13 Wash. 352 | Wash. | 1896
The opinion of the court was. delivered by
The respondents entered into a written contract with appellant to erect for it a school house for the sum $18,179, according to plans and specifica
Appellant insisted on deducting the cost of the
(1). As to the mutual differences between said parties and to determine the amount, if any, due the parties of the first part (respondents) under and by virtue of the afore-mentioned contract, without any consideration of the heating and ventilating apparatus known as the Smead system.
(2.) As to whether or not the expense of putting said system into the building should be borne by the parties of the first part, and thereupon determine the gross amount, if any, due the parties of the first part under said contract, and to make the proper award under this agreement as provided by the laws of this state.
Under this agreement the respondents chose L. K. Church, and the appellant chose J. S. White, as their respective arbitrators, and the two chose R. McFarland, as the third. After being duly sworn said arbitrators proceeded to hear, try and determine the differences submitted to them by said agreement, and after hearing and considering the evidence produced by the respective parties, a majority of them,-on May
The argument of the learned counsel for appellant, as indicated by their brief, seems to proceed upon the theory that this court will try and determine the matters in controversy between these parties upon the evidence which was submitted to the arbitrators, and which has been transmitted to this court as part of the record herein. But such is not the theory of the law. The only power conferred by law upon the court below, respecting the questions presented by the exceptions was that which authorized it to refer the cause back to the arbitrators for amendment of their award in case it appeared that they had committed error in fact or in law, or if no such error appeared, to confirm the award as made. With the merits of the controversy the court had nothing whatever to do. It was not possessed of the case for the purpose of proceeding to its determination. Code Proc.,§429. Neither is this court so possessed of it. The sole question for our determination is whether the superior
Having shown the extent and limit of the power of the court in the premises, under the statute, the question arises as to how it was to determine whether the errors complained of had been committed. Was it by an examination of all the evidence taken before the arbitrators, and upon which they base their award, or was the question to be determined from the award itself? The legislature has provided that arbitrators shall have power to decide both the law and the fact-that may be involved in the cause submitted to them (Code Proc., §430,) and that is the common law rule, upon a general submission, unless the arbitrators are-restricted by the agreement to submit: Morse, Arbitration and Award, p. 296.
The legislature has also provided, as we have seen, that awards may be set aside for error in fact or law, but inasmuch as there is no provision in the statute-requiring arbitrators to file of preserve the evidence-received upon the hearing, it would seem to follow that the errors which will sustain an exception to an award on the ground indicated must be discovered by an examination of the award alone. If it was the intention of the legislature to require the court, upon hearing exceptions taken to awards, to examine the-evidence submitted to the arbitrators, or, in other words, to try the cause de novo, it is but reasonable to-presume that they would have so declared. And in the absence of such provision, we think we are justified in adopting the rule announced in many well con
In 1 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, supra, it is said that, “ The mistake for which an award will be set aside must be palpably apparent upon its face, in some material point, and extremely prejudicial to the losing party; ” and numerous decisions are referred to in support of the proposition. Arbitration is favored by the law as an easy, expeditious and inexpensive mode of adjusting disputes and differences, and awards are generally very liberally construed by the courts. All reasonable intendments and presumptions will be indulged to uphold them, and no intendments will be made to overthrow them. The principal object of submitting controverted questions to arbitration is to avoid the expense and delay incident to ordinary proceedings in the established courts of justice, and after parties have submitted their disputes to a tribunal of their own selection, they ought generally to be bound by the result. Wilson v. Wilson, 18 Colo. 615 (34 Pac. 175); New York Wood Working Co. v. Schnieder, 119 N. Y. 475 (24 N. E. 4). The adoption of any other rule would result in making arbitration the beginning instead of the final determination of controversies, and would create a fruitful source of litigation.
This was a general submission of all differences growing out of the contract between the parties, and
See, also: Burchell v. Marsh, 17 How. 344; Goddard v. King, 40 Minn. 164 (41 N. W. 659); New York Wood Working Co. v. Schnieder, supra.
In the case last cited the court by Gray, Judge, said:
“I think the rule should be a settled one that the submission by parties of all matters in dispute, growing out of a particular transaction or contract, will estop them from thereafter claiming that the awrard is not conclusive, if its language and terms, when fairly regarded, are comprehensive. The presumption should be strongly upheld by the courts that the arbitrator’s decision was a final adjustment of all matters in controversy.”
In Fudickar v. Insurance Co., supra, the court, in discussing this question, uses language peculiarly applicable to this case, and which is as follows:
“But it is held, in accordance with what seems to be a just view of the subject, that arbitrators may, unless restricted by the submission, disregard strict rules of law or evidence and decide according to their sense of equity. (Kleine v. Catara, 2 Gall. 61; Boston Water Power Co. v. Gray, 6 Met. 131; Tyler v. Dyer, 13 Me. 41; Hazeltine v. Smith, 3 Vt. 535; Cushman v. Wooster, 45 N. H. 410; Sto. Eq. §1454.) If, for example, a claim for compensation for the erection of a building by one person on the land of another, under a contract which, by technical construction, makes the right to compensation dependent upon full performance by the builder, is referred to arbitration, and it turns out that there has been a failure by the builder to comply with the contract in some particulars, although the benefit which the other party has received from part performance is greater than the injury sustained by the failure to perform the contract in full, the arbitrator may, I think, where the submission is general, award the excess of benefit, although in an action at law upon the contract he could not, within the decision in Smith v. Brady, 17 N. Y. 172 (72 Am. Dec. 442), recover.”
If the language quoted expresses the correct doctrine—and we think it does — it disposes of the contention of appellant that the arbitrators committed error in law by finding in favor of respondents, after having found that the building, as completed by them, varies in some particulars from the original plans and specifications, but was built and completed according
We perceive no error in the ruling of the superior court, and'the judgment must, therefore, be affirmed.
Hoyt, G. J., and Dunbar, Scott and Gordon, JJ., concur.