An award will not be set aside in equity on account of an
omission by the arbitrators to act upon part of the matters
submitted unless that omission shall have injured the
complainant.
That judges chosen by the parties themselves, as well as those
constituted by law, ought to be exempt from all imputation of
partiality or corruption; that their conduct ought to be fair and
their proceedings regular, so as to give the parties an opportunity
of being heard and themselves the means of understanding the
subjects they are to decide are propositions not to be
controverted. But corrupt motives are not lightly to be ascribed to
the arbiter, nor is partiality to be ascribed to him on account of
difference of opinion with respect to the decision he has made.
When the price of land, and not the question of title, is
submitted, the submission and award need not be by deed.
This case seems to be sufficiently stated in the following
opinion, delivered by MR. CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL on 9 March, all
the judges being present.
This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court for the
County of Alexandria, sitting in chancery, by which that court set
aside an award made between the parties, and directed an
account.
Page 11 U. S. 172
The bill impeaches the award because
1. The arbiters exceeded their power.
2. They made no award with respect to a part of the matter
submitted to them.
3. They were partial, and proceeded to make their award without
hearing the party against whom it was made.
The arbitration bond binds the parties to submit to the award,
order a arbitrament of Francis Peyton, Theophilus Harris, and
Thomas Herbert, or any two of them, respecting a controversy of
several accounts and contracts existing between them.
A judgment at law has been obtained for the amount of the award,
for relief against which and against the award itself this suit was
instituted.
By the plaintiffs in error it is contended that excess of power
in arbiters is a defense at law, and is therefore not examinable in
this Court.
That the injured party may avail himself of this defense in a
court of law where the excess of power is apparent on the face of
the award is not controverted. But in this case it is not shown by
the award itself, and the defendant insists that he was not at
liberty in a court of law to avail himself of evidence
dehors the award, and in support of this opinion the case
of
Wills v. MacCarmick, 2 Wilson 149, has been much relied
upon. Without deciding that question, the Court will proceed to
inquire whether the defendant in error has succeeded in proving
that in this case the arbiters have in fact exceeded their
power.
It appears that Abraham Faw sold to David Davy a lot of ground,
the purchase money for which was payable in four years in four
equal annual payments. Davy conveyed to Faw, about the same time, a
lot which he had purchased from Elisha C. Dick, and which he held
on the condition of making certain improvements. Davy becoming
insolvent, it was agreed that his contract
Page 11 U. S. 173
with Faw should be annulled, that the bonds he had given Faw for
the purchase of the lot should be returned to him, and that he
should surrender the bond for a title which Faw had executed. It
had been stipulated that in the event of his failing to pay the
purchase money and of the contract's being avoided, the money
actually paid by Davy to Faw should be considered as rent so far as
rent was allowed. There had been some other dealings between the
parties, and there had been a small piece of ground rented to Davy
on which he had put some inconsiderable improvements.
In this state of things, they agreed to submit their affairs to
arbitration, and the bond was executed which has been stated. The
arbiters awarded that Faw should pay Davy �314 4s. 11p., and it is
proved that, in making up the account between the parties, they
debited Faw with �300 for the lot which had been conveyed to him by
Davy. Faw contends that this was not a contract subsisting between
the parties, and consequently is not included within the terms of
the submission.
Faw alleges in his bill that this whole transaction was closed,
that the lot conveyed to him by Davy formed no part of the
consideration given for the lot he had sold, but was conveyed to
him, because Davy considered the rent reserved on that lot and the
conditions of improvement, which were inserted in the deed, as
equivalent to its full value. These allegations are denied in the
answer, and the defendant avers that the price of the lot purchased
by him was �500; that he conveyed the lot he had purchased from
Dick at �100, and gave his bonds for �400, the residue of the
purchase money; that when this contract was annulled, he became
entitled to his lot or to its value, and that this was one of the
subjects submitted to the referees.
In addition to this testimony furnished by the answer, the
defendant has produced the testimony of a witness who was present
when the arbitration was agreed upon and the bond executed. He says
that the lot purchased by the defendant from the plaintiff, and
that which had been conveyed by the defendant to the plaintiff as
well as other accounts between the parties formed the subjects of
conversation.
