10 A. 591 | R.I. | 1887
This is an action to recover the rent of certain premises used and occupied by the defendant. The plaintiff claims to recover the rent by force of an alleged award, signed by Louis J. Doyle and Henry A. Webb, under a submission to arbitration between him and the defendant, by which it was agreed that said Doyle and James Tiffany should fix the rent; and in case they could not agree, that they should have authority to select a third person to aid them, and that the award of either two of the three should be binding. Doyle and Tiffany selected Webb as the third arbitrator. The defendant submitted evidence to show that before the final conference, at which the award was agreed upon, he revoked the authority of the arbitrators, and that thereupon Tiffany withdrew and no longer acted with the others.
It is a general rule that a party to a submission may, at any time before award made, revoke the authority of the arbitrators. In this case, however, the plaintiff contends that the defendant could not revoke, because the submission was in pursuance of a covenant in the lease under which the defendant occupied. Flint
v. Pearce,