18 Mo. 399 | Mo. | 1853
delivered the opinion of the court.
By written submission these parties referred certain matters in controversy, suits, quarrels, &c., between them, to the arbitration and award of Lyman Beeman, William M. Grigg and William R. Devin. The arbitrators met on the day agreed upon, and the parties also met. Each produced his statements
1. From the facts in proof before the Circuit Court, on the motion to vacate the award, it appears that the arbitrators were not sworn on the day they first met and undertook to hear the parties andreceive the statements, accounts, explanations, &c.; they made no award on this day. They met again on the 9th of April, and were then, for the first time, sworn as arbitrators. They received no more or further evidence on the subject than what was offered on the first day ; all the evidence ever given before them, as arbitrators, was given on the first day, at their first meeting, when they were not sworn. Now the statute of this state, upon this subject, is positive : “¡Before proceeding to hear any testimony, the arbitrators shall be sworn faithfully and fairly to hear and examine the matters in
These arbitrators heard all the evidence, received the accounts and statements, and afterwards were sworn. They heard no evidence after they were sworn ; for, on the second meeting, they only met to compare and examine the facts, and then award.
This omission we consider fatal; it was a misbehavior; and though without design or intention to do wrong, it, nevertheless, renders the award invalid.
I deem it unnecessary to notice all the points, or indeed, any others made in this case. The judgment of the Circuit Court, vacating the award, is affirmed,