Millsaps v. . Estes

50 S.E. 227, 137 N.C. 536, 1905 N.C. LEXIS 204
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 21, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 50 S.E. 227 (Millsaps v. . Estes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Millsaps v. . Estes, 50 S.E. 227, 137 N.C. 536, 1905 N.C. LEXIS 204 (N.C. 1905).

Opinion

This case was before us at Spring Term, 1904, when we ordered a new trial. It is reported 134 N.C. 486, where the facts are fully stated byJustice Montgomery. We are now asked to rehear the case, and to review and reverse the decision we then made. A brief recital of the leading facts will make plain our reason for not doing so. The plaintiffs brought a suit in 1888 against Estes and others and alleged in their complaint that their grandfather, John A. Millsaps, had devised to their father, W. R. Millsaps, the land in controversy for and during his natural life, with a restriction annexed to the gift that he should not sell and convey the same, and at his death to his legitimate children, the plaintiffs; and that their father sold and conveyed the land to the defendants in this suit, who entered while the life estate was still subsisting, and committed waste upon the land. Their prayer *Page 394 was for a forfeiture of the life estate and for damages for the waste committed and for a cancellation of the deeds made by the life tenant. The material allegations were denied by the defendants.

Plaintiffs were all infants at the time the suit was commenced and when the judgment therein was rendered, and there was no (537) appointment of a next friend, upon written application and order, as required by the rule of the Court, to prosecute the suit in their behalf — Clark's Code (3 Ed.), p. 958 — though the name of John Shuler was inserted in the summons by the clerk as such next friend. The evidence does not tend to show that he took any interest in the subsequent proceedings or any care of the interests of the infants. So far as appears, the latter had no actual knowledge of the institution of the action or of the proceedings therein. The evidence tends to show that the action was commenced at the instance of their father, whose conduct and relation to the cause indicates that he was unfriendly to their interests and was attempting by the suit to cure the defective title he had conveyed to the defendants.

The counsel of record consented to an arbitration, the submission requiring the arbitrators not to ascertain and determine what were the real rights of the plaintiffs, but simply to report the value of the land and how much had been paid to William Millsaps by those who purchased from him. It was further provided that the judgment should be entered for the difference between the value of the land and the sums so paid, or "for the balance thus found due to the plaintiffs." The arbitrators reported the value to be $1,550, the amount paid $1,194,60, leaving a balance due $355.40, to be paid as follows: G. D. Estes $225, W. R. Randall $45.40, and John Long $55. The other purchasers, J. A. and Mary M. Franks, were found to have paid their share in full, and no sum was reported as due by them. In accordance with the submission by consent of counsel, it was afterwards adjudged by the court that the award be approved and made a rule of court, and that the defendants respectively pay to the plaintiffs the several amounts thus found due by the report of the arbitrators; and the clerk, as commissioner, was appointed to make title to the purchasers upon payment of the sums so due. The several amounts were afterwards paid and title (538) made by the commissioner accordingly. It further appears in the case that of the balance reported as due namely, $355.40, the infants by their guardian received in round numbers one-half thereof, so that they have realized from their land, which is worth $1,550, the small sum of $175.

This action is brought to set aside that judgment and the award for the reasons stated in the former opinion, some of which were that the attorneys had no power or authority to consent to any such arbitration, *Page 395 and the court had no power to enter a judgment by consent thereon, and further, that an arbitration by infants, or their next friend or attorneys even if properly appointed, is voidable if not void.

At the former hearing, this Court held that the arbitration and proceedings based thereon were void and could not be set up as an estoppel or as res judicata so as to conclude the infants. Counsel for the petitioners now argue that this was error, as the submission, the arbitration and the award, at most, were only voidable, and that the infants cannot avail themselves of the defect and disown the act of the attorneys and disaffirm the award, because a judgment of the court has supervened, and as some at least of the defendants purchased for value upon the faith of that judgment, without notice of any illegality, they are protected under the general principle applicable to persons who buy at judicial sales and who are strangers to the suit in which the sale was ordered.

We find that the authorities are not agreed as to whether an infant's submission to arbitration is void or merely voidable. Some courts, which are entitled to the greatest respect, have held that it is utterly void, while others of equal authority have held that it is only voidable. In this conflict of opinion, we are inclined to concur with those courts and the text-writers who maintain the proposition that such submissions are voidable merely, as we are unable to see why the case should be taken out of the general rule as to the contracts of infants, a submission being in itself a contract, or so far partaking of its (539) nature as to be substantially within the principle applicable to contracts. A submission to arbitration may be defined as the agreement by which parties refer disputed or doubtful matters pending between them to the final decision and award of another party, whether one person or more; the party to whom the reference is made is called an arbitrator; the arbitration is the investigation and determination of the matters of difference between the contending parties by the arbitrator so chosen, and the award is the decree or judgment of the arbitrator, and is generally conclusive in its effect. 2 A. E. (2 Ed.), 539; Morse on Arbitration, 36. The basis of the arbitration and award is the submission. Watson, in his book on Arbitration, 59 Law Lib. (1848), p. 55, thus states the law upon the question now presented: "Every person capable of making a disposition, or a release of his right, may make a submission of that right to arbitration, and consequently will be bound by an award made in pursuance thereof. But persons who cannot bind themselves by contract, cannot submit to arbitration, as infants, femes covert, persons compelled by threats and imprisonment, persons professed in religion. It is quite clear that a submission by an infant is either void or voidable; and unless he ratifies when he attains his age, he is not bound by his submission to perform an award. In Rolle's *Page 396 Abridgment it is laid down generally that an infant is not bound by his submission of a trespass committed either on his person or on his land. In another place, in the same book, it is said that such submission is only voidable. And this seems to be the only doubtful question respecting the submission, as far as regards the infant himself; for in some cases it has been held that a submission by an infant is entirely void; in others that it is only voidable. In a modern case, where a cause was referred by parol agreement, in which an infant (by his prochein(540) amie

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Bluebook (online)
50 S.E. 227, 137 N.C. 536, 1905 N.C. LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millsaps-v-estes-nc-1905.