4 Whart. 81 | Pa. | 1839
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
— As to the first bill of exception; we are clearly of opinion that the plaintiff in error, the defendant, below, was entitled to have the question answered, which, by way of cross-examination he propounded to Mr. Brown, the witness produced by the plaintiff below, to prove the submission and award set forth in his declaration; and upon the establishment of which, his right to recover depended. The object of the question by .the defendant, was, to ascertain from the witness, whether the submission of which he' spoke in giving his evidence in chief, had not in effect, been terminated or put an end to before the award, of which he also testified, was made. Now it is perfectly obvious, that the award was a mere nullity, or in law no award at all, unless a submission authorising it, was in force or being at the time it was made. The claim of the plaintiff below therefore, rested entirely upon the fact of such an award having been made, as he alleged, that is, one made in pursuance of an agreement of submission, existing between him and the defendant below at the time. This was part of the allegata on his part, and therefore, to entitle him to recover, he was bound to sustain it by his proofs. Having given evidence accordingly by the witness, which, without more, went to prove that the writing, purporting to be an award, was made in pursuance of an agreement of submission in force at the time of making the award, he could with no propriety or colour of reason after closing his examination of the witness in chief, object to the defendants, asking such questions of the witness as would tend to elicit evidence from him, showing that the submission, of which he testified, as having been made, had been put an end to, before the making of the award; and consequently the award was made without any submission, which autho
Then in regard to the second exception; we also think that the Court below fell into an error in rejecting the evidence, under the impression, it would seem, that the witness was incompetent, or could not be required to give it, because he acted as an arbitrator in making the award upon which the plaintiff relied for his recovery against the.defendant. The Court seem to have taken up the idea, that the evidence, which the defendant proposed to give by the witness, tended to impeach the propriety, if not the integrity of his conduct, as an arbitrator. This, however, I think, was a misapprehension ; for the evidence offered to be given by him, instead of going to show that he acted improperly as an arbitrator between the parties here, would have shown, if it had been given, that he in fact was not an arbitrator at the time, and had no authority from the parties, to act as such; and that, though he had had such ■authority some time before that, yet he with the other gentleman upon whom it was conferred, after making an attempt to execute it,
Judgment reversed and a venire de novo awarded.