Maysville, Washington, Paris & Lexington Turnpike Road Co. v. Waters

36 Ky. 62, 6 Dana 62, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 143
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 6, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 36 Ky. 62 (Maysville, Washington, Paris & Lexington Turnpike Road Co. v. Waters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maysville, Washington, Paris & Lexington Turnpike Road Co. v. Waters, 36 Ky. 62, 6 Dana 62, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 143 (Ky. Ct. App. 1837).

Opinion

Judge Marshall

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

In August, 1830, a contract was entered into between these parties, by which Waters undertook to construct two sections of the road leading from Maysville to Lexington,. to be graded and covered with stone, to the depth of nine inches, according to the specification made in the contract; for which the company agreed to pay him’thirteen dollars sixty three cents for each pole in length, that the sections should measure when completed; that is to say, at the end of every sixty days, winter excepted, they were to pay such sum as the superintendent of the road might direct, not exceeding three fourths of the estimated value of the work done? until the first six inches of stone should be put on the road, when the'y should pay any sum so directed to be paid, not exceeding nine tenths of the value of the work done; and upon the final completion of the whole, with a cover of stone of nine inches, they were to pay promptly, upon the order of the superintendent, the remainder of the whole price, at thirteen dollars and sixty three cents per pole. They also agreed to pay such price as the superintendent might think just, for such extra work as should be ordered by him, and done by Waters.

Among various other stipulations of the contract, the following only seem to have a special bearing on the questions involved in the present controversy. The road was to be graded according to notes of ascents and descents, &c. furnished by the superintendent; and the bed of the road was to be rounded, and ready for the stone, by the first day of May, 1832,-and rolled, inspect[63]*63ed and passed, before stone is laid upon it. The first six inches of stone to be laid arid rolled, to the satisfaction of the superintendent, by the 15th day of June, 1832. The last three inches of stone to .be -laid when and how the superintendent shoidd direct, or permit: the whole work to be done in a workman-like manner, to the satisfaction of the superintendent; to whose directions, as to the time and manner of construction, Waters bound himself to conform. It was further agreed, that if the work should not progress in a proper manner, and with sufficient speed, the superintendent might take any measures- he should think best for insuring its proper progress, without any interference on the part of Waters. And finally it was agreed that the superintendent for the time being, who should not be a stockholder or contractor, should be, and he was thereby constituted, sole umpire and arbitrator between said Waters and the company, in all matters in dispute between them, relative to the contract; whose award was to be final. And that if either party should fail to perform his part of the contract, the said superintendent .might declare the contract null and void, and assess damages'against the delinquent, which nullification and .assessment should be binding and final.

ThebUl.

In October, 1833, Waters filed this bill, alleging that he had, some time before, completed the construction of the road in substantial conformity with the contract, .and to the satisfaction, as he supposed, of the superintendent, on whose order he had-, from time to time, during the progress of the work, received various partial .payments from the company, leaving a large balance due, which, according to the terms of the contract, was. .payable, on the order of the superintendent, when the work was completed. But that John S. Williams, the .superintendent for the time being, had, in pursuance, as he pretended, of the provision constituting him sole umpire and arbitrator, made an award, on the 9th of April, 1833, by which he directed one thousand two hundred and thirty one dollars fifty cents to be charged against the complainant, and deducted from the contract price of his work; and that afterwards, on the 24th of July following, he changed the award, so as to charge [64]*64him with the additional sum of two hundred and thirty four dollars seventy five cents, to be deducted as above. Which award he alleges to be in the hands of the company, and exhibits extracts from it, which had been furnished to him by one of the directors. He impeaches the award on the ground (1) of fraud, partiality and bias in the arbitrator; (2) of gross mistake' of law and fact, arising from ignorance or negligence; (3) of want of notice to him, and of any knowledge on his part, that the superintendent was acting as arbitrator’, so that he had no opportunity of presenting his claims or contesting the facts; and (4) on the ground that the award was made before any dispute had actually arisen, and without the request of either party. It is further alleged, that the superintendent, after permitting the complainant to go on to the completion of the work, without giving any ground to suppose that he was dissatisfied with it in any of its progressive stages, now refuses to give an order on the company for the balance due him; and he prays that an account be taken of the payments made; that the company be decreed to pay him what is justly due, and for general relief.

Defence, by demurrer, pleas & answer: their con ■tents. Replications.

The defendants demurred, and filed two pleas and an answer. The first plea relies upon the agreement that the superintendent shall be sole umpire, &c., and avers that there had been no submission of the matters alleged by the complainant when the bill was filed, although the defendant had offered to submit them. The second plea sets up a formal award by the arbitrator, after the suit was brought. And the answer, besides reiterating both of these matters, with greater particularity of detail, denies all allegations impeaching the character and conduct of the superintendent, and alleges various failures and deficiencies in the work undertaken by the complainant, justifying the deductions made from his demand, and the refusal of payment by the company.

In reply to each of the pleas, and to the answer, the complainant re-asserts the matters stated ill his bill, and states further, in reply to the second plea, that the superintendent, at the time, and in the same matter, in which he was acting as arbitrator, acted also as the agent of [65]*65the defendants, in going to Maryland and there taking a deposition for them, which was read in evidence before him as arbitrator. The replication to the answer states the same fact, and alleges also that the award stated in the bill, was made at the request of the defendants.

Decree of the circuit court, and appeal. The grounds of demurrer and the matter of the pleas being again stated and relied on in the answer, the latter only, need be considered. Two questions the decision of which will decide this case. An award, not made under a rule of a court of common law, may b<i>impeached by bill in equity— But here it is alleged that there was, in fact, no award, and the eompt’s remedy is adequate and plain, at law.

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Bluebook (online)
36 Ky. 62, 6 Dana 62, 1837 Ky. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maysville-washington-paris-lexington-turnpike-road-co-v-waters-kyctapp-1837.