Wells v. Lane

15 Wend. 99
CourtCourt for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors
DecidedDecember 15, 1835
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 15 Wend. 99 (Wells v. Lane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court for the Trial of Impeachments and Correction of Errors primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wells v. Lane, 15 Wend. 99 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1835).

Opinion

The following opinions were delivered :

By the Chancellor.

Even if the defendant’s counsel had been right in supposing that a parol agreement to submit the matters in difference between the parties to arbitration was a legal discontinuance of the suit, though no award had been made in pursuance of such submissioú, he was totally wrong in supposing that a mere submission to arbitrators could be pleaded as a bar to the further continuance of the suit. A legal submission to arbitration and a valid award in pursuance of the submission, may be pleaded in bar of the further maintenance of a suit then pending for the same matters, although the agreement to submit should contain an express stipulation that the submission shall not work a discontinuance of the suit; unless the parties have also agreed that the judgment may be entered in such suit in conformity with the award ; for, by the making of the award, the original cause of action is gone, and the party must thereafter be left to his remedy on the award itself. A me~re agreement to submit to arbitration, however, is as most but a consent to discontinue the suit, or to take the cause out of court without costs to either party, leaving the plaintiff to commence his action de novo if no award shall be made by the arbitrators on such submission. And if the plaintiff afterwards attempts to proceed in the original suit, the proper remedy of the defendant is by an application to the court to stay the proceedings, on the ground that the suit is in fact discontinued and out of court. The legal effect, however, of this plea puis darien continuance, in bar of the further maintenance of the plaintiff’s suit, and of a verdict and judgment thereon in favor of the defendant, would be forever -to bar the plaintiff’s right of action for the alleged slander for which the original suit was instituted, and to charge him with the costs of the plea and of all subsequent proceedings, although the submission to arbitration should be afterwards revoked by the defendant himself, or the arbitrators should refuse to act. The judgment of the court of common pleas, was therefore clearly erroneous, and was properly reversed by the supreme court, even if this was the only error appearing upon the record. The issue joined being an immaterial one, and being found for the defendant, who committed the first fault in pleading, the judgment should have been arrested, or a repleader might have been awarded upon the application of the plaintiff; but in such a ease, if the issue is found against the party who pleads an insufficient bar, the adverse party is entitled to judgment on the account of the falsity of the insufficient plea. Chamberlayn v. Nicholas, Cro. Eliz. 455. 5 Coke R. 43, a, S. C. 2 Tidd 920, 9th Land. ed. It becomes necessary therefore, in this case, to examine the question, whether it was competent for the defendant to sustain'his plea by proof of a parol agreement to discontinue the suit by a submission to arbitration, as the awarding of the venire de novo was erroneous if the issue was properly found for the defendant; and as no repleader could be awarded upon a writ of error, where [62]*62it had not been asked for in the court below, there should in that case have been a simple judgment of reversal, with costs, leaving the plaintiff to seek his remedy by a new action; but if the objection to the introduction of parol testimony to prove the submission to arbitration was inadmissible, then a venire de novo was properly awarded, to enable the plaintiff to falsify the plea and to have his damages assessed by the jury for the slanderous words charged. The declaration in that case would stand confessed, the former plea in bar being waived by the plea puis darien continuance. 1 Chitty’s Archbold, 288; Freem. Law R. 252. I think the supreme court decided correctly, in holding that the rule of the Yates county common pleas precluded the defendant from giving proof of a mere parol agreement to submit to arbitration, to sustain the allegation in his plea. Where the existence of an agreement which is required to be in writing is put in issue, the party claiming the benefit of such agreement must establish its existence by written evidence, or he will fail. Conine v. Graham, 2 Paige 181. There is nothing in a mere agreement to submit a matter to arbitration which must of necessity have the effect to discontinue a suit brought for the same matter.

A valid submission may be made, leaving the suit in full life, provided it appear from the agreement itself that such was the intention of the parties.

A general agreement to submit to arbitration operates as a discontinuance merely from the implied understanding of the parties, that the suit is to be no further prosecuted. It is material, therefore, to ascertain in such cases what was the precise agreement between the parties, and whether it was not a part of such agreement that the plaintiff should be permitted to proceed in the suit if the defendant should think proper to revoke the submission, or the arbitrators should neglect to make their award within the time fixed by the parties in their submission. It is very certain, therefore, that all the evils of conflicting affidavits and misapprehension of facts, which were intended to be guarded against by the rule of the court, will be found to exist in relation to such an agreement respecting the proceedings in the cause. A general agreement to submit to arbitration is clearly an agreement in respect to the proceedings in the cause; for it is the implied agreement to.discontinue, and that only which can have the legal effect of putting an end to the suit. It is therefore within the. letter as well as within the spirit of'the rule.

Again ; I am strongly inclined to think that the provisions of the seven first and of the three last sections of the title of the revised statutes relative to arbitrations, 2 R. S. 541, are applicable to all arbitrations, whether the parties agree in their submission that a judgment may be entered on the award or otherwise; but that no judgment can be entered summarily, upon an award of arbitrators, in pursuance of an agreement to that effect contained in the submission, except in the manner and subject to the restrictions contained in the eighth and the thirteenth succeeding sections. The former statute on this subject, 1 R. L. of 1813, p. 125, was only intended to apply to a particular class of cases, where the parties agreed that their submission should be made a rule of court; but the legislature, in the recent revision, has materially changed the phraseology of the statutory provisions on the subject of arbitrations; and the revisors, by these new provisions, appear to have intended to adopt a code of procedure for these do^ mestic tribunals which should be applicable to all cases of submission to, arbitration ; presenting at the same time the distinction between those cases in which the parties intended to secure the right of resorting to a summary proceeding by judgment to enforce the award,-and those in which they were satisfied with a reliance upon the common law remedy by action of debt upon the award, or a suit on the bond or agreement of submission. Among the provisions which I think were intended to be general, and to apply to all submissions to arbitration, is that contained in the first section, which only authorizes a submission by an instrument in writing, or a written agreement, containing a specificaton of the sub[63]*63ject matter of the submission and the- terms upon which the submission is made.

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Bluebook (online)
15 Wend. 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wells-v-lane-nycterr-1835.