Pepin v. Societe St. Jean Baptiste
Pepin v. Societe St. Jean Baptiste
Opinion of the Court