President of Delaware & Hudson Canal Co. v. Pennsylvania Coal Co.

50 N.Y. 250, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 414
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 12, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by109 cases

This text of 50 N.Y. 250 (President of Delaware & Hudson Canal Co. v. Pennsylvania Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
President of Delaware & Hudson Canal Co. v. Pennsylvania Coal Co., 50 N.Y. 250, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 414 (N.Y. 1872).

Opinion

Allen, J.

It appears to be well settled by authority that 'an agreement to refer all matters of difference or dispute that may arise to arbitration, will not oust a court of law or equity of jurisdiction. The reason of the rule is by some traced to the jealousy of the courts, and a desire to repress all attempts to encroach on the exclusiveness of their jurisdiction; and by others to an aversion of the courts, from reasons of public policy, to sanction contracts by which the protection which the law affords the individual citizens is renounced. An agreement of this character induced by fraud, or overreaching, or entered into unadvisedly through ignorance, folly or undue pressure, might well be refused a specific performance, or disregarded when set up as a defence to an action.

But when the parties stand upon an equal footing, and intelligently and deliberately, in making their executory contracts, provide for an amicable adjustment of any difference that may arise, either by arbitration or otherwise, it is not easy to assign at this day any good reason why the contract should not stand, and the parties made to abide by it, and the judgment of the tribunal of their choice. Were the question res nova, I apprehend that a party would not now be permitted, in the absence of fraud or some peculiar circumstances entitling him to relief, to repudiate his agreement to submit to arbitration, and seek a remedy at law, when his adversary had not refused to arbitrate, or in any way obstructed or hindered the arbitration agreed upon. But the rule that a general covenant to submit any differences that may arise in the performance of a contract, or under an executory agreement, is a nullity, is too well established to be now questioned; and the decision of the appeal of the present defendant does not make it necessary to inquire into the reasons of the rule, or question its existence. The better way, doubtless, is to give effect to contracts, when lawful in them *259 selves, according to their terms and the intent of the parties; and any departure from this principle is an anomaly in the law, not to be extended or applied to new cases unless they come within the letter and spirit of the decisions already made. The tendency of the more recent decisions is to narrow rather than enlarge the operation and effect of prior decisions, limiting the power of contracting parties to provide a tribunal for the adjustment of possible differences, without a resort to courts of law; and the rule is essentially modified and qualified.

The agreement, which is the subject-matter of litigation in this action, was carefully prepared by astute counsel, and the contracting parties themselves were intelligent, shrewd and practical business men of large experience; and no injustice, therefore, will be done to either by interpreting the instrument, and every part of it, by the ordinary rules for the interpretation of written instruments. It may be assumed that every provision which was essential to protect the interests of either, and give effect to the actual intention of both was inserted in words well chosen to give clear and distinct expression to the views of the parties, and exclude every construction inconsistent with such intention or the agreement as actually made.

The plaintiffs, under the agreement, secured to themselves the right to certain tolls absolutely for the use of their canal, to be ascertained from year to year in the manner and by the rules prescribed. Although they were not fixed and certain in amount, they were capable of being ascertained and made certain. An enlargement of the canal was contemplated, which it was supposed would inure to the benefit of the defendant by reducing the actual cost of transportation, and entitle the plaintiffs, under the arrangement and the terms of the agreement, to additional toll. But the amount of the toll to which the plaintiffs should be entitled, in addition to the toll as agreed upon, could not then be determined; and hence a provision was necessary for the ascertainment and adjustment of this additional toll when the right to it should *260 accrue: The parts of the agreement relating to this additional toll are separate and independent of every other part of the instrument, and are complete and perfect by themselves as an agreement by which the plaintiffs should be entitled, in the contingency named, to charge and collect the contemplated additional toll. Every part of the agreement, as to this additional toll, should be read as one instrument and one agreement. So part of it is collateral to and independent of any other part of it, and effect cannot be given to any one provision or paragraph, except in reference to and as modified by the other parts of the agreement relating to the same subject-matter. This is a leading canon in the interpretation of all covenants and written instruments.

The plaintiffs were secured the right to “ charge and collect ” toll on the defendant’s coal; and it may be conceded the defendant undertook to pay, in addition to the toll before then chargeable, at a rate to be established after the canal enlargement should be completed in the manner particularly prescribed, and an arbitration was the final resort agreed upon to establish the rate and amount of toll, in case the contracting parties should not be able to agree, and the decision of the arbitrators was to be final in the premises. Both parties were to be concluded by it as to the amount or rate of toll which the one might exact and the other be compelled to pay. The manner by which the rate of toll was to be established was by the agreement of the parties, or, that failing, by arbitration. S"o other mode or manner was thought of or prescribed; and this manner being prescribed necessarily excludes every other method, as clearly and effectually as if the parties had said in terms that the rate should not be established by a resort to the courts or in any other manner, except by the parties, or, in case of their disagreement, by disinterested persons to be chosen for that purpose. Expressio wiius est exelusio dUerims. The parties have agreed to a rate “ to be established in manner followingand it would have added nothing to the legal effect to have added in terms that it should not be otherwise established, and excluded in *261 words the interposition of the courts. It is true the data from which and the rule and method of computation and calculation by which the additional rate was to be ascertained and adjusted is prescribed for the government of the parties, or those who, in their stead and as arbitrators or -umpires, should act under this part of the agreement. That is, doubtless, a part of the process or formula for establishing the additional rate; but that alone did not and could not determine the rate. Action was to be had by the agents provided for, in conformity to and under the prescribed rule, and the manner of establishing the additional rate of toll was by the selection of the arbitrators, and their proceeding to ascertain the facts, and make the necessary estimates and the resulting calculations and computations.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 N.Y. 250, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 414, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/president-of-delaware-hudson-canal-co-v-pennsylvania-coal-co-ny-1872.