Memphis & Charleston R. R. v. Scruggs

50 Miss. 284
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 50 Miss. 284 (Memphis & Charleston R. R. v. Scruggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Memphis & Charleston R. R. v. Scruggs, 50 Miss. 284 (Mich. 1874).

Opinion

Peyton, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the chancery court of Al-corn county, enforcing the specific performance of an award.

The material facts of the case are, that on the 7th day of July, 1857, the Memphis and Charleston Railroad Company, and J. W. Scruggs entered into a contract, by the terms of which said Scruggs was to build a hotel on the grounds of the said company at Corinth now in Alcorn county, to be used as an eating house for said road. The said J. W. Scruggs was to erect the buildings [290]*290and make the other improvements at his expense, and pay the said railroad company two hundred and fifty dollars per annum, for the use of the ground occupied by said improvements. . He was to keep a first rate eating house, satisfactory to the company, and if the company should become dissatisfied with the character of the house kept, then they were, to have the right to pay to the said J. W. Scruggs the value of his improvements at the time, and take possession of the property; and in case said Scruggs should become dissatisfied with the schedule of the road or its management, then he was to have the right to give up the said improvements, and require the said company to pay him their value at the time of such surrender. In either case, the property to be valued by disinterested parties. The said Scruggs was to-board all the officers and employees of said company at the usual and customary rates charged by other eating houses on said road, and this- contract was to be binding on both parties so long as mutually agreeable.

Some time after the making of said contract, the said J. W. Scruggs conveyed his entire interest in said property to his wife, Narcissa Scruggs. It became agreeable to both parties that the said property should be surrendered to the said company, on the payment of the amount due the said Narcissa Scruggs for the-value of the said property under the contract. But the parties-being unable to agree as to the construction of said contract, and upon the amount of the value of said property to be paid upon the surrender thereof to said company, on the 24th day of February, 1871, the said parties entered into a written agreement to refer the construction of said contract and the amount to be paid for said property to the said Narcissa Scruggs, upon her surrender of the same to the said company, to the arbitrament and award of R. C. Brinckell, R. O. Reynolds and F. L. Pledge, and the amount so fixed by the awTard, was, by the terms of the agreement of submission, to be a lien on said property.

On the 20th day of April, 1871, the arbitrators met at the [291]*291Scrugg’s House, in the town of Corinth, and the parties appearing by their counsel, and after hearing the contract and the agreement of submission read and the evidence offered by the parties, and the arguments of counsel, did award, order and decree in writing, that the said railroad company pay to the said Narcissa Scruggs the sum of thirty-one thousand six hundred and sixty-six 66-100 dollars on the surrender of said property.

The appellants make the following assignments of error:

1. The court had no jurisdiction, there being no ground for equitable relief.

2. The award was void, because it went beyond the power of the arbitrators.

3. The submission was void, being by a married woman, and without authority from the appellants.

4. The court below should have dismissed the bill.

With respect to the first assignment of error, involving the question of the jurisdiction of a court of equity to enforce specific performance of awards, it may be observed that the interference of the court in such cases being in exercise not of any jurisdiction peculiar to awards, but of its ordinary jurisdiction as applied to the specific performance of agreements, it follows that many if not all the principles applicable to ordinary suits of that nature must apply. Had this award been for the payment of money only, the remedy would have been full, adequate and complete at law, and a court of equity would have had no jurisdiction to enforce a specific performance of it. There would have been no element of equity in it to authorize the interposition of a court of chancery. In England, the court of equity has in many cases decreed the specific performance of awards, though not made rules or orders of the court for the performance of some specific thing, as to convey an estate, assign securities or the like, but not awards simply to pay money. Fry on Specific Performance of Contracts, 510. And in reference to the specific performance of awards simply to pay money, .the general rule of [292]*292thiseountry seems to coincide with that of England. Turpin v. Banton, Hardin, 312; Story v. Norwich & Winchester Railroad Co., 24 Conn., 94, and Bubier v. Babier, 24 Maine, 42. A court of equity has jurisdiction to enforce specific execution of an award concerning real estate or of an agreement for the purchase and sale of real estate, notwithstanding that it involves the enforcement of an award to pay money. It is clearly not the rule to suffer the ends of justice to be defeated, and the jurisdiction of equity to be ousted,'beca use of an obligation in the award to pay money. Ery on Specific Performance, 510, in note (1).

By the terms of the submission the amount fixed by the award was to be a lien on the property, which could be enforced only in equity by a sale of the property under a decree of the chancery court. Under the agreement this lien attached upon the property upon the making of the award by the said arbitrators, and furnished an element of equitable jurisdiction. And it was agreed by the parties to the submission that the award or “ decree, as it is called, of said arbitrators shall be entered as a decree of the chancery court of Alcorn county.” This, we think, is substantially a compliance with article 2 of the Code of 1857, page 371, which provides that it shall and may be lawful for all merchants and traders and others desirous to end any controversy by arbitration, to agree that their submission of the matter in controversy to the award or umpirage of any person or persons, should be made a rule of any court of record which the parties shall choose, and to insert such, their agreement, in their submission. This was done, and gives the court of chancery, which is here regarded as a court of record, jurisdiction of the case.

The second assignment of errors makes it necessary to inquire whether the arbitrators exceeded their power in making their award, and this involves the question of the power conferred upon them by the agreement of submission. By reference to that instrument, it will be seen that the construction of the agreement or contract and the value of the property to be paid for on [293]*293its surrender, were the only questions submitted to the arbitrators for their decision and award. These were the only questions submitted to them; the first being the construction of the contract, which is matter of law, which is proper for the decision of the court, and the other as to the value of the property to be paid for on its 'surrender to the railroad company, was a matter of fact, proper to be decided upon the evidence. The submission clearly shows that the parties could not agree as to the construction of contract, and the value of the property, and hence the submission of these questions to arbitration.

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Bluebook (online)
50 Miss. 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/memphis-charleston-r-r-v-scruggs-miss-1874.