50 N.J. Eq. 103 | New York Court of Chancery | 1892
The object of this suit is to procure a decree annulling an award made by two arbitrators. This relief is sought on two grounds—-first, that the arbitrators exceeded their authority, and, second, that their award is uncertain and inconclusive; in other words, that it is neither certain nor final. Another ground is attempted to be alleged, namely, that the arbitrators refused to hear material evidence, but the bill, on this point, is so defective in essential respects as to state no ground of action whatever. All that it avers is, that the arbitrators refused to hear several material witnesses which were offered on behalf of the complainant, but what facts these witnesses would testify to is not stated, nor is it alleged that the arbitrators were informed what was the nature or character of the evidence they would give. So that, if it be assumed that everything alleged in the bill, with the requisite legal certainty, is true, still it is apparent that the bill fails to show that the arbitrators refused to hear a single word of material evidence. The pleader, it is true, says they did, but that is all he says. He gives his opinion respecting the nature of the rejected evidence, but not the evidence itself. The issue which the bill tenders on this point is wholly immaterial. The question is not, did the arbitrators refuse to hear evidence which,
The causes which led to the agreement under which the award in question was made, may be stated, with sufficient fullness for the purposes of the present discussion, as follows: The complainant and defendant owned the whole of the capital stock of the Leslie Brothers Manufacturing Company, a corporation organized under the laws of this state, with a capital of $500,000, divided into five thousand shares of $100 each, and doing business in the city of Paterson, in the manufacture of steam snowplows, locomotives and other machinery and appliances. Each owned two thousand five hundred shares of the stock of the •corporation, and the defendant was its president and general manager, the complainant was vice-president, and a third person acted as secretary and treasurer. While the parties were thus equal in property and power, disputes arose respecting the conduct of the business of the corporation, which became so bitter and dangerous to its prosperity that both desired that a separation of their corporate interests should take place by the retirement of one of them from all participation in the affairs of the corporation. They were, however, unable themselves to agree upon any basis of settlement, but were willing to leave the question as to which one should retire, by the sale of his stock, and what the other should pay him for his stock, to be settled by arbitration. To accomplish these objects, the parties, by an agreement under seal, appointed two arbitrators and gave them .power, in the language of the agreement,
to decide and direct which of the said parties shall sell to the other all his •capital stock of said company, and the terms upon which said sale shall be •made, and how and when the same shall be paid for,”
The parties signed this agreement on the 20th day of April,. 1891, and three days afterwards, on April 23d, the arbitrators-made their award. They awarded, in the first place, that the-complainant should sell all his stock “ and.any and all his rights in connection with said company” to the defendant, and that the defendant should pay to the complainant $23,000. Eleven thousand dollars of this sum they directed to be paid, in the language of the award,
“in the following manner: the sura of $8,000 in cash within three days after the making of this award, and giving to the said Edward Leslie a receipt in-full, up to this date, of all moneys due by the said Edward Leslie to the said' John S. Leslie or to said company, which amounts we, the said arbitrators,, declare to be $3,000.”
Six thousand dollars more were to be paid on or before May 1st, 1892, the payment to be secured by a bond executed by the ..defendant, with a.surety, who is-named. The remaining $6,000’ were to be paid on or before May 1st, 1893, its payment to be secured by the pledge of one thousand shares of the stock of the Leslie Brothers’ Manufacturing Company. They also awarded, to quote the language of the award,
“ to the said Edward Leslie a bonus of $1,000, to be paid on each rotary snowplow hereafter built and sold by the said Leslie Brothers’ Manufacturing Company, or its assigns, until the said sum of $1,000 is paid on fifty plows, after which number said payment of $1,000 shall cease to be made. * * * The-aforesaid bonus of $1,000 is to be paid on the first day of May in each andi every year upon all plows built and disposed of within the term of one year previous to the date of such payment, the first of such payments of bonus to be made on the first day of May, 1892.”