Page 11 U. S. 174
Francis Peyton, one of the arbiters, declares that he considered
all the transactions between Faw and Davy as submitted to them;
that Faw himself laid before them the bond he had given to Davy for
a conveyance of the lot he had sold, and that he always understood
from Mr. Faw during the arbitration that he was willing to pay �100
for the lot conveyed to him by Davy. Peyton adds that the mode
adopted by the arbiters for arranging that part of the subject was
understood by them to be the one which was most agreeable to Mr.
Faw.
The Court is of opinion that the plaintiff in the court below
has failed in showing that the arbiters have exceeded their
powers.
2. A second objection to this award is that the arbiters have
not settled the accounts between the parties for flour stored by
Faw for Davy, which accounts were clearly within the
submission.
The defendant has not shown that he is injured by this omission,
and it is therefore unnecessary to decide whether, had he been
injured, a court of equity could or could not have afforded
relief.
3. A third ground on which the application for relief is placed
is the partiality and improper conduct of the arbiters.
That judges chosen by the parties themselves as well as those
who are constituted by law ought to be exempt from all imputation
of partiality or corruption; that their conduct ought to be fair,
and their proceedings regular, so as to give the parties an
opportunity to be heard and themselves the means of understanding
the subjects they are to decide are propositions not to be
controverted. But corrupt motives are not lightly to be ascribed to
the arbiter, nor is partiality to be attributed to him on account
of difference of opinion with respect to the decision he has
made.
The charge made in this case, that the parties were not
sufficiently heard, is not supported, and is contradicted by the
testimony in the cause. The general
Page 11 U. S. 175
charge of partiality is also contradicted and is expressly
denied by the arbiters, who have been made defendants, and by the
deposition of Francis Peyton, who did not sign the award.
Some particular facts have been proved by which this charge, it
is supposed by the counsel for the defendant in error, may be
supported.
McKinsey Talbot deposes that after the arbiters had separated,
Thomas Herbert, who was one of them, said that David Davy ought to
buy his winter's meat for him without making any charge on account
of the particular service he had rendered him in the said
arbitration.
That such language is unbecoming in a judge will not be denied,
and if the circumstances leading to these expressions, and the
manner in which they were uttered, had been stated in the record,
and there had been reason to believe that the words were spoken
seriously, they would have furnished objections to the award not
easily to be removed. But nothing is stated which could give these
expressions a serious aspect. They appear not to have been
delivered confidentially, and as it is difficult to conceive that a
man who could be chosen as an arbiter would thus wantonly and
unnecessarily expose the depravity of his own conduct, the Court
must consider these words as spoken in sport, with indiscreet
levity but not as seriously indicative of an opinion that he had
made an unjust award.
The same witness, in another deposition, states that he was
present at a meeting of the arbiters and heard Thomas Herbert say
that they had the hands of Abraham Faw so fast tied that he could
not for his life get them loose.
It is impossible to consider these expressions in an arbiter
without some disapprobation. But what led to the employment of them
does not appear, nor is the Court informed of the temper in which
they were employed. It is worthy of remark that Thomas Herbert does
not appear to have had an opportunity of cross-examining this
witness, and that this deposition was
Page 11 U. S. 176
taken before the arbiters were made parties to the cause.
There is some testimony respecting some altercations or
jealousies between Faw and some of the arbiters at a corporation
election, but they were too trivial to be worthy of notice, and as
they occurred about the time of the submission and before the
arbiters proceeded on the business, it is supposed that they would
have induced Faw, had he thought them of any importance, to make
some effort to prevent an award.
Upon a view of the whole case, the Court is of opinion that the
plaintiff in the court below has not shown sufficient matter to set
aside the judgment at law, and doth therefore direct that the
decree of the circuit court be
Reversed and annulled.
March 13 -- After the decision of the cause, C. Lee for the
defendant in error, cited Kyd on Awards, to show that where the
dispute is about land, the submission and award must be by
deed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE MARSHALL.
That is where the title is in question. But here the title was
conveyed -- the dispute was only as to the price. The question of
title was not submitted.