McKeen v. Oliphant
McKeen v. Oliphant
Opinion of the Court
The questions presented by these pleas, and the demurrer thereto, may be resolved into two :
First, Whether the award, upon which the action is brought, is inconsistent with the law applicable to this subject, and
Second, Whether, if good, it is binding upon the defendant in his individual and private capacity, or whether it affects him only in his representative capacity as administrator of Samuel Taggart ; and in considering these questions, I shall confine myself to what I understand to be well settled general principles, without adverting to or citing particular cases and decisions.
It is a general principle, that an award, to be binding and obligatory between the parties, should be certain, mutual, and final upon all the matters submitted.
The fourth, fifth and sixth pleas raise the exceptiohs that it is uncertain, not mutually satisfactory, and not final.
We will examine these exceptions in the order in which they are presented. And first, as to its uncertainty.
The plea alleges that it is uncertain, because it does not order in what manner the debts due from the firm are to be paid, or by v'hom and in what manner the deficiency is to be paid. To settle this, and some other questions connected with it, we are to refer to the submission, and ascertain what the parties submitted to the decision of the arbitrators. By this, it appears that all disputes and controversies respecting the adjustment of the accounts and business of said firm, are submitted to their arbitrament.
The demurrer to these pleas is well taken, and should be sustained.
The seventh plea is performance, or a readiness and willingness to perform, and an offer to perform his part of the award, if the plaintiff would perform his part, by collecting the debts due to, and paying the debts owing by said firm, and dividing the surplus, as he was requested to do, but wholly refused. This plea is no defence to the action. It is not a good plea of performance. If, by the award, the plaintiff was bound to do this, it was not a condition precedent. The payment of the $3,354 1(% did in no wise depend upon the plaintiff’s making these collections. It was to be made in nine months from the date of the award, and independently of any act to be performed by the plaintiff. But, as before remarked, these collections and divisions of the surplus, after payment of the debts, were no part of the submission; the award, therefore, in this respect, is void, and the plea bad in substance.
The three remaining pleas, raise a more important and difficult question, to wit, whether the plea of plene administravit, and the proceedings in the orphans’ court, set forth in the ninth and tenth pleas, are a good answer to the plaintiff’s claim, or, in other words, whether the defendant is not personally liable for the amount awarded.
The plaintiff has declared against him in his individual capacity, upon a covenant made by himself and not by his intestate. In the articles of submission, the parties were the plaintiff and the defendant described as the administrator of Samuel Taggart,
The award is that all controversies and actions between the parties shall cease; that there is due from the estate of Samuel Taggart deceased, to the plaintiff, $3,854 10J. The order or judgment of the arbitrators, is that this sum shall be paid by the defendant, administrator as aforesaid, “ out of the estate of said deceased, in nine months.”
It has been adjudged that a mere submission to an arbitration by an executor, is not in itself an admission of assets 5 T. P. 6; Bac. Abridg., for in many cases it is the best mode of ascertaining whether there be any foundation for the demand, and is often advantageous to both parties. But if an executor, in his submission, bind himself and his heirs &c. to perform the award, he will be bound, whether he has assets or not. 1 T. R. 691; Watson on Part. 4; Tol. on Ex. 465. We are here to enquire, whether these principles can be properly applied to the case before us. Here the defendant, as administrator of Taggart, entered into á submission to an arbitration, and bound himself and his heirs to perform the award, The action had been brought upon the bond or article of submission ; the defendant cannot, therefore, avail himself of these pleas, for it was his own personal covenant, which, in a suit at law, he cannot gainsay or deny, unless we can find some paramount rule of construction applicable to the case,-by which he can evade the former. Covenants are to be construed according to their spirit and intent, which is to be gathered from the whole context, 6 Johns. R. 50; 7 East, 240; Bac. Abridg. tit. Covenant. What, then, is the true intent of the defendant’s covenant here. The object of the submission was to ascertain, by the judgment of third persons, whether anything was due from the estate of the defendant’s intestate to the plaintiff, upon a fair adjustment of the accounts and business of said firm, as between themselves. The arbitrators were to determine the balance that should be due; and the defendant bound himself personally to abide such decision. That
Hornblower, C. J. and White, J. concurred.
Ether, J. absent.
Whitehead, J. did not hear the argument.
Demurrer sustained, as to all the pleas except the eighth, ninth and tenth, and overruled as to them.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ROBERT McKEEN v. EAYRE OLIPHANT
- Status
- Published