This case comes before us upon an appeal from a judgment entered on the award of arbitrators. The arbitration bonds were executed after the joining of issue between the parties in an action brought in this court. The dispute was in respect to a quantity of flannels, and the bonds provided for the submission of all the matters arising under the pleadings to two dry-goods merchants, one chosen by each of the parties, with the additional proviso, that the umpire, in case of disagreement, should also be chosen from among the dry-goods commission merchants. The arbitrators were attended by the respective parties in person, and without counsel, and thus the whole matter was completely withdrawn from the court, and placed exclusively in the hands of laymen, specially chosen by the parties from the class most conversant with the subject-matter of the controversy. The award was in favor of the plaintiffs, and was made without disagreement, and consequently without the necessity of calling in an umpire.
An award, under such circumstances, should not be lightly disturbed; certainly not without some evidence of fraud, corruption, partiality, or unfairness. Nothing of the kind is suggested here, and the only grounds upon which a reversal is claimed are, first, that the arbitrators received as testimony, on the plaintiff’s behalf, some m parte affidavits; and, second, that they refused to permit the defendant to inspect those parts of the plaintiff’s books, in respect to which testimony was being given. These objections are not well founded in fact, as will presently be shown ; but were they clearly established, the acts complained of do not amount to such misconduct or misbehavior as would justify us in setting aside the award. The statute, by these terms “ misconduct ” and “ misbehavior ” (2 R. S. 542, § 10), contemplates acts evincing unfairness, or contrary to all the principles of a just proceeding, such as those discountenanced in Walker v. Frobisher (6 Ves. 70), and in Knowlton v. Mickles (29 Barb. 465), and not mere errors of judgment, however great (Smith v. Cutler, 10 Wend. 589 ; Ketchum v. Woodruff, 24 Barb. 147; Cranston v. The Executors of Kenny, 9 Johns. 212; Herrick v. Blair, 1 Johns. Ch.
The remaining objection, that the arbitrators refused to receive evidence on behalf of the defendant, as to the contents of
