrator in accordance with the agreement of the parties. On June 10, 1938, upon plaintiff's petition and with the acquiescence of defendants, Label Goldblatt, Esq., was named by the court below to act as the third arbitrator in conjunction with the two appointed by the parties. This procedure is supplied by § 4 of the Arbitration Act of April 25, 1927, P.L. 381, 5 PS 164. There after, Rosenberg refused to act and no other arbitrater was appointed in his place. On February 4, 1939, after months of fruitless negotiation between the parties and their attorneys, the two arbitrators, namely Krakow and Goldblatt, called a meeting on notice to defendants, and the testimony of plaintiff and his witnesses was taken. Neither of the defendants nor the arbitrator appointed by them, appeared at the hearing. On June 2, 1939, the other two arbitrators who heard the evidence, made a finding in favor of plaintiff and he then sought confirmation of the award. This was refused and on motion of defendants the lower court vacated the *541 award and re-submitted the controversy to the arbitrators; hence these appeals.
The legal question involved is a narrow one: when three arbitrators are agreed upon and only two of them hear the evidence and make an award thereon, is such award valid under the provisions of the Arbitration Act of 1927, supra? The arbitration provided for in contracts made after that act took effect must be proceeded with according to the terms of that statute. J.M. DavisCo. v. Shaler Twp.,
Section 6 of that Act, 5 PS 166, provides: "When more than one arbitrator is agreed to, all the arbitrators shall sit at the hearing of the case, unless, by consent in writing, all parties shall agree to proceed with the hearing with a less number." Whether the word shall is to be regarded as mandatory or is directory merely is to be determined by what is intended by the statute. The word is generally regarded as imperative: Nat.Transit Co. et al. v. Boardman,
It is undisputed that the two arbitrators heard the witnesses and made the award in the absence of the third arbitrator, and that they so acted without defendants' consent in writing. To avoid the conclusion that the proceedings were irregular under the statute in those respects, plaintiff contends, since one arbitrator had refused to act, that at the time of the hearing there were but two arbitrators. Hence, it is argued that all the arbitrators did sit. This contention, however, entirely overlooks the written agreement that there must be three arbitrators and the policy of the law that arbitration agreements must be given effect according to their terms.
For the foregoing reasons the award based upon evidence heard by only two of the arbitrators was a nullity and the order of the lower court must be affirmed, but certainly without approval of the Fabian tactics pursued by defendants and their counsel in avoiding the issue. Plaintiff, however, is not without remedy; sections 3 and 4 of the Arbitration Act provide adequate means of relief. The court has jurisdiction over the arbitrators: NipponKi-Ito Kaisha Ltd., v. Ewing-Thomas Corp., supra, and while there is no express provision for the contingency of the refusal of an arbitrator to act, the Supreme Court in J.M. Davis Co., v. ShalerTwp., supra, has definitely upheld the power of the court to appoint a substitute in place of an arbitrator who has disqualified himself and has pointed the *543 way to the proper procedure where an arbitrator will not act.
Order in each appeal affirmed, costs to follow the final award.