Freeborn v. Denman
Freeborn v. Denman
Opinion of the Court
The record brought up from the. Inferior ‘Court of Common Pleas of the county of Middlesex, by the writ of error in this cause, is in substance as follows
John Denman and Randolph Jaques declare agáinst Thomas Freeborn, of June term, 1821 „ in the common counts, upon promises to them, for plough-timber sold and delivered, for goods tvares and merchandizes sold and delivered, and for work and'labor done. The defendant pleads the general issue. Continuances are entered to December term, 1821, at which term a reference of all matters in difference in the cause to three referees is made in the usual form, with power to report at the next or any subsequent term, and the report to be made a judgment. At September term, 1822, come as well the said John Denman as the .said Thomas Freeborn, by their attorneys, and the said Randolph Jaques cometh not; and the referees return their report, made and signed 29th August, 1822, whereby they
The assignment of errors alleges the death of Eandolph Jaques on the 15th day of August, 1822, before the making of the report, and there is a joinder in. error in the common form.
The first objection on the part of the plaintiff in error is, that the referees proceeded and made a report in favor of one of the plaintiffs, after the death of the other, and before any suggestion was made or continuance, in the name of the survivor, ordered.
At common law the death of one of several plaintiffs is generally an abatement of the action, 2 Saunders 72, i. In the case which was chiefly relied on by the counsel of the plaintiff in error, Spencer and Woodward v. The Earl of Rutland, Yelv. 208, it was held that a writ of error abates by the death of one of the plaintiffs. The same doctrine was held in Penoyer v. Brace, 1 Lord Raym. 244. The cases of Capel v. Saltonstall, 3 Mod. 249, and Wedgewood and others v. Bayley aoid others, Tho. Raym. 463, are more aualagous to the present, especially the latter which was an action of trover by five plaintiffs and before verdict one of them died; they proceeded to trial and a verdict was found for all the plaintiffs; then the plaintiffs suggest that one is dead and prayed a judgment for the rest, and had it. Upon a writ of error this judgment was reversed. But all these cases, that of Yelverton as well as the others, were decided
The second objection urged on the part of the plaintiff in error is, that the death of one of the plaintiffs below revoked the submission, and that the subsequent proceedings were therefore erroneous and illegal. This objection is formidable because it attacks the substance, the authority of the referees. In support of it, the counsel has relied on the doctrine, that there may be an implied as well as an express revocation of a submission to arbitration, 1 Bac. Abr. 134, Arbitr. and Award B ; and upon the cases of Potts v. Ward, 1 Marshall 336, and of Toussaint v. Hartop, 7 Taunton 571, in which it was held that the death of the defendant before the making of the award was a revocation of the authority -of' an arbitrator, acting under a submission by order at nisi prius, and where a verdict had been taken subject to the award—to these cases may bo added, Cooper v. Johnson, 2 Barn. and Alder. 394, where a similar decision was made. But in the case stated of an implied revocation, by the marriage of a feme sole, an actual revocation was within the power of the party; and in the cases whore the death was held a revocation, the party dying was the solo defendant, and not one of several defendants. No case was cited at the bar, nor have I found one, in the exercise of some diligence, whore the death of one of several plaintiffs or defendants has been held to affect the power of the arbitrator. Nor can the effect of the death of the sole party be considered as entirely settled in Westminster Hall, for in the case of Bower v. Taylor, 7 Taunton 574, the Court of King’s Bench refused to set aside an award made after the death of one of the parties where a verdict had been taken subject by an order of nisi prius to a reference, although a notice not to proceed in the reference had been given, by the
In the absence, then, of direct authority, and in this conflict of adjudged cases, we are to seek for principles on which the present question may be solved. A submission to arbitration by deed or by a parol may be revoked, but where several persons on the one side or the other submit, one of them, on either side, cannot, without the others, revoke the submission, 1 Bac. abr. 123, tit. Arbit. and Award, Kyd on Awards 16. A submission, by. parol or by deed, may, by the part} or parties of either side, be revoked even against the will of the other side; but where a cause pending in court has been submitted, by rule of court, the parties cannot, in this state, rescind the rule and revoke the submission, without mutual consent. Seamans and others v. Pharo and others, 1 South. 123. The same point has been decided in Massachusetts, Haskell v. Whitney, 12 Mass. Rep. 47; and in Pennsylvania, Pollock v. Hall, 4 Dall. Rep. 222. Same case, 3 Yeates, 42. Ruston v. The Administrators of Dunwoody, 1 Binney 42. The mode of proceeding here, by reference, where an action is pending, is a creature of our own law and entirely unknown to the English courts. There, in case of submission by rule of court, even where a cause is pending, the mode of enforcing the report is by attachment only, unless where a reference has been made at nisi prius and a verdict taken subject to the report; and in such case the judgment is entered as upon a verdict, the verdict being made to conform to the report even by changing it, if need be, from the party for whom originally rendered to the opposite party: — but here no verdict is taken, and the judgment is rendered actually and formally, such being the provision of our statute, upon the report. So that the reference, the report and the judgment are, to all intents and purposes, a regular continuance of the action ; and it is expressly provided by our statute that where there
Inasmuch therefore as one of the several plaintiffs or defendants cannot without the others revoke a submission; inasmuch as one party without the consent of the other cannot rescind a rule of reference,; inasmuch as the reference, report and judgment are with us the regular continuance of an action; and inasmuch as the death of one of several plaintiffs or defendants, where the cause of action survives, operates no abatement, there was in the case before us, by the death of Jaques, no revocation of the authority of the referees. In this respect then there is no error in the record.
In my opinion let the judgment be affirmed.
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