Panhandle Grain & Elevator Co. v. Dorsey

242 S.W. 255, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 988
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 24, 1922
DocketNo. 6758. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 242 S.W. 255 (Panhandle Grain & Elevator Co. v. Dorsey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Panhandle Grain & Elevator Co. v. Dorsey, 242 S.W. 255, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 988 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

The Panhandle Grain & Elevator Company, a corporation, purchased from Roberts Bros., a partnership, .10,000 pounds of cane seed, to be delivered at Amarillo in “sound, strong .bags.” The company rejected the shipment upon its arrival, however, upon the ground that it was not sacked as stipulated in the contract, or marked as required by law. Roberts Bros, at once offered to re-sack such of the seed as required it, and protect the company against loss on account of the alleged default, although denying that it had breached the contract. The company refused this offer and rejected the shipment, thus throwing the seed back on Roberts Bros., who were forced to resell on a declining market, suffering a loss of nearly $8,000 from the contract price. Both parties being members of the Texas Grain Dealers’ Association, Roberts Bros, filed a claim through that association against the Grain & Elevator Company, and a written agreement was entered into by the parties to arbitrate their dispute before the arbitration committee of the Grain Dealers’ Association, as provided in the latter's constitution and by-laws. The time and place of the hearing was set, notice was given, tlie parties filed elaborate pleadings, assembled and filed their documentary evidence, and appeared and presented their evidence and arguments, Roberts Bros, being represented by a member of their firm, and the Grain & Elevator Company by J. D. Hunter, its president and general manager. The hearing resulted in an award in favor of Roberts Bros, for substantially the amount of their claim. The Grain & Elevator Company asked for and obtained a rehearing, but the committee affirmed the original award. The company had the right to apxieal to the executive committee of the Grain Dealers’ Association, but did not avail itself of this right, and thus the award became final. By the terms of the arbitration agreement, the award was made payable to H. B. Dorsey, secretary of the association, at Forth Worth, but the company ignored his demand for payment, and he brought suit thereon in one of the Tarrant county district courts and there recovered.

The record presents a simple case in which the parties to a controversy entered into a written agreement to submit their differences to arbitration before a board of three disinterested men, selected by the parties in advance and named in the agreement, who were to conduct the proceedings under clearly specified rules, and whose finding was by the agreement to become final and conclusive upon the parties. The record very clearly shows that the prescribed procedure was closely followed by the board, that both parties entered and participated fully in the whole proceeding, were given all the time agreed upon and asked for by them, were permitted to introduce all the testimony they had or indicated they could secure, and were given every opportunity to present their respective contentions without let or hindrance. At no time before, during, or subsequent to the proceeding did appellant make any objection to the personnel of the board it had agreed upon, or to the manner in which the case was heard, considered, and decided. But after this suit, was filed to enforce the award, and when it was compelled to answer, appellant contested it, claiming, for the first time, that its claim was submitted to arbitration by its president without any authority from the corporation, that' the award was grossly erroneous in fact as well as in law, that the arbitrators were partial to its adversary, and that the procedure and award of the board were rendered invalid by the presence and meddlesome interference of the secretary of the Grain Dealers’ Association. If these charges had been supported by the evidence, the questions presented would have been entitled to much consideration. But a very careful review of the record discloses no testimony whatever to support either charge; the contrary was clearly shown.

Appellant contends that the award is based on the board’s erroneous view of the law, and was contrary to the law, in that the evidence and the language of the award showed conclusively that Roberts Bros, breached their contract by shipping the seed in question in unsound and improperly tagged sacks, thereby breaching the contract. It is true that the evidence introduced in the arbitration proceedings, and upon this trial, was such as to support a finding to this effect, and that appellant was warranted in rejecting the shipment because of this breach. For the purpose of this discussion, it may be conceded that the fact of the *257 breach, warranting the rejection of the shipment, was conclusively shown. But it was shown, further, that upon discovery of the breach, which occurred through no negligence, and without the knowledge, of Roberts Bros. — or at least, the jury could properly so find — the latter offered in good faith to promptly resack the seed and protect appellant against loss in the transaction by reason of the breach of contract. Appellant, however, declined the offer, and rejected the entire shipment, thus forcing Roberts Bros, to resell on a declining market. This offer unquestionably created equities in favor of Roberts Bros., and although appellant may have been warranted, in a strictly legal, technical sense, in arbitrarily terminating the whole contract, the conduct of Roberts Bros, evidenced a good faith desire and purpose, coupled with the ability, to place appellant just where it would have been had there been no breach of contract. They sought to, and could, fully repair the damage they had unwittingly occasioned, and the circumstances seem to us to present an ideal cause for arbitration. Appellant must have so regarded it at the time, as it readily entered into the agreement to settle the controversy in that way.

We think that by entering and participating throughout in the arbitration, appellant yielded to the board the power to determine whether the rights and liabilities of the parties should be tested by the strict or technical terms of the contract, as construed by the letter of the law, or by the equities growing out of the transaction as evidenced by the circumstances surrounding it; that by submitting its claim to arbitration, thus" avoiding the process of courts of law, it surrendered its right to have its cause tested by technical or legal rules, and sought relief in justice and equity, according to the interpretation of laymen of its own selection. Of course, if appellant desired to save its right to have its cause submitted, heard, and determined according to the rules of law, it could have done so by stipulation in the agreement to arbitrate. That was not done here; the stipulation provided that the award should be according to “justice and equity.” Having elected to pursue this course, the finding of the arbitrators is conclusive upon appellant, in the total absence from the proceedings and award of partiality, fraud, misconduct, or manifest error. Under the terms of the submission, the arbitrators had the power -to disregard any strict.legal right or objection, and adjust the matters in dispute on the enlarged principles of justice and good conscience; for “where arbitrators, knowing what the law1 is, or leaving it entirely out of their consideration, make what they conceive under the circumstances of the case to be an equitable decision, it is no objection to the award that in some particular point it is manifestly against the law.” Edrington v. League, 1 Tex. 64; Green v. Franklin, 1 Tex. 497; Forshey v. Railway, 16 Tex. 516; Payne v. Metz, 14 Tex. 56.

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Bluebook (online)
242 S.W. 255, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 988, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/panhandle-grain-elevator-co-v-dorsey-texapp-1922.