Perrigo Gold Mining & Tunneling Co. v. Grimes

2 Colo. 651
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedFebruary 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2 Colo. 651 (Perrigo Gold Mining & Tunneling Co. v. Grimes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perrigo Gold Mining & Tunneling Co. v. Grimes, 2 Colo. 651 (Colo. 1875).

Opinion

Hallett, C. J.

To the sixth and seventh pleas first put in a demurrer was sustained, and plaintiffs in error took leave to amend. Subsequently other pleas were filed, in which a new defense was set up, and defendant in error again demurred. By filing new pleas under leave to amend, the intention to abandon those first put in was evinced, and the judgment of the court, as to them, is not now open to review. Dickhut v. Durrell, 11 Ill. 72; Dean v. Gecman, 44 id. 287. The first of the additional pleas to which a demurrer was sustained, is based upon section 14 of the act relating to replevin (R. S. 540), which provides that in an action upon a replevin bond, when the merits of the case have not been tried in the action of replevin, the defendants may plead the fact, and their title to the property in controversy in. bar of the action. To establish this defense, it was alleged that the matters in controversy in the replevin suit were submitted to arbitration, and thereby the replevin suit was dismissed ; that the arbitrators heard the evidence and made an award upon which the court entered judgment; that the merits of the replevin suit were not tried in that action, and that defendants were the owners of the property, and entitled to the possession of the same. Assuming that the submission to arbitrators was unconditional as stated in the plea, [656]*656there can be no doubt as to its effect upon the replevin suit. Thereby the action was discontinued, the parties having resorted to another forum. Reeve v. Mitchell, 15 Ill. 297; Camp v. Root, 18 Johns. 22. And the suit being thus brought to an end without a trial, it must be true that the merits of the case were not tried therein. It is said, however, that the plaintiff in replevin, the principal obligor in the bond, by entering into the arbitration voluntarily dismissed his suit, and, therefore, he is denied this defense by the express language of the last clause of section 14, supra. But the difference between the discontinuance which results from submitting a cause to arbitration, and the dismissal mentioned in the statute, is too plain for argument. The latter is the voluntary act of the plaintiff in rep levin,by which he withdraws his case from the court for the purpose of avoiding a trial, and upon which, by the 12th section of the act (R. S. 540), the court must give judgment against him for the return of the property. When the parties agreed to go before another tribunal, it would be absurd to say that the defendant may have, by the judgment of the court, the relief which he has agreed to ask of the arbitrators. By the agreement to submit, the parties declined to accept the judgment of the court, and, therefore, none could be pronounced except as to the matter of costs. The allegation that the arbitrators made an award upon which judgment was entered, is not inconsistent with the statement that the suit was dismissed, although it appears to be quite unnecessary to the defense set up. It is not alleged in the plea that the judgment on the award was entered in the replevin suit; and by statute (R. S. 50), a judgment may be entered by the clerk upon an award of arbitrators, and so the replevin suit may have been discontinued by the submission, and upon an award made, judgment afterward entered as alleged, but not in that action. Objection that the plea contained redundant matter was not made, and I do not see that any other can be maintained. The second additional plea was interposed by Mead, one of the sureties in the replevin bond, setting up a submission to arbitrators in the replevin suit, and an award [657]*657made by which the suit was discontinued. Here, as in the first plea, the submission to arbitrators appears to have been absolute and unconditional, which is a material circumstance with reference to its effect upon the suit, as will be explained hereafter. And if the replevin suit was by that means withdrawn from the court by consent of parties, it would be impossible to charge a surety in the replevin bond upon his obligation. The bond was to secure the due prosecution of the replevin suit, and the return of the property when adjudged, all of which was dispensed with by the act and agreement of the defendants in replevin, for whom the bond was taken by the sheriff. By removing the cause into another forum, they made it impossible to go on with it in the district court, and the bond must be taken to refer to the acts and omissions of the principal obligor in the latter tribunal. Perkins v. Rudolph, 36 Ill. 306; Archer v. Hale, 4 Bing. 464.

Therefore, if the cause was removed from the court by agreement of parties, as it must have been if the submission contained nothing from which it may be inferred that the parties intended otherwise, no action can be maintained against a surety in the bond, the fact being well pleaded. There is a difficulty, however, as to the plea, which is or should be in the form of a special traverse. Confessing that the replevin suit was begun and the bond given as alleged in the declaration, the pleader doubtless intended to deny that the suit was prosecuted to judgment, as was also alleged in the declaration. This was done by setting up the submission to arbitration, and consequent discontinuance, which is not a direct denial of any thing alleged in the declaration, but a statement of matters inconsistent with the truth of what is there alleged. Steph. PI. 179. Because of this omission, the demurrer was properly sustained, although the plea appears to be otherwise sufficient. Upon other issues the cause was brought to trial before a jury, and the submission to arbitrators, together with their award, was put in evidence. Upon another trial a question may arise upon the submission, which should now be discussed in order to [658]*658explain wliat has been said touching the sufficiency of the pleas and to secure a correct result. Attention has been directed to the fact that in the pleas the submission does not appear to be subject to any condition respecting the further prosecution of the replevin suit, but when produced in evidence, we find that it is entitled in the cause, and that it expressly provides that the award of arbitrators shall have the same force and effect as the verdict of a jury, and that judgment shall be entered thereon in that action. This gives to the case a new aspect and presents a distinction which has been fully recognized in cases of this kind. Although a reference to arbitrators without more will operate to discontinue a suit pending, if a different intention can be gathered from the submission, such result will not be allowed. This point was expressly ruled in Ex parte Wright, 6 Cowen, 399, and is fully illustrated in Green v. Patchen, 13 Wend. 293. The practice of referring matters in litigation to arbitrators is not unknown to the courts, and many cases may be found in which the manner of proceeding is discussed. It seems that a rule of court or judge’s order directing the submission was required, and that the plaintiff usually took a verdict for his security, particularly when bail was given in the case. Tidd’s Pr. 819. If the plaintiff did not take a verdict the bail was discharged, but this was upon technical grounds, which cannot be recognized at the present day. Tidd’s Pr. 838, 1097. The essential feature of the practice for present consideration is that, by entering into the submission with a stipulation for judgment upon the award, the party against whom the award is made is held to have confessed the judgment, entered according to his agreement. Yates v. Russell, 17 Johns. 461; Hills v. Passage, 21 Wis.

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Bluebook (online)
2 Colo. 651, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perrigo-gold-mining-tunneling-co-v-grimes-colo-1875.