115 Ga. App. 729 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1967
In this suit to recover for the breach of a construction contract, a copy of the contract incorporated in plaintiff’s petition contained the following provision: “Any disagreement arising out of this contract or from the breach thereof shall be submitted to arbitration, and judgment upon
1. “Where a contract contains a stipulation, not that all the questions arising thereunder . . . shall be submitted to arbitration, but that the decision of arbitrators upon a certain question or questions . . . as to the amount of loss or damage, and the like, shall be a condition precedent to the right of action upon the contract itself . . . such stipulation will be enforced, because the parties to a contract have a right to adopt whatever method they see fit for determining such questions; and until the method adopted has been pursued or some sufficient reason given for not pursuing it, no action can be brought upon the contract.” Southern Mut. Ins. Co. v. Turnley, 100 Ga. 296, 301 (27 SE 975). See also: Liverpool &c. Ins. Co. v. Creighton, 51 Ga. 95, 110; Adams v. Haigler, 123 Ga. 659, 665 (51 SE 638); Goldberg v. Provident Washington Ins. Co., 144 Ga. 783, 787 (87 SE 1077); Millican Electric Co. v. Fisher, 102 Ga. App. 309, 311 (116 SE2d 311); 5 AmJur2d 535, Arbitration and Award, § 20.
However, the principle stated in Turnley, supra, is not applicable here, for in this case the contract provided that all matters in dispute arising out of the contract must be submitted to arbitration. “According to numerous decisions a general agreement to arbitrate all questions which may arise in the execution of a contract, both as to liability and loss, should be treated as against public policy and void, as an attempt to oust the courts of jurisdiction.” State Hwy. Dept. v. MacDougald Constr. Co., 189 Ga. 490, 504 (6 SE2d 570). More accurately stated, the rule which obtains in this state is that “A common-law agreement ... to submit the validity and
As the agreement to arbitrate here was subject to revocation by plaintiff and therefore unenforceable in the absence of a prior award rendered pursuant to the agreement, the trial court erred in sustaining defendant’s general demurrer to the petition.
2. The ruling of the court sustaining defendant’s imperfect special demurrer and striking plaintiff’s amendment was harmless since the matter stricken was mere surplusage.
Judgment reversed.