Beam v. Macomber

33 Mich. 127, 1876 Mich. LEXIS 6
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 33 Mich. 127 (Beam v. Macomber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beam v. Macomber, 33 Mich. 127, 1876 Mich. LEXIS 6 (Mich. 1876).

Opinion

Campbell, J:

The present controversy arises out of an arbitration of [128]*128partnership matters, whereby an award was made against Beam in favor of Maeomber of nine hundred and ninety-two dollars and thirty-four cents. The parties had been engaged in buying and selling live stock, and upon a difference in their final accounting, they referred their matters to A. C. Prutzman, C. F. Wheeler and E. II. Lothrop, each depositing a note of one thousand two hundred dollars, the prevailing party to receive the note of the other, with such endorsements as should reduce it to the real balance. The arbitrators, having found the amount of nine hundred and ninety-two dollars and thirty-four cents to be due Maeomber from Beam, endorsed down his note to that sum and gave it to Maeomber, June 23d, 1870. Four days thereafter Maeomber sued it in attachment against Beam. In February, 1871, Beam filed his bill to have allowed him a sum of one thousand two hundred dollars paid for the firm but accidentally omitted from his statement submitted to the arbitrators, and never acted on by them, though alleged to have been known to Maeomber and not revealed by him. Various proceedings were had before answer, which need not be referred to. The answer, which was not sworn to, denies the error, but avers two errors against Maeomber, which he claims to have recently discovered, — one in an omission by Beam to charge himself with seven hundred dollars, part of receipts from sales of hogs, September 23, 1869; and one of one thousand three hundred dollars, from sales on October 20, 1869. A cross-bill, not sworn to, sets up the same facts, and prays a correction of the award.

Proofs were taken, and all the arbitrators were sworn on behalf of Beam, who was also a witness. Maeomber introduced no evidence, except from an accountant to prove the proper mode of making debit and credit entries. He was not sworn himself. Both bills were dismissed, and both parties appeal.

The first question presented is, whether any case is made for disturbing the award.

It is not competent to open an award made by judges [129]*129selected by the parties themselves for any small or slight occasion. Parties having selected them and trusted to their discretion must abide by their decision unless very good reason can be shown to the contrary. But on the other hand, the mere fact that arbitrators have acted, does not prevent courts from inquiring to ascertain whether by fraud or accident they have been prevented from making such an award as- they might or would have made on -a fair and full showing; and equities may exist which will render it just and proper to relieve against the defects which are found to arise from their omissions, for which the complaining party is not in fault. Fraud and mistake may furnish grounds for equitable interference. — Bulkley v. Starr, 2 Day, 553; Van Cortlandt v. Underhill, 17 J. R., 405; Charter v. Trevelyan, 11 Cl. & Finn., 714; Champion v. Wenham, Ambler, 245; Hutchinson v. Shepperton, 13 Q. B., 955; Boston Water Power Co. v. Gray, 6 Met., 131; In re Dare Valley Railway Co., L. R., 6 Eq., 429.

In Champion v. Wenham, Ambler, 245, it was held the whole award need not be disturbed where the matter complained of can be discriminated and settled by itself. And such seems to be the good sense of the matter.

The present case being one where each of the partners kept account of his own matters, each was bound in good faith to lay before the arbitrators his whole knowledge of the facts, and any willful omission to do this would have been fraud. The failure to have all proper evidence laid before them could hardly fail to have arisen from either fraud or mistake of one or both of the parties.

The items set up by Macomber, if correctly claimed by him to have' been omitted in the accounting, would have changed the balances very considerably. Their combined amount is two thousand dollars, and the allowance of either of them would have required the arbitrators to make an award against Beam beyond the face of the one thousand two hundred dollar note deposited; and the allowance of both would have about doubled the award.

[130]*130The fact of this great excess is of itself enough to require caution in examining Macomber’s claim, for it is evident the differences which the parties found in their private accounting, and which led them to arbitrate, must have been such as did not contemplate a balance of more than one thousand two hundred dollars due to either, and no attempt has been made to show any concealment of these items at that time.

Upon examining the record and proofs we find abundant evidence that the items out of which the seven hundred dollar claim arises were submitted to the arbitrators, and that they heard the parties, and upon investigation changed Beam’s statement by adding to it a charge against him of a further sum than he had credited. He swears, and the other testimony bears him out in it, that the additional charge grew out of a dispute which they examined into. There is nothing to show the arbitrators had not full means of knowledge, and Beam swears positively that he credited the whole money in controversy except the sum added by them against him. It also appears from the testimony of one of the arbitrators, that while Macomber found fault afterwards with the disallowance of the one thousand three hundred dollar item, he said nothing to him about this. Under all these circumstances we think there is nothing to show any mistake or misconduct of the arbitrators, or any oversight. And as Macomber has not seen fit to give his own testimony or show his own vouchers or accounts, it must be presumed there is no ground of complaint on this score.

The one thousand three hundred dollar item was also brought before the arbitrators and passed upon, and we have no reason to suppose there, was any mistake-here, for it was in the minds of all the parties, and it is not probable that any one of intelligence could have passed by such a mistake as is set up in regard to it. This sum, as well as other items, appears in Beam’s statement.in a form not according with the rules of book-keeping, but nevertheless in such a way as to lead to no difficulty, if compared with the sales [131]*131accounts, to which, it must be presumed all the parties looked for information. Beam received two thousand three hundred and eighteen dollars and twenty cents, on the 22d of October, 1869, of which he retained one thousand and eighteen dollars and twenty cents, and paid to Macomber one thousand three hundred dollars. He charged himself with the former sum and the company with the latter, and made no credit. There were no partnership books, and these charges, if they stood alone, would represent the transaction in the same way as if he had simply charged the difference between what he and Macomber received, leaving each to retain his own share of two thousand and thirty-six dollars and forty cents as- divided. No injustice could be done, unless Macomber also charged himself a second time with the same amount, and was, in consequence, twice charged by the arbitrators. Such a mistake would be so obvious it could hardly escape attention. In the statement on which the arbitrators appear to have made their final figuring, the account of Macomber’s dealings charges him only with such moneys as he received from his own sales, which would not include this.

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Bluebook (online)
33 Mich. 127, 1876 Mich. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beam-v-macomber-mich-1876.