Joseph F. Mittelman Corp. v. Murray L. Spies Corp.

205 Misc. 1017, 129 N.Y.S.2d 822, 1954 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3239
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1954
StatusPublished

This text of 205 Misc. 1017 (Joseph F. Mittelman Corp. v. Murray L. Spies Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joseph F. Mittelman Corp. v. Murray L. Spies Corp., 205 Misc. 1017, 129 N.Y.S.2d 822, 1954 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3239 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1954).

Opinion

Colden, J.

In an action to compel the defendants to account for all moneys, transactions, assets, income, profits, receipts and disbursements of a joint venture, and for related relief including the appointment of a temporary receiver and an injunction restraining the defendants from continuing the management and control of the joint venture, or the use of the name “ Mittelman-Spies Organizations,” plaintiff moved for an order restraining the defendants from continuing to conduct any [1019]*1019matter or thing connected with the joint venture and the employment agreements between and among the plaintiff and the defendants, to direct the defendants to pay $5,000 loaned by plaintiff to the joint venture, and to appoint a receiver pendente lite of the remaining assets thereof.

The defendants cross-moved for an order directing that the disputes which had arisen between the plaintiff and the defendants be submitted to arbitration, as provided in certain contracts, and to stay all proceedings in this action until such arbitration has been concluded. In a separate proceeding the corporate defendant in the action above referred to petitioned the court to direct all disputes that have arisen between it and the plaintiff to be submitted to arbitration in accordance with the aforesaid contracts. By a cross motion the respondent, plaintiff in the plenary action, moved to stay arbitration and to vacate the notice of intention to arbitrate dated February 8,1954, which petitioner had served upon it.

On April 1, 1953, the plaintiff and the corporate defendant entered into an agreement in writing providing for a joint venture in connection with their respective businesses of placing mortgages for builders, brokers and owners of real property, and processing certain contracts or commitments with lending institutions. Paragraph “ Tenth ” of said agreement provided as follows: “ Tenth: (a) If any disagreement shall arise

between the parties as to the conduct of the joint venture or as to any other matter, cause or thing whatsoever not herein otherwise provided for, the same shall be decided and determined by arbitrators; and each party shall appoint one such arbitrator, and both of such arbitrators shall appoint a third arbitrator, and the decision of two of such arbitrators, when made in writing, shall be conclusive upon the parties hereto.

(b) That the appointment of the arbitrators by the respective parties hereto shall be made, as follows: The party seeking arbitration hereunder shall serve a notice in writing upon the other party hereto, setting forth the disagreement or disagreements that he desires to be arbitrated, as well as the name of his arbitrator; and, thereupon, the other party hereto shall, within five (5) days after the receipt of such notice, serve upon the party seeking arbitration a notice in writing stating the name of his arbitrator, (c) The failure of a party to appoint an arbitrator shall authorize the other party to make an appointment for the one so in default, (d) If the two arbitrators appointed hereunder shall fail, within five (5) days after the second of the [1020]*1020arbitrators shall have been appointed, to select a third arbitrator, then, and in such event, any judge of the Supreme Court of the State of New York, County of Queens, upon application made by either party hereto for that purpose, shall be authorized and empowered to appoint such third arbitrator, (e) The award to be made by the arbitrators hereunder shall be made within five (5) days after the third arbitrator shall have been appointed and judgment upon the award rendered may be entered in the highest Court of the forum, State or Federal, having jurisdiction.”

On the same day they entered into a supplemental written agreement whereby the individual defendant, Murray L. Spies, was employed as manager and agent of such joint venture. Paragraph “ Tenth ” of this agreement likewise provided for arbitration in terms substantially identical to those set forth in the agreement of joint venture.

The plaintiff in the plenary action, who is the respondent in the proceeding to compel arbitration, urges that the provisional remedies and the other relief sought in its motion made in the plenary suit are necessary for the protection of the assets of the joint venture and should, therefore, be granted, and that the parties should not be relegated to arbitration inasmuch as the arbitration clause is invalid and unconstitutional and the controversies between the parties are not arbitrable.

The claim of invalidity is directed to subdivisions (c) and (e) of paragraph Tenth of the contracts in question. The first of these subdivisions authorizes the party seeking arbitration to appoint the arbitrator for the other party, if it defaults in itself making such appointment, within five days after the receipt of the written notice provided in subdivision (b). It is urged that such a provision, authorizing as it does the designation -of an adverse party’s arbitrator, is repugnant to due process of law, especially since the two arbitrators to be selected by the parties have the power, as provided in subdivision (d), to select a third arbitrator. It is also urged in that connection that section 1452 of the Civil Practice Act entitled “ Provision in case of failure to name arbitrator or umpire ” is exclusive.

In the first place parties may stipulate away statutory, and even constitutional rights ” (Matter of New York, L. & W. R. R. Co., 98 N. Y. 447, 453, cited with approval in Pines v. Beck, 300 N. Y. 181). Secondly, section 1452 itself provides “ If, in the contract for arbitration * * * provision be made for a method of naming or appointing an arbitrator or arbitrators [1021]*1021or an umpire, such method shall be followed Commenting upon this section, the Court of Appeals recently observed: From the plain wording of that section it will be seen that if the parties have provided for a method of naming or appointing an arbitrator the Supreme Court shall follow such method and is empowered to designate an arbitrator only if 6 any party thereto shall fail to avail himself of such method, or for any reason there shall be a lapse in the naming of an arbitrator or arbitrators.’ ” (Matter of Lippschutz [Gutwirth], 304 N. Y. 58, 62-63.) The court also said at pages 61-62 that the purpose of article 84 of the Civil Practice Act “ is to give effect to contracts providing for the settlement of disputes before tribunals of the parties’ own choosing by rendering such agreements irrevocable and, in effect, subject to specific enforcement. The provisions of article 84 are intended to strengthen not change the rights and obligations of parties to arbitration agreements. The law ‘ does not bring the contract into being, but adds a new implement, the remedy of specific performance, for its more effectual enforcement.’ (Matter of Marchant v. Mead-Morrison Mfg. Co., 252 N. Y. 284, 293.) The spirit of the arbitration law being the fuller effectuation of contractual rights, the method for selecting arbitrators and the composition of the arbitral tribunal have been left to the contract of the parties.” (Italics supplied.)

After all, the parties to these contracts have themselves chosen the method for selecting the arbitrators and imposed the conditions for their selection. Neither may “ now ask the courts to relieve it of the contractual obligation it assumed ” (Matter of Amtorg Trading Corp. [Camden Fibre Mills], 304 N. Y. 519, 521).

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Bluebook (online)
205 Misc. 1017, 129 N.Y.S.2d 822, 1954 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joseph-f-mittelman-corp-v-murray-l-spies-corp-nysupct-1954.