Muldrow v. Norris

12 Cal. 331
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 12 Cal. 331 (Muldrow v. Norris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Muldrow v. Norris, 12 Cal. 331 (Cal. 1859).

Opinion

Field, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court—Baldwin, J., concurring.

The submission of the parties embraces all matters of controversy existing between them, previous to December, 1850. What those matters were the submission does not state ; it only recites that they were various, and that the agreement was entered into “ for the purpose of having the same speedily and properly adjusted.” From its language it must be inferred that the parties stipulated to withdraw their several matters of difference from the consideration of the ordinary tribunals, upon the condition that they should be all adjusted and [339]*339settled by Judges of their own selection, and full peace be thus obtained, and not mere partial freedom from litigation.

The rule is general, that arbitrators must pass upon all matters submitted, or their award will be invalid. If several matters are specified in the submission, and the award does not disclose that each is determined, it is defective on its face, and can be set aside on motion. But if the submission is general, of all matters in controversy, without specification it is not necessary that the award should embrace any matters except those which are laid before the arbitrators. These last, however, must be passed upon, or the award will be void in toto, and be set aside upon a proper showing of the omission. The authorities to this effect are numerous and decisive. Thus, in Randall v. Randall, 7 East. 81, the submission embracéd three subjects : one to determine all actions between the parties ; another to fix the value to be put upon hop poles and potatoes in certain land; and the third, to ascertain the rent to be paid for other land. The arbitrators made their award upon the first two subjects, but omitted to notice the last, and the Court held that the whole award was vitiated by the omission. “ The authority,” said Ellenborough, C. J., given to the arbitrators, was conditioned, ita quad they should arbitrate upon these matters by a certain day. If, then, they fail as to one of them, the condition has not been performed upon which the award was to have its obligatory effect; and here they have stopped short, and have omitted to settle one of the subjects of difference which was stipulated for. This is not like the case where an award, being good in part and bad in part, the good part shall not be vitiated by the arbitrator having also directed something to be done which is superfluous and bad. But here the very condition on which the parties submitted to the award has failed.” And in the same case, Le Blanc, J., said : “ The contract of the parties is in effect this—One says that he will submit to the arbitrators to ascertain what he is to pay for the hop poles, etc., upon condition that it shall also be referred to them to decide what rent is to be paid for certain land. And he may fairly have said that unless both those matters of difference were referred he would not refer either of them singly. If, then, the arbitrators omit to decide one of them, the condition fails on which the reference was agreed to.”

[340]*340In Mitchell v. Stavely, 16 East. 58, to the action on an arbitration bond the defendant pleaded, among other things, that a certain matter of difference between the parties was laid before the arbitrators, but was not included in their award, and the Court held the plea good. The submission was of all matters in difference, and Ellenborough, C. J., said : “ The award, therefore, is not only not final, but there is no award at all respecting one of the matters in difference referred, which is stated to have been notified to the arbitrators. It was a condition of the submission that they were to award upon all matters in difference between the parties. That is an important difficulty, against which the plaintiff has to contend, and it would be to no purpose to amend the pleadings.”

To the same effect is the case of Wright v. Wright, 5 Cowen, 197. That was an action upon an arbitration bond conditioned to abide the award of certain arbitrators, upon the usual general submission, with the ita quad clause. The defendants pleaded that the arbitrators left undetermined a controversy between the parties which was brought to their notice; and, on demurrer to the replication to the plea, the Court, per Sutherland, J., said : It is a general rule, that where the bond of submission contains an ita quad clause, the award will be void, unless it comprehend ah the matters submitted. This rule is invariable where the particular matters submitted are specified in the bond. But where the submission is general, and an award concerning one or more things is made, it will be presumed, until the contrary is shown, that nothing else was referred to the arbitrators, or brought before them by the parties. But if the arbitrators award in relation to one or more things, and say that they will not meddle with the rest, the whole is void, because they have not pursued their authority; and in such a case it is immaterial whether the submission was general or special, for, if general, it appears on the face of the award that the arbitrators had notice of the matters which they refuse to decide.”

The submission or bond in the several cases cited contained an ita quad clause; and this fact is considered as distinguishing those cases from the one at bar. The ita quad clause, so called, is only a condition that the award should be rendered upon the matters submitted by a specified day. The designation of the day is one part of the condi[341]*341tian essential to be complied with, but not more so than the other part, that the award should be upon the matters submitted.

In the cases of Mitchell v. Stavely, 16 East., and Wright v. Wright, 5 Cowen, the award was rendered within the time designated, and the decisions were made upon the omission of the arbitrators to pass upon all the items specified in thé submission, or laid before them under its general terms. The same was evidently the case with the award in Randall v. Randall, 7 East., as the objection taken was not to the time the award was rendered, but that one of the three subjects submitted was left undetermined. See, also, Brown v. Merrill, 4 Eliz., Dryer, 216; Bisden v. Inglet, 2 Croke, Eliz., 838; Ormelade v. Coke, 4 Croke, Jac., 354 ; Bradford v. Bryan, 7 Mod. 349.

The point, then, of the decisions, so far as that part of the ita quad clause is concerned which affects the present case, is this : that if the submission provide that an award upon the matters submitted be made, or the condition of the bond be that the parties are bound, provided the award of such matters be made, then such proviso extends to all the matters submitted, and operates to render the submission conditional, and the award binding only in case the arbitrators pass upon every subject, either specifically referred to them, or brought to their notice under the general terms of the submission.

The language of the submission of the parties in the case at bar, is much stronger that the award must embrace all the matters in controversy, than the usual formal ita quad clause, so that the award be made of the premises,” etc. It recites that there are “ various matters of differencethat for the purpose of having the same speedily and properly adjusted,” the parties have agreed to submit “ all matters of difference, suits, actions,” etc., to the arbitrators “ to determine ths same;”

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Bluebook (online)
12 Cal. 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muldrow-v-norris-cal-1859.