Strite v. Reiff

55 Md. 92 | Md. | 1880

Irving, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appeal in this case must be dismissed. It appears by the record, that the subject-matter of the controversy involved in this appeal, was, by written agreement of parties, submitted to the arbitrament and award of “the three Judges of the Orphans’ Court,” (of Washington County,) “ whose judgment and determination in the premises shall he binding, final and conclusive upon all the parties, unless appealed from within thirty days thereafter by any party aggrieved, and such appeal shall be to the Court of Appeals of Maryland.”

Abraham Strite, as executor of another Abraham Strite, held a fund of which Henry Strite, (one of the appellants,) as a child of the deceased Abraham Strite, is entitled to a share, unless Israel Reiff, who claims by a deed of trust to him from Henry Strite, or D. M. Witmer, (who also claims by assignment from Henry Strite,) is entitled to this share. Three persons are claiming of the executor, and it is their respective claims which they have submitted to the arbitration of the Judges of the Orphans’ Court. It is apparent, that the Orphans’ Court, as such, had no power finally to adjudge between these persons as to their respective rights; and it is so conceded by the appellant. If their award. has any binding effect, it is because of the agreement making the submission to them. Whether that agreement making the submission was made under, and was warranted by sec. 7, Art. 7, of the Code of Public General Laws; or was a reference by agreement to the Judges, as individuals, irrespective of *95that section of the Code makes no difference. If the reference was to the Judges as an Orphans’ Court, and was warranted hy the statute, the decision would he final, and no appeal would lie. The statute contemplated no appeal from the award itself. It provided for a final settlement of disputes in this way to save litigation, evidently, and therefore provided for no appeal. Consent cannot give jurisdiction; and the reservation of the right of appeal, hy the terms of reference, can confer on this Court no right to hear the case. If the reference was outside the provisions of the statute, it stands in the attitude of an ordinary case of arbitration and award, from which there is no appeal. Ho matter in what form the Judges of the Orphans’ Court- may have entered their decision in this case, it will be referred to their character as arbitrators, and not to their official character as a Court.

It having been put in the form of a final order, or judgment of that Court, cannot give it the force and effect of an order or judgment which would be within their jurisdiction to enter.

Judge Cooley, in his work on Constitutional Limitations, page 500, says: If Judges should sit to hear such controversy ; they would not sit as a Court; at most they would be but arbitrators; and their action could not be sustained on that theory, unless it appeared that the parities had designed to make the Judges their arbitrators, instead of expecting from them valid judicial action as an organized Court. Even then their judgment would not be binding as a judgment, but only as an award.”

This case is materially distinguishable from the case of Woods vs. Matchett, Adm’x, 41 Md., 394.

In that case the matter in controversy between the parties was with reference to a claim of the appellee against the appellant. That dispute was, by the consent of parties, referred by the Orphans’ Court to a third person. *96Exceptions were filed against the confirmation of the award for errors patent on its face. The Orphans’ Court overruled the exceptions and confirmed the award. Appeal was taken from that order of the Court overruling the exceptions and ratifying the award. No point was made, whether the reference, made hy the Orphans’ Court, was of a subject within the meaning of Art. Y, sec. Y, of the Code; or whether the subject-matter was a controversy within the jurisdiction of the Orphans’ Court to decide without the assent of parties; nor was there any point or question made whether the right of appeal existed in such case; so that the Court did not directly pass on any of those questions. We are not therefore trammelled in this case by that decision. In this case, the reference was made by agreement directly to the Judges of the Orphans’ Court. They made an award. No exceptions were filed; but appeal was taken directly from the award.

(Decided 10th December, 1880.)

Appeal dismissed.

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