23 Cal. 275 | Cal. | 1863
delivered the opinion of the Court—Norton, J. concurring.
This is an action for the specific performance of an award made by arbitrators," under and in pursuance of an agreement made by the parties. The defendant demurred to the complaint on the ground that the same did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The Court sustained the demurrer, holding that the remedy of the plaintiff was not by a suit for a specific performance, but an action to recover the penalty of five hundred dollars stipulated in the agreement, submitting the matters in controversy to the arbitrators, and agreeing to abide by and perform the award. A final judgment was rendered against the plaintiff, from which he appeals.
The complaint avers that the defendant, on the thirty-first day of October, 1860, conveyed to the plaintiff the undivided one-half of certain tracts of land in Siskiyou County, and' that they then entered into a partnership and farmed the land as copartners until the twenty-second of March, 1862, when differences and misunder
Under Sec. 380 of the Practice Act, the parties had a right to submit the question1 relating to the partition of the land to the award of the arbitrators. The Court erred in holding that the plaintiff could not maintain a suit for a specific performance of the award, and that he was confined to an action to recover the penalty stipulated in the articles of submission. Courts of Equity have, in numerous cases, decreed the specific performance of awards, though not made rules or orders of Court for the performance of some specific thing, such as the conveyance of an estate, an assignment of securities, and the like. (Fry on Specific Performance, Sec. 974.) It makes no difference that the agreement contains a stipulation to pay a certain sum as a penalty in case of a non-compliance with or refusal to perform the award. A Court of Equity looks to the substance of the agreement, and not to its form, and will afford the party a remedy by decreeing a specific performance, where such relief is proper; and it will not suffer the party to escape from a specific performance, even if he should offer to pay the penalty agreed upon. (Chamberlain v. Blue, 6 Blackf. 491; 2 Story’s Eq. Secs. 715, 751.) It follows that the Court erred in sustaining the demurrer.
The judgment is therefore reversed, and the defendant is ordered to answer the complaint within ten days after service of notice of the filing of the remittitur in the Court below.