Luedinghaus Lumber Co. v. Luedinghaus

299 F. 111 | 9th Cir. | 1924

GILBERT, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above). A motion to dismiss the appeal is based on three grounds: First, that the transcript was not filed in this court until after the return day of the citation, and no legal orders were entered extending the time for filing the same. But it appears from the record that the reason why the transcript was not filed on or before the return day was that the appellees procured ex parte orders from the trial court extending their time to propose amendments to the statement of the testimony. Those orders by their own force extended the time for filing the transcript. Second, it is said that the appellants waived their right of appeal by complying with the decree. What the appellants did was to malee certain payments, so as not to jeopardize their rights under the contract with the appellees. In so doing there was no waiver of the right to appeal. Josevig-Kennecott Copper Co. v. Howarth Co. (C. C. A.) 261 Fed. 567; Hoogendorn v. Daniel, 202 Fed. 432, 120 C. C. A. 537; Dakota County v. Glidden, 113 U. S. 222, 5 Sup. Ct. 428, 28 L. Ed. 981. Equally without merit is the third ground for dismissal, that the decree is not final. The decree finally disposed of the principal contentions between the parties, as will more fully appear upon the discussion of the merits of the controversy. The motion is denied.

We are unable to agree with the court below that the provision in the contract for the determination of the amount of timber on the lands was an agreement to arbitrate a dispute should one arise between the parties, or that the effect of the agreement and the question of its revocability are determinable byr the rule of the common law as to arbitration and award. Arbitration presupposes a dispute and is a recognized common-law method of settling disputes and controversies. If there is no matter in dispute, there is no question for arbitration. Omaha v. Omaha Water Co., 218 U. S. 180, 30 Sup. Ct. 615, 54 L. Ed. 991. There is a broad distinction between a submission to arbitration and a provision for incidental appraisement or measurement. Said the court in Palmer v. Clark, 106 Mass. 373 :

“A reference to a third person to fix by his judgment the price, quantity, or quality of material, to make an appraisement of property and the like, especially when such reference is one of the stipulations of a contract founded on other ancf good considerations, differs in many respects from an ordinary submission to arbitration. It is not revocable.”

In Noble v. Grandin, 125 Mich. 383, 84 N. W. 465, in a contract for the sale of land, an agreement was made that the amount of merchantable pine timber standing thereon should be estimated by three appraisers. The court held that the agreement was not for an arbitration, but for an appraisement, and held that the agreement was a collateral part of the contract, and not revocable by either party. In Green & Coates, etc., Ry. Co. v. Moore, 64 Pa. 79-91, Judge Sharswood said:

“An award is the judgment of a tribunal selected by the parties to determine matters actually in variance between them — not merely to appraise and settle the price of property contracted for under the stipulation that this term of the contract was to be so ascertained.”

*114In Martin v. Vansant, 99 Wash. 106, 168 Pac. 990, Ann. Cas. 1918D, 1147, it was held that an agreement in advance, before a dispute has arisen, to submit to appraisers the value and price of land held under option to purchase, is not an agreement to submit an existing controversy to arbitration, and is therefore not subject to revocation by one of the parties, but is an irrevocable agreement, upon which specific performance may be decreed. Among the cases affirming these principles are Toledo S. S. Co. v. Zenith Transp. Co., 184 Fed. 391, 106 C. C. A. 501; Irwin v. Hoyt, 162 Iowa, 679, 144 N. W. 584; Willingham v. Veal, 74 Ga. 755; California M. E. Conference v. Seitz, 74 Cal. 287, 15 Pac. 839; Guild v. Atchison, T. & S. F. R. Co., 57 Kan. 70, 45 Pac. 82, 33 L. R. A. 77, 57 Am. St. Rep. 312; Omaha Water Co. v. City of Omaha, 162 Fed. 225, 89 C. C. A. 205, 15 Ann. Cas. 498.

Nor can we agree with the appellants that an appraisement vyas had in compliance with the terms of the contract. After considerable delay the appellees appointed one Dodwell as their cruiser. The Lumber company appointed Plarris. Dodwell, before completing his cruise, was taken seriously ill. He and Harris had an understanding that Duval should be the third cruiser, but such understanding was premature, as under the contract the third cruiser was to be appointed in case only of disagreement between the first cruisers. After Dodwell was taken ill, the appellees appointed De Merritt as their cruiser. De Merritt made his cruise and gave the lumber company a statement thereof. Thereafter De Merritt and Harris verbally agreed upon Du-val as the third cruiser, but immediately thereafter De Merritt revoked the agreement. The appellees and De Merritt refused to accept Duval, and urged Harris to consent to the selection of another as the third cruiser. Harris refused, and he and Duval made their report independently of De Merritt. The contract provided that a cruise should first be made by a cruiser employed by the appellees, that the lumber company should employ a cruiser to check his cruise, and that in case of difference between them the two cruisers should select a third, and that the three should thereupon determine the amount of timber. It is clear from the evidence that the third cruiser was never selected in the manner contemplated by the contract. The two cruisers who were authorized to select the third were the two cruisers who made a cruise for the respective parties. Dodwell never made the cruise for the appellees, and he was not authorized to join in the selection of the third cruiser. De Merritt did make it, and he was the only person authorized to act with the lumber company’s cruiser in selecting the third. ■ He never did join in that selection, or, if he did, he recalled his action before anything was done under it.

It is true that in cases of appraisal the appraisers are not governed by the rules relating to arbitrators. “As long as appraisers act honestly and in good faith, they have a wide discretion as to their methods of procedure and sources of information.” Omaha Water Co. v. City of Omaha, 162 Fed. 225, 89 C. C. A. 205, 15 Ann. Cas. 498. Monidah Trust Co. v. Arctic Const. Co. (C. C. A.) 264 Fed. 303. And the award of appraisers is riot to be vacated for mere errors of judg*115ment upon questions of fact. Goddard v. King, 40 Minn. 164, 41 N. W. 659; James v. Schroeder, 61 Mich. 28, 27 N. W. 850. And if the award is within the contemplation of the contract, and contains the honest decision of the appraisers, it will not be set aside. But here there never was an agreement that Duval should act as the third appraiser, and an appraisement made jointly by him and the lumber company’s cruiser wholly failed to meet the requirement' of the contract. Either party could disregard it, or could invoke the aid of equity to set it aside. Sholz v. Mills, 176 Mo. App. 352, 158 S. W. 696.

The parties to the suit, possessing as they did the vested right to have an appraisement made in the manner prescribed by the contract, fixing the quantity of timber involved in the transfer, neither party could be deprived of that right by a judicial decision in the present case. The lumber company had not abandoned that right. And there was no allegation in the pleadings nor facts developed in the case to give the trial court jurisdiction to direct that a cruise of the timber be made in disregard of the provisions of the contract, or to adopt any such cruise made under the court’s order as the measure of the lumber company’s liability to the appellees. Upon the pleadings and the facts we think the trial co'urt should have directed the specific performance of the agreement for appraisement.

We find, as did the court below, that- there was failure of full performance of the contract, both by the appellees and the lumber company ; but we are of the opinion that the deposits made by the lumber company and the tenders of payment which it made to the appellees should in equity be held to have stopped the running of interest upon the amounts so deposited and tendered, and that, in view of the default of both parties to the contract, costs were not, in equity, recoverable by either party in the court below.

The cause is remanded, with instructions to modify the decree as herein indicated.