Wilbourn v. Hurt

139 Ala. 557
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 139 Ala. 557 (Wilbourn v. Hurt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilbourn v. Hurt, 139 Ala. 557 (Ala. 1903).

Opinion

McCLELLAN, C. J. —

The law favors, - and, by express statute, it is made the duty of courts to encourage tlie settlement of controversies by reference thereof to arbitrators chosen by the parties. — Code, § 508. The theory upon which tlie law and courts encourage such settlements is that they facilitate and expedite the adjustment of disagreements between citizens, they save the time of the courts and the costs of regular judicial proceedings, and, being made pursuant to the agreement of tlie parties and by persons of their own selection, they are likely to be more satisfactory to all concerned and to assuage and heal animosities thereby conserving the general good. To conserve these ends, and to justify their favor and encouragement of the law and the courts, it is necessary that such settlements should settle the controversies involved, close them up, and conclude them [560]*560out of court. If any party dissatisfied with, a settlement made by arbitrators may bring the controversy into court and. there have it reinvestigated, and litigated and determined over again, the whole scheme and theory and purpose of arbitration would- be thwarted and defeated] there would be no basis for the favor and encouragement of the law and the courts, and instead of time and costs being saved, and animosities being allayed, litigation would be repeated and drawn out, costs would be increased and ill feeling engendered, intensified and prolonged beyond what would be incident in an3r of these respects to suits in the courts in the first instance. In other words, the submission to arbitration might well in every case, and certainly would in many, operate to the creation or aggregation of the very evils which it is the purpose of the law to avoid or to lessen by recognizing, providing for and encouraging this mode of settling controversies among the parties. But apart from the foregoing considerations, it is altogether illogical that a party to an arbitration should be allowed to take the controversy into the courts after it has been submitted to arbitrators and decided by them. His submission of it is entirely voluntary; there is no coercion or compulsion about it. The consideration for his agreement of submission is a like argument on the part of his adversary. Their minds come together to the conclusion that this is the best way to adjust their differences. They select the person or persons who shall determine the issues between them, and they contract one with the other that the arbitrators thus selected shall determine and declare their rights and duties in the premises, and they hind themselves to abide by and perform whatever award may be made. It is not their contemplation nor their contract that the award shall be tentative merely, or evidential merely, or merely preliminary to litigation in the courts; but it is their contemplation and undoubtedly their binding contract that the award shall finally settle and forever determine the controversy. Each of them is as much bound by. the award as if each, without controversy or arbitration had agreed, contracted and promised in writing to pay the [561]*561money or do tbe thing each is required by the award to pay or do; it is as much an agreed settlement of their dispute in the one case as the other; and neither can any more avoid or escape the duty imposed by the award than he can avoid or escape' the obligation imposed by his contract. If he made the contract and has not performed it, and it is sued upon, he has no defense to such suit. He may show if he can that he did not sign it or that he has performed it, but failing in this he is absolutely bound by it. So with an award: If he has submitted a matter to arbitrators, and they have jointly considered that matter and determined it and made their award accordingly, and he is sued upon .that award, he has no defense to such suit. He may show, if the can, that they have not considered the matter submitted, or that their award is corrupt, but failing in this he cannot have a reinvestigation of the controversy and a retrial of its issues in any court, because he has foreclosed all that by a valid and binding contract that those issues shall once for all be investigated by judges of his own selection, and thát their conclusion upon them shall determine, and forever settle the controversy. He has no right to have his controvery tried by ¿ court, because he has contracted away this right in consideration of having it settled by judges of his own selection, and the law recognizes and the courts will hold him to this contract whether the award be a common law or a statutory award: The controversy has been settled as he voluntarily and upon valuable consideration agreed that it should be settled; and there it must and does end. It is, therefore, not only subversive of the whole theory of arbitration, the emasculation of the whole system, altogether illogical and even absurd to allow a retrial of the controversy in the courts, by appeal or otherwise, but it involves the participation by the courts in. a flagrant violation of the express, valid and binding contract of the parties.

. We have been discussing awards generally without special reference to our statutory provisions on the subject of arbitration. When the legislature came to deal [562]*562with, this subject, it not only fully recognized the general doctrine as to the finality and conclusiveness of awards, but out of abundant care and caution it expressly reiterated and declared that doctrine as applicable to our statutory awards. This is the provision: “An award made substantially in compliance with the provisions of this chapter, is conclusive between the parties thereto, and their privies, as to the matter submitted, and cannot be inquired into, or impeached for want of form or for irregularity, if the award determines the matter or controversy submitted'; and such award is final, unless the arbitrators are guilty of fraud, partiality or corruption in making it.” — Code, § 521. This section was a part of the chapter* on arbitration embodied in the Code of 1852. It would have been strange indeed had the able and learned lawyers who prepared that Code, conversant as they were with the theory and law of arbitration and the legal qualities of awards, followed this unequivocal declaration of their duality and conclusiveness, with provisions for appeals from them whereby their conclusiveness would be destroyed and the whole purpose and theory of the statute would be perverted and thwarted. This strange thing was not proposed by the eminent men who prepared that body of laws, nor done by the legislature of that day., There is no semblance of a provision in this chapter as embodied in the Code of 1852 or in the Code of 1867 for any appeal under any circumstances from an award, directly or indirectly, nor for a retrial of a controversy once determined by arbitration in any way whatever. There was, it is true, in the chapter as originally codified, the following provision : “If the award, is not performed within ten days after -notice, and deliverey of a copy thereof, the successful party may return the submission and the award to the clerk of the circuit court of the comity in which the award is made, if for the payment of more than fifty dollars, for the delivery of specific property, or to do or omit to do any particular act. Tf for fifty dollars or less then to a justice of the 'peace of the county; and such award has the force and effect [563]*563of a judgment at law, upon which execution may issue as in other cases,” (Code of 1852 § 2714) ; and this provision has been brought forward into all subsequent Codes, and constitutes section 513 of the present Code.

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Bluebook (online)
139 Ala. 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilbourn-v-hurt-ala-1903.