Harris v. Brand

17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 713
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedOctober 14, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 713 (Harris v. Brand) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Brand, 17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 713 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1905).

Opinion

WILDMAN, J.

This is said to be one of three actions which involve substantially the same questions now pending in this court upon petitions in error. Only one of the cases, however, has been submitted to us and whether there are any points of difference which might involve separate hearings, we are not advised.

The plaintiff in error with one Arthur L. Mills and Thomas F. Whittlesey were appointed and acted as arbitrators to determine certain disputes existing between the defendant in error and the Toledo, St. Louis & Western Railroad Company, under and in pursuance of an agreement set forth in the pleadings in the case below. The court below, upon motion of the defendant, entered judgment in the defendant’s favor. Lem P. Harris, as I have said, was one of three arbitrators, chosen in the dispute between Brand and the railroad company, and, after the rendition of certain services by the arbitrators in the carrying out of the duties placed upon them by the arbitration agreement and their acceptance of it, Harris brought suit against Brand for compensa[714]*714tion as such arbitrator. To arrive at the exact point upon which the case'was disposed of in the court below, reference may be had to the docket entry which is recited in the brief of one of the eóunáel, and which gives the ruling of the court and the reason therefor:

“Submitted upon motion by defendant for a judgment on the pleadings. The precise question involved was decided in Bates v. Townley, 2 Exch. 164. Arbitrators are not parties to the contract of submission, and cannot sue upon it. They are entitled to compensation for services rendered and, both parties to the contract having jointly requested the same, both jointly and not each severally, are liable therefor. Petition dismissed at costs of plaintiff. Plaintiff excepts.”

This naturally invites an examination of the case to which reference is made by the trial judge in Bates v. Townley, 2 Exch. 164. The case did not arise in precisely the same form as that presented by the case at bar. It was not a suit, as finally decided, by the arbitrator for compensation, but one of the parties to the agreement for arbitration, having made, as he claimed, a payment of the other party’s share of the compensation to the arbitrators, indeed claiming that he had paid the entire compensation, sought to recover in the way of contribution, one-half of the amount which he had paid. It was claimed in the case that the arbitrators had not acted strictly in accordance with the requirements of the contract of submission. Two arbitrators were named in the contract and they were authorized to select a third arbitrator and indorse the fact of his appointment upon the contract of arbitration. This they failed in part to do. They proceeded with the reference and appointed a third arbitrator, but his appointment was not indorsed upon the submission, as required of them. Subsequently the three arbitrators made their award, whereby they found that there was due from the defendants to the plaintiff the sum of something over two thousand pounds, which they directed that the defendants should pay to the plaintiff; and they did further award:

“That the costs of the reference and award, including compensation to.the arbitrators, should be borne as follows: that is to say, one moiety thereof by the-plaintiff, and the other moiety by the defendants. On the twenty-second of February the plaintiff took up the award and paid the whole costs of it, amounting to 25 L., 8s., 9d., and on the following day served the defendants with notice thereof, but there was no express request to pay,” — that is, the plaintiff paid it without being requested so to do by the defendants.
“The plaintiff now sought to recover 12 L., 14s., 9d., the moiety [715]*715of those costs, as money paid for the defendants’ nse. The declaration contained a count on the award, which had been demurred to, and judgment given for the defendants, 1 Exch. 572; so the plaintiff now relied upon the award itself as evidence of an account stated. On the part of the defendants, it was objected that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover the moiety of the costs as monejr paid for the defendants’ use, on the ground, first, that the award was not binding, the appointment of the third arbitrator not having been indorsed on the submission; secondly, that the costs of the reference were not ascertained, either by the award or by the taxation of the court.”

A careful examination of the case discloses that this latter clause is made an element in the final adjudication by the court.

The court avoids any decision as to whether the three arbitrators should be joined; but does hold that the plaintiff who paid the entire amount of the award might have been compelled to do so by reason of the fact that his obligation was joint with that of the other party to the award. It will be noticed that the court does not hold that the arbitrators might not also at their option, have the right to sue eithér of the parties to the award severally. We might tarry for a moment and consider the fact that we have three kinds of obligations upon contracts: The obligations may be joint, or may be several, or they may be joint and several. Now while that court held that this obligation was joint, so that the arbitrators might have sued all of the parties to the award together, they did not hold that the arbitrators might not, in their discretion, have sued them severally; nothing is said upon that subject. It is held that the contract is joint, but it is not held, and it was not necessary to hold, that it might not also be several. The liability of one of the parties to the award to be sued and required to pay the entire compensation might be a justification for his paying it in its entirety and then suing the other party who had contracted with him, for contribution. That is about all that the court here was compelled to hold upon this point, but the case finally went off on another. The result would have been the same, whether the obligation was joint, or whether it was joint and several.

“The first point to be considered is, whether both the parties were jointly liable to the arbitrators to pay them for their trouble. This 'depends upon the question, whether the arbitrators were parties to the submission, and agreed to be paid on the terms contained in it only. If they were, then they had a remedy only against each for [716]*716the part which they by their award should direct each to pay, and so this action could not be maintained.”

That would be true if the contract was several, not joint. Then if one of the parties paid that part which the arbitrators decreed should be paid by the other, he would be a mere volunteer and he could not recover the amount so paid.

We are not satisfied that the precise point presented in the case before us was decided by this case of Bates v. Townley, supra, as the judge below seemed to understand it. It is true that the English court did hold, as the court below holds, that arbitrators are not parties to a contract of submission and cannot sue upon it; but the court does not discuss the question as to whether in considering the rights of arbitrators, if they had brought suit they would or would not have been entitled to sue the contracting parties severally instead of jointly. They are only holding in substance that they had a right to sue them jointly, that the parties had jointly bound themselves.

In 3 Cyc.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Ohio C.C. Dec. 713, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-brand-ohiocirct-1905.