Moore v. Ewing

1 N.J.L. 144
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 15, 1792
StatusPublished

This text of 1 N.J.L. 144 (Moore v. Ewing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Ewing, 1 N.J.L. 144 (N.J. 1792).

Opinion

Kinsey C. J.

These are motions to show cause why two awards between the same parties, the one in an action of covenant, the other of debt should not be set aside. To these awards three exceptions have been fded, but the opinion of the court having been formed upon one of them, renders a minute examination of the others unnecessary, A number of affidavits, have been read and a great variety of evidence brought before the court; the material facts however are shortly these. It appears that the referees after hearing the parties, and forming their opinions found some difficulty in drawing up the ‘awards with legal precision; it was- thought proper therefore to have them drawn up by Mr. Leake, and in order that this should be done, the referees adjourned over their meeting for another day, when the awards were to be approved of and signed. It does- not appear that they afterwards met pursuant to adjournment, but the reports were carried to each of them separately, and executed at their own places of residence. No suspicion seems to be entertained with regard to the integrity and purity of the proceedings; the reasons for their not holding the subsequent meeting are given freely and are satisfactory. The characters of the arbitrators are fair and unimpeached, and all the parties in the business are presumed to have believed that they were acting strictly within the line of their duty.

I own that I am a great friend to arbitrations; I believe them to be frequently productive of real advantage, and they are not to be hastily or inconsiderately set aside. I approve in the highest manner of the liberality with which courts of justice have reviewed their proceedings, particularly in modern times, but where any corruption — misbehaviour—or plain mistake of law or fact appears, courts of justice are bound to set them aside. If exceptions of this kind were not to be admitted, and these evils corrected, awards would indeed as Lord Hardivicke expresses himself, prove arbitra[146]*146ry, too much so for a free government. There is perhaps no mode of trial less objectionable than that by jury, yet Lord Mansfield thought that it could hardly have subsisted to his time, if courts did not occasionally preserve its purity unimpaired, and restrain its wanderings by granting new trials. For this reason I have no difficulty in pronouncing' the expression attributed to Lord Holt in Salkeld 73, not to be law, especially as applied to the case, and exceptions then, before the court. “ A party shall not come and say that the arbitrators have not done him justice, and put the court to examine it.” In that case the complaint was, that the arbitrators had not allowed the party time to produce his witnesses. The report of the same case in a book of much superior authority

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Bluebook (online)
1 N.J.L. 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-ewing-nj-1792.