Western Female Seminary v. Blair

1 Disney (Ohio) 370
CourtOhio Superior Court, Cincinnati
DecidedMay 15, 1857
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Disney (Ohio) 370 (Western Female Seminary v. Blair) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Superior Court, Cincinnati primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Western Female Seminary v. Blair, 1 Disney (Ohio) 370 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1857).

Opinion

Stoker, J.

This is an application to make an award a rule of this court, under the act authorizing and regulating arbitrations, passed February 17,1831. Swan’s Stat. 44.

The application is resisted on several grounds:

1. First: Because the plaintiff did not execute the bond required by section 2 of the statute authorizing the submission.

The bonds are dated on the same day, and are both executed by Blair and the plaintiff, the execution by the plaintiff being in the following words:

“ For which payment, well and truly to be made, we bind the Western Female Seminary, a corporation as aforesaid, her successors and assigns, each and every of them. Sealed with our seals, and. dated this 28th day of July, a. d. 1855.” The previous portion of the bond commencing in these words: “ Know all men by these presents, that the Western Female Seminary, a corporation under the general law of Ohio, situate at Oxford, Butler county, Ohio, are held and firmly bound unto John M. Blair, in the sum of five thousand dollars:” the condition of which was, to abide by and perform “ the decision of Guernsey T. Roots and John H. Coleman, and such third person as may be selected by them, who are ehosen as arbitrators, as well by and on behalf of said John M. Blair as of the said Western Female Seminary,” etc.
The signature is the “Western Female Seminary, by Daniel Tenney, President. [seal.]”

The two arbitrators named made selection of William B. Moores, and upon the hearing of the controversy an award was made and submitted in writing, under the hands and [372]*372seals of Roots and Moores, finding that Blair was indebted to the Seminary in the amount of $1,969.18.

It is admitted that the corporation had no common seal; and it is proved by the president that no private seal of any of the officers had been especially adopted. The board of trustees, however, who were authorized by law to transact the business of the corporation, had previously resolved, at a stated meeting, to submit their controversy with the defendant, to arbitration, and empowered their president to complete the proper arrangements preparatory to the submission.

There can be no doubt that the only mode by which a coi’poration could make a deed, at common law, was by the use of its common seal, or by the adoption of some private seal, if no common seal existed. This rule was formerly very strictly observed, even to the extreme of technicality, but has been greatly modified in later times. The weight of modern authority applies the same implication to the execution of such an instrument as the paper before us, as to a bond executed in due form. In both cases, the execution will be held to be valid, prima facie, and obligatory on the parties intended to be bound. To avoid it, a want of authority on the part of the agent to sign the instrument, or to use his private seal, should be proved; and certainly, under our practice, the obligor of any bond, as well as the maker of every note, whether an individual or a corporate body, is compelled to deny under oath, the execution of the instrument, before the plaintiff is required to prove it.

When the common seal of a corporation is affixed to an instrument, it is an established rule that it will be presumed the officers did not exceed their authority, and the seal itself is evidence that it was properly affixed. The contrary must be shown by the objecting party. Angel & Ames on Corp. 115; 6 Paige, 60, Lovett v. The Steam Saw Mill Association; 12 Wheat. 70, Bank U. S. v. Dandridge; 8 Pick. 56, New England Mar. Ins. Co. v. De Wolf; 21 Pick. 428, Mill Dam Foundry v. Hovey; 12 N. H. 434, Flint v. Clinton Co., etc.

[373]*373The purpose for the courts to accomplish, whenever the validity of contracts is questioned, is to ascertain what the parties intended to do; and where the assent of both may fairly be presumed, they will be held bound by their admissions, either express or implied. In the present case, the corporation does not deny its liability nor impute any defect in the mode of executing the bond by the president.

The plaintiff has asked us to make the award a rale of court, and thus admitted the liability. If they should have disputed it, they would have been estopped. Beyond this, both parties have proceeded under the submission on the faith that they were mutually bound. Neither claimed that the bond required by law had not been properly executed, during the progress of the arbitration, and never until this motion was made.

We must regard, therefore, the several obligors to have admitted their liability and given their full assent to the bond, if the execution had been originally defective. We can not permit either, in this stage of the case, to deny their liability. They must be estopped.

If a judgment should be rendered upon a bond defectively executed, when all parties had their day in court, and permitted the case ■ to be decided on the merits without excepting to the mode in which the bond was executed, there certainly could be no cause of complaint; and the award made in this case must, for all practical purposes, produce the same result.

We hold, then, that the first objection made by the defendant must be overruled. v

2. The second objection taken is, that the bond does not contain the names of the arbitrators, as required by section 2 of the statute.

The language of the section is: “ The parties to such submission may enter into arbitration bonds, which bonds shall be conditioned for the faithful performance of the award, or umpirage, setting forth the name or names of the arbitrators or umpire, and the matter or matters submitted [374]*374to Ms or their determination; and when such is the agreement, that such submission be made a rule of any court of record within this State, or a rule of any particular court of record named in the submission.”

The question now arises, does the bond conform to the statute in the substantive provisions?

At common law, it was the right of any person to submit his claims to the arbitrament of others, and the agreement to submit would bind all the parties, whether in writing or by parol merely. Awards made pursuant to such submissions were regarded by the courts with great favor, as they tended to quiet litigation, and were determined by the tribunal elected by the parties themselves. Where the remedy to enforce the award is not in the usual mode, by action, but is sought through the intervention of the statute which gives a summary process, by attachment, to compel the performance of the award, it is but the application of the ordinary rule by which the jurisdiction of courts is regulated, to require that all the requisites of the statute authorizing the submission shall have been substantially fulfilled.

Thus, under the statute of 9th and 10th William III, ch. 15, which permits awards to be made a rule of court, it has been held “ that no parol submission is within the statute.” 7 D. & E. 1, Ansell v. Evans. So the bond must express that the award shall be made a rule of court, or it will not be allowed to be; Str. 1178, Harrison v. Grundy; and where the submission is not clearly within the statute, the parties will be left to their action; 3 Neville & Manning, 860, in re Lee, et al.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Disney (Ohio) 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/western-female-seminary-v-blair-ohsuperctcinci-1857.