The doctrine is obviously fundamental that it is essential to the validity of an award that it be confined to those things which, by the agreement of arbitration, are submitted to the judgment of the arbitrators, and that it shall not extend to those which are not within the terms of the submission. Caldwell says it is one of the requisites of a valid award that it be consonant to the submission. The award must not extend to persons or things beyond the scope of the submission. Caldw. Arb. 226, 227. And Kyd says the award must not extend to any matter not comprehended within the submission. Thus, if the submission be confined to a._particular subject of dispute, while there are other things in controversy between the parties, an award which extends to any of these other things is void, as far as it respects them. Kyd Aw. 141. This principle has been recognized and enforced by both this court and the supreme court. Young v. Executors of Young, 2 Halst. Ch. 450; Hazen v. Addis, 2 Gr. 333. Nothing, it seems to me, can be clearer, both as a principle of sound law and of plain natural justice, than that where two persons submit, in plain and clear terms, one particular dispute or controversy to the determination of a third, as their judge, his authority must be considered to be .inflexibly limited to a decision of that one particular matter, and that any attempt by him to pass judgment upon any other question must be held to be unauthorized and beyond his power, and consequently without the least legal force. The submission is the commission of the arbitrator. By force of it, he becomes a judge with absolute power over the things submitted to his judgment; So long as he acts uprightly and impartially, and keeps within the limits of his authority, and deprives neither party of a full and fair hearing, his judgments are unimpeachable and irreversible. He may do what no other judge has a right to do; he may intentionally decide contrary to law and still have his judgment stand. This was so declared in Bell v. Price, 2 Zab. 578, 590, where Mr. Justice Carpenter, in pronouncing the judgment of the court of
Tried by this principle it seems to me to be well nigh undeniable that the award in question is void. A single matter was submitted, namely, which one of the two parties should sell his stock to the other. The primary object that both wanted to' accomplish was, that one should become the owner of all the stock, in order that he might be freed from all interferences from the other. Each was desirous to obtain complete control of the corporation. That could only be effected by one making sale of his stock to the other. But which should sell—Avho should go out—was the point of difficulty about Avhich they could not agree, but which they were willing to submit to arbitration. That was the principal thing submitted, but, as necessarily incident to it, the arbitrators were authorized to prescribe the terms of sale and decide how and when the stock of the one that they decided should sell should be paid for by the other. "Which one should sell his stock, and how much the one, that it was decided should become the buyer, should pay the other for his stock,' comprehended everything that the parties intended to submit, and everything which, according to the fair and reasonable construction of the terms of the submission, they did submit. The award, however, extends beyond this and embraces another and entirely different matter. It attempts to take jurisdiction, not only of the previous dealings between the parties, but also those between the complainant and Leslie Brothers’ Manufacturing Company. It decides that the complainant is indebted to the defendant, “ or to said company,” in the sum of $3,000, and directs that the defendant shall pay that sum to the complainant by giving him a receipt in full for all moneys due by the complainant to the defendant, “ or to said company,” and that such receipt shall operate as a payment of $3,000 of the amount awarded to the complainant for the value of his stock. The defendant is thus authorized
The complainant is also entitled, in my judgment, to prevail on the second ground. This award is uncertain and inconclusive.
“As the principal object which the parties have in view, when they submit to arbitration, is to prevent any future litigation on the subject of the submission, no rule is better founded than that which requires that an award should be final.”
And Chief-Justice Horublower, in pronouncing the opinion of the supreme court in Hazen v. Addis, 2 Gr. 333, 337, after quoting the above rule laid down by Kyd, added: “ It [the award] must be an absolute conclusive adjudication of the matters in dispute.” This principle is elementary and has been universally recognized. It requires no support from adjudged cases; a few, however, will be cited to show how it has been applied. Pedley v. Goddard, 7 Term 69, 73; Carnoehan v. Christie, 11 Wheat. 446, 466 ; Waite v. Berry, 12 Wend. 377, 380 ; Fletcher v. Webster, 5 Allen 566, 567; Lincoln v. Whittenton Mills, 12 Metc. 31, 34 ; Ballie v. Edinburgh Oil Gas Light Co., 3 Cl. & F. 639, 655.
The only duty imposed by the submission on the arbitrators, in behalf of the party that they decided should sell his stock, was to fix the price which he should be paid, and how and when the same should be paid. They decided that the complainant should sell. This gave him a right to a price. They had power to decide what it should be, but no power to fix an uncertain or indeterminate sum, nor to so arrange the payment of the sum that they fixed as the price, that the amount the complainant would be entitled to receive should depend not on their judgment but on the will or future action of the defendant or some other person. They could not delegate their powers, nor so exercise them that the amount which the complainant should receive, as the price of his stock, should depend upon chance or the future
“We award to Edward Leslie a bonus of $1,000, to be paid on each rotary snow-plow built and sold by the Leslie Brothers’ Manufacturing Company or its assigns, until the sum of $1,000 is paid on fifty plows.”
It will be observed that the word “ bonus ” is used instead of “price.” In its strict sense, that word means “good,” but in its popular sense it is used to denote a premium for a loan. The arbitrators manifestly used it as the equivalent of “ price.” There can be no doubt that they meant that the complainant should, in case fifty plows were made and sold, be entitled to be paid $50,000 as part of the price of his stock. They had no power to award a bonus or premium, and unless the rule, that awards are to be expounded favorably and every reasonable intendment made in their support, is applied, and it is, in consequence, held that “ bonus ” here means “ price,” it would be very difficult to say that this award should not be declared void for excess of power. It will also be noticed that the award does not say, in
The demurrer must be overruled, with costs.