Fletcher v. Webster
Fletcher v. Webster
Opinion of the Court
There are various objections to the award which it is not necessary that the court should consider; for we are of opinion that it is fatally defective in not being certain and final.
The sum which the award requires the defendant to pay to the plaintiff, as the excess, if any, of the contract price over the sum of $612.50, &c., and also the sum which the award requires the plaintiff to pay to the defendant, if the sum already paid, and the amount of lien claims and costs, and the aforesaid sum of $612.50 shall be more than the contract price, are both entirely uncertain, and cannot be made certain by any means afforded by the award.
In the case of Waite v. Barry, 12 Wend. 377, arbitrators awarded that A. should pay to B. a certain proportion of a prize drawn in a lottery, after deducting the usual percentage, with the amount already paid. The court decided that as nothing appeared on the award showing the amount that had been already paid, or from which it could be ascertained by calculation, the award was bad for want of certainty, and for not making a final disposition of the matters submitted. “ It is essential to the validity of an award,” said Sutherland, J., “ that it should make a final disposition of the matters embraced in the submission, so that they may not become the subject or occasion of future litigation between the parties. It is not
We think the decision in that case was right; and as we cannot distinguish the present case from that, in principle, we must hold that the award is not a bar to this action, being of no legal validity. Exceptions overruled.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John W. Fletcher v. Joshua Webster
- Status
- Published