Wechsler v. Gidwitz

250 Ill. App. 136, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 241
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 3, 1928
DocketGen. No. 32,673
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 250 Ill. App. 136 (Wechsler v. Gidwitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wechsler v. Gidwitz, 250 Ill. App. 136, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 241 (Ill. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Holdom

delivered the opinion of the court.

Complainant filed his bill to set aside the award of a board of arbitrators, composed of the Hon. Harry Fisher, a judge of the circuit court of Cook county, Charles S. Smith and William E. Nichols. The submission was in writing between the complainant and the defendants. The defendants answered, in the main denying the material averments of the bill, and filed a cross-bill praying for a decree dismissing complainant’s bill for want of equity, confirming the award of the arbitrators and that the award be ordered carried out and enforced. Complainant answered the cross-bill.

Beplications were filed by the complainant to def end-ants ’ answer and defendants (cross-complainants) filed a replication to the answer of complainant to the cross-bill.

There was a reference to a master who heard all the proofs and reported thereon his findings to the court and recommended that a decree be entered dismissing complainant’s bill for want of equity, and granting to cross-complainants the relief prayed in their cross-bill. To the report of the master complainant interposed objections which were overruled by the master. Exceptions to the master’s report were filed before the chancellor, which exceptions were sustained and a decree entered granting to complainant the relief prayed by him in his bill. Defendants bring the record here foi review by appeal.

Defendants, cross-complainants, argue for reversal, aside from the formal assignments of error, principally, that the chancellor erred in not dismissing complainant’s bill for want of equity and granting the relief prayed for in the cross-bill; also in finding that there was an oral agreement between the parties that no lawyers should participate in-the hearing before the arbitrators; that it was error to admit the testimony of arbitrators Nichols and Smith in an attempt to impeach the award.

The agreement of submission to arbitration between the parties contained the following as to the disputed matters submitted:

“The said Samuel B. Wechsler has filed a declaration against the Community State Bank,, a corporation, and the said Community State Bank, a corporation, filed certain counter claims and other defenses against said claims in case # 376135, Superior Court of Cook County, and the said Community State Bank, a corporation has filed an action in the Municipal Court of Chicago, Case # 859003 against the said Samuel B. Weehsler, and has filed a statement of claim in said action in the said Municipal Court and the said Samuel B. Weehsler has filed certain counter claims and other defenses in said action, and the said Samuel B. Wechsler having filed a declaration against Jacob Gidwitz in Case # 373315, Superior Court of Cook County, and the said Jacob Gidwitz having filed certain counter claims and other defenses against said claim, of the said Samuel B. Weehsler, and

“Whereas, certain other claims, demands and controversies and disputes exist between the said parties with reference to certain transactions heretofore had between them which said claims, demands, controversies and disputes are for moneys claimed to be due each from the other, and for other personal property with reference to certain-agreements, representations and obligations from and to each other.”

The submission clause makes it a statutory arbitration by direct reference to the statute and is in the following terms:

“It Is Further Agreed that the Award of said Arbitrators or the majority of them shall be binding and conclusive upon all the parties hereto; that the instrument of Submission to Arbitration and Award may be filed in the Superior Court of Cook County and shall be deemed to be a filing with the written consent of the parties to this submission; that Court shall thereupon take jurisdiction of the parties and subject matter of this submission without written pleadings; that a judgment or successive judgments of said Court shall be rendered upon any award or awards made pursuant to this submission, and that the judgment of said Court shall be final and that no appeal or writ of error will be prosecuted by each or either of said parties.”

Furthermore, in a subsequent clause the following appears: “Said arbitrator shall conduct proceedings in all things pursuant to the Arbitrations and Awards Act of the State of Illinois.” There is also a provision that the agreement and the award of the arbitrators, or a majority of them, may be filed in the superior court of Cook county, which court shall take jurisdiction of the parties and the cause- without written pleadings; that- a judgment or judgments of the court shall be rendered upon any award made pursuant to the submission, and that the judgment of the court shall be final, and no appeal or writ of error sued out therefrom.

It appears without contradiction that Nichols was selected by complainant as his arbitrator, and that Smith was selected by the defendants as their arbitrator,- that Judge Fisher was selected by Nichols and Smith as the third arbitrator or umpire. The evidence clearly demonstrates that Nichols and Smith were partisans for the respective persons who chose them, as above set out, and that Judge Fisher was the only impartial arbitrator who brought to the discharge of his duties an open and impartial mind and discharged the functions of his office with the utmost diligence and fairness, seeking for the right under the evidence heard and applying the law thereto as an ethical minded judge should do, and that he reached his conclusions after painstaking consideration of all thé evidence submitted, applying to such evidence correct legal principles.

The submission agreement is the contract of the parties solemnly entered into in writing and it cannot in any manner be varied by any parol agreements made either prior or subsequent to the execution and delivery of the written submission. By its terms the rights of the parties must be adjudged, without any reference to claimed contemporaneous verbal understandings. Such are in law merged in the executed contract. Clark v. Courier, 280 Ill. 590, and Podolsky v. Raskin, 294 Ill. 443, are decisive on this point, which limits the arbitrators in their decision to the particular matters submitted in the writing. Again the rule is correctly stated in Schmidt v. Glade, 126 Ill. 485, where the court said:

“Where the arbitrators recite in their award that they disposed of a matter, entrusted to their consideration, in the manner required by the agreement for submission, it cannot be shown by parol evidence, that they disposed of such matter in another and different manner.”

The master correctly held that no oral testimony of the arbitrators was receivable to impeach the award, although their evidence would be admissible to sustain it. The chancellor, in overruling this conclusion of the master, committed reversible error. What the court said in Stone v. Baldwin, 226 Ill. 338, hereinafter recited, is equally applicable to the instant situation:

“This testimony does not furnish legal basis for an attack upon the finding, as the testimony of an arbitrator showing that he alone has been guilty of misconduct will not be received to impeach an award. (Claycomb v. Butler, 36 Ill. 100; Seaton v. Kendall, 171 id. 410.)”

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Bluebook (online)
250 Ill. App. 136, 1928 Ill. App. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wechsler-v-gidwitz-illappct-1928.