Bowen v. Lazalere

44 Mo. 383
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedAugust 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 44 Mo. 383 (Bowen v. Lazalere) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowen v. Lazalere, 44 Mo. 383 (Mo. 1869).

Opinion

Bliss, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff brought suit in the Daviess County Court of Common Pleas against the defendants, upon a promissory note for about $500. Defendants admitted the execution of the note, [385]*385but said it was procured by fraud. The plaintiff, in reply, denied all the facts charged as constituting the fraud. Afterward the defendants filed a supplemental answer recapitulating the former answer, with the addition of a new defense — that the matter in dispute had been submitted to arbitrators, who had madetheir award. The record shows that the defendants at the same time filed the submission and award and a motion to confirm the award.

The court, upon motion of plaintiff, struck from the file the motion to confirm, for want of notice, whereupon the defendants withdrew the submission and all the papers connected with it. No reply to the supplemental answer is filed, and no further allusion is made to the matter during the trial. This seems to be the same award brought before the court at the present term in the case of Shores and Wife v. Bowen.

The cause proceeded to trial upon the allegation of fraud in procuring the note, and the verdict and judgment were for the plaintiff for its full amount, which judgment was reversed in the District Court. After the trial the defendants presented a bill of exceptions, which the judge refused to sign, certifying as his reason that it was untrue. It was then signed by three bystanders, but the judge refused to permit it to be filed in court for the same reason. Afterward, and within five days of the trial, the defendants took and deposited with the clerk four affidavits sustaining the bill of exceptions, which are annexed to and certified up as part of the record — the original bill of exceptions so sustained having been brought up by them and filed in the District Court — and come here with the rest of the record.

Counsel for the plaintiff seem.' to criticize this mode of bringing up the bill, but I do not see wherein it is not a compliance with the requirements of the statute. As this statutory mode of bringing up the facts of a case is unusual, and is liable to embarrass the appellate court by the necessity imposed upon it of deciding the truth of the bill, we take the opportunity of saying that it ought to be avoided if possible. To that end, the judge who presides at the trial would do well to state briefly wherein the bill is untrue, if he objects to it upon that ground, and to give the parties such assistance in making it up as his impartiality and his notes of [386]*386the testimony eminently qualify and enable him to do. The law, however, does not require that he write the bill, or change one presented to him — only that he shall certify the cause of his refusal to sign it. A liberal construction o£ this requirement, we think, would make it his duty to point out in a general way, but With such particularity as to make it understood, in what the untruthfulness consists.

It is claimed by the plaintiff that the defendants, by withdrawing their motion to confirm the award, abandoned that portion of their answer. But it could not have that effect. The proceedings to obtain judgment upon the award form no part of this case, and should not have been mixed up with the record. When the parties agreed to submit the matter in controversy to arbitration, they thereby agreed that the suit be discontinued. Another tribunal was selected; and if the plaintiff did not voluntarily dismiss his case, the defendant could compel him to do so by motion setting up the submission, or by ansAver in the nature of a plea in abatement puis darrien. (Larkin v. Robbins, 2 Wend. 505 ; Ressequie v. Brownson, 4 Cow. 341.) The judgment sought upon the aAvard had nothing to do with this case, and the AvithdraAval of the papers pertaining to it can not be construed as an abandonment of any portion of the ansAver. I do not knoAV that I understand the views that prompted the action of counsel in the trial of the case. The allegation of submission and aAvard ayos neither replied nor demurred to ; and the parties went to trial upon that portion of the ansAA-er alleging fraud in the procurement of the note. They seem to have lost sight of the award altogether; the ansAver is upon the record with no reply; and we are unadvised Avhether the parties intended to retain or abandon it, or Avhy no further allusion Avas made to it. We Avill, hoAvever, examine it and see Avhat kind of defense it makes.

We have seen that a submission may be made to Avork a dismissal of the suit. It is not necessary that there be an aAvard, for the consent to arbitrate is in itself a selection of another tribunal and an agreement to transfer the cause to that tribunal, which agreement the court will carry into effect whenever it is properly brought to their notice. So far as its effect upon the [387]*387pending action is concerned, it is equivalent to an agreement, for a good consideration, to dismiss an action brought to recover a debt. But such submission alone can not be pleaded in bar. It is no answer to the merits until there is a good and binding award. It is by no means certain, because there is a submission, that an award will follow. The arbitrators may refuse to serve, or proceed so irregularly as to vitiate their action, or their authority may be revoked; and if the submission could be pleaded in bar, the claim would be lost without any trial upon the merits.

In the record before us this matter is not set up by way o£ abatement to procure a discontinuance of the suit. It is in the nature of a plea in bar to the merits — an answer setting up the award as a full defense against the claim. So that, this answer not being denied, if the award is a good one, it is a full defense, and a final judgment should have been given for the defendants. It is only necessary, then, to examine this part of the answer and see what kind of an award is pleaded. The submission seems to have been a good one, and, if properly brought before the court, would have procured a discontinuance of the suit. But the award, as set forth, is radically defective.

The answer states that the controversy was “submitted to Jas. L. Davis, Wm. B. Johnson, and Wm. L. Givens, as arbitrators,” etc., and that afterward two of said arbitrators, Johnson.and Givens, gave notice to the parties, proceeded to hear and examine the matters in controversy, made their award, signed the same, etc. No mention is made of Davis ; but it affirmatively appears that only two of the parties met and heard the case. The absolute requirement of the statute, that “all the arbitrators must meet together and hear all the proofs and allegations of the parties,” renders a less number absolutely incompetent to sit. This award, then, as set up in the answer, was no adjustment of the controversy, and the parties did well to disregard it. To the claim of the defendants in this court, that the submission itself abated the suit, and that the judgment should therefore be reversed, it may be further said that matter in abatement is, in general, waived by a plea and trial upon the merits. It would be unconscionable, in a case where the court has undisputed jurisdiction, to allow a [388]*388party, after having pleaded voluntarily, and gone to trial and been defeated upon the merits, to come in after judgment, and especially upon error, and say that the plaintiff had agreed to discontinue the suit.

We must, then, see whether any error has been committed upon the trial.

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44 Mo. 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowen-v-lazalere-mo-1869.