Brewer v. Bain

60 Ala. 153
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 60 Ala. 153 (Brewer v. Bain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brewer v. Bain, 60 Ala. 153 (Ala. 1877).

Opinion

BRICKELL, C. J.

The bill was filed by the appellee, for a settlement of the accounts of a partnership in planting, averred to have existed with the appellant in 1870, and to compel the appellant to account for property of the partnership, which, it is averred, he had converted to his own use. The answer denies the material allegations of the bill, and pleads, in bar of the relief sought, that the matters in controversy had been submitted to the arbitrament and award of Hugh G. Windham, and I). C. Taylor, who had rendered their award, ascertaining and declaring that the appellee was indebted to the appellant, on account of such matters, in the sum of twelve hundred and eighty-five 61-100 dollars. The final hearing was on the bill and answer, and proof addressed to the allegations of the bill, the matters of account, and to the fact of the submission and award. The chancellor declared that the award was not a bar, because it was uncertain; because, in arriving at their conclusions, the arbitrators must have considered matters not submitted to them; and lastly, because he regarded it as hard, unconscionable, and oppressive on the appellee. A decree was rendered, ordering an account in conformity to the prayer of the bill, and giving special instructions to the register, as to the mode of taking the account. A final decree was rendered, adjudging a large amount to be due the appellee from the appellant; from which decree this appeal is taken, and numerous erors are assigned.

1. It is obvious that the question meeting us at the thresh-hold of our consideration of the case, is the fact of submission and award ; for, if that fact is proved affirmatively, in the present state of the pleadings, the award is a positive bar to the relief sought by the bill. Parties have an unqualified right to submit all controversies, involving pecuniary demands, or property, and rights of property, to the arbitrament of those in whom they confide, and whom they deem competent to determine them, rather than to enter on litiga[159]*159tion, by pursuit of remedies in courts established by law. This mode of adjusting controversies, the statute declares, it is the duty of all courts to encourage ; and, in this respect, the statute is simply declaratory of the principles which courts of law and equity had observed for a long period prior to its enactment. — Young v. Leaird, 30 Ala. 371. The common law recognized the right; and, though statutes may prescribe the mode of submission, and the requisites of an award, they are not, unless so expressly declared, in abrogation of the common law. — Byrd v. Odem, 9 Ala. 755.

2-3. The object of the parties, in the submission of a controversy to arbitrament,is the ascertainment and determination of their respective rights, and the silencing of litigation; and this object would fail, if the award, when rendered, had. not the finality and conclusiveness of a judgment or decree of a court of competent jurisdiction. Such is the effect and operation the law accords to it, when it is within the submission, and determines and disposes of the matters in dispute. — Morse on Arbitration, 487. As the claim or demand, which is the subject of suit, is merged in the judgment rendered, the claims or demands submitted to arbitration are merged in the award rendered; and like a judgment or decree, the award may be pleaded in bar of any subsequent suit, founded on such claim or demand. — Morse on Arbitration, 490.

The submission before us is very general in its terms. There is no other description of the subject of submission,1 on which the arbitrators must award, than the matters in controversy. To this general term the parties gave a definite application, when they appeared before the arbitrators, submitted their partnership transactions, and litigated their respective demands as partners. The subject-matter of submission was thereby rendered certain ; and to that the award must be referred. — Price v. White, 27 Mo. 275; Woodward v. Atwater, 3 Iowa, 61.

An award can not be assailed collaterally.—Woodrow v. O’Conner, 28 Vt. 776. When pleaded in bar to a bill in equity, seeking relief as to matters it embraces, if on its face it is valid, the force and effect of a judgment must be allowed to it. If the complainant assails its validity, for extinsic facts, the bill must be amended, and these facts must be stated specifically. The principle is the same, as when a release is pleaded; or when, to a bill for general account, a stated, or a settled account is pleaded. Decrees must be founded on, and supported by pleading. Proof, without corresponding pleading, will no more authorize a decree, than pleading without corresponding proof. [160]*160Caton v. Willis, 5 Ired. Eq. 335; McKinley v. Irvine, 13 Ala. 593; Paulling v. Lee, 20 Ala. 753; Crabb v. Thomas, 25 Ala. 212. A larger latitude, and less certainty of averment, may have been indulged by a court of equity, than was originally tolerated in courts of law. But, as is said in Duckworth v. Duckworth, 35 Ala. 70, “ It is a cardinal rule, founded in good sense, that a bill must show the complainant’s claim or title to relief, with such accuracy and clearness, and with such certainty, that the defendant may be distinctly informed of the nature of the case which he is called on to meet: matters essential to the complainant’s right to relief must appear, not by inference, but by direct and unambiguous averment.” The award, if valid on its face, is prima facie a bar to this suit, when connected with the evidence that the parties appeared before the arbitrators, and submitted for their determination their partnership transactions, and their liability to each other growing out of their relations as partners — the matters which form the gravamen of the bill, and in respect to which relief is sought. Until the bar of the award is removed, of these matters there can be no examination. If the bill assailed the award only, without allegation of the original transactions, and the injury he had suffered from it, the insufficiency of it would be admitted. Claiming relief on the original transaction only, without impeaching the award, which forecloses all inquiry into them, it is equally insufficient. In either instance, but a part of the case is disclosed, and but a part of the facts on which the right of relief depends are put in issue. Hence, the general rule we have stated, that an award can not be collaterally impeached by evidence. The grounds of objection to'it must be stated with precision.— Willingham v. Harrell, 36 Ala. 583; Routh v. Peach, 2 Anst. 519; Todd v. Barlow, 2 Johns. Ch. 551; Evert v. Evert, 5 Md. 353; 1 Dan. Ch. Pr. 371.

We concede the proposition, urged by the counsel for the appellee, that the defendant, relying on an award as a bar, must show its existence, and its prima facie validity; and when offered in evidence, objections addressed to the fact of its existence, or to its invalidity, will be entertained. But, when its existence is shown, objections to its validity must be supported by matter apparent on its face, and not by matter extrinsic, which is not in issue.

4. The only objection, addressed to the existence of the award, is, that it is not shown the appellee entered into the submission. The answer could well be, that the fact is not disputed, either by pleading or evidence. But it clearly appears that he did enter into it. True, the submission appears to have been signed by H. Bain, in the joint names of H.

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Bluebook (online)
60 Ala. 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brewer-v-bain-ala-1877.