24 Gratt. 521 | Va. | 1874
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellant’s objections to the decree of the Circuit court sustaining the award of the arbitrator, although presented in various forms, are in effect but two.
I. That there was a mistake of law by the arbitrator apparent on the face of the award.
2. That the award was not final between' the parties, because it did not dispose of the claim of the appellee Thomas to an interest in the land.
Awards which are in substance and effect judgments of a tribunal of “the parties’ own selection,” are always favored in law as tending to the repose of society and the suppression of litigation. “ Expedit Reipublicm ut sit finis litium.” It is therefore only in cases of plain and
Invoking the latter proposition of law, the appellant contends that the arbitrator in this case plainly intended to decide according to law, and manifestly mistook the law, in this: that holding the contract in the case to be an “entire contract,” and the hiring an entire hiring for the year, he laid down as a rule of law to control his decision, “that Thomas, if entitled to recover at all upon that contract, is entitled to recover the hire or wages for the vahóle year;” whereas his right of recovery, in case of discharge without cause, should be limited to the amount of damages actually sustained by such illegal discharge. ~We think the proposition contended for by appellant, and not that laid down by the arbitrator, correctly propounds the law of the case; and if we were satisfied that the arbitrator -was controlled in his award by the rule of law thus assumed by him, we should be disposed to set the award aside for manifest mistake of
We think it evident, from what we have thus quoted from the award, that the arbitrator did not base his decision on the pi’ineiple first announced as law; but, taking the rule established by the case in McCord to be law, he was of opinion that Thomas was, even in that view, entitled to full wages. Tie held that Thomas had been dischai’ged without misconduct on his part, when the year was nearly half gone, and he evidently was of opinion that it was then “impracticable to get employment; ”
"Whether the judgment of the arbitrator on the facts of the case was or was not right, is not for us to decide. If the record contains all the facts, we might be inclined to differ widely from him; but the weight and effect of the testimony was submitted to him, and we feel bound by his judgment thereon.
The next and only other question necessary to be considered is, whether the award was final? "Whether it disposed of all matters submitted to the arbitrator? It is insisted that it did not dispose of Thomas’ claim to the land — that this claim was a matter of controversy in the chancery cause, and not being disposed of, that the award was not final — was incomplete and void.
The chancery suit was brought by "Willoughby & Miner, but abated as to Miner by his death; and the submission was of “ the matters in controversy in this cause between the said "Willoughby and the said Thomas.” These were matters of controversy -with Willoughby, as survivor of Willoughby & Miner, by whom the suit was brought, and for whose benefit it was prosecuted. The
But if it was a claim to an interest in the land, and was submitted to the arbitrator as such, we think it was definitively disaffirmed by the award. That award gave-to Thomas all he claimed under the contract of the 13th of March 1869, with Willoughby & Miner; thus, according to him, in our judgment, the very utmost extent of his rights, and necessarily disaffirming any claim on his-part to the land in question. The arbitrator evidently regarded this as “ res ad/judicaia ” by the decree of the 27th of September 1869, by which a receiver was appointed to take charge of the premises held and occupied by Thomas, until the 1st day of January 1870,.
The decree of the Circuit court must be affirmed, with costs and damages to the appellee.
Decree affirmed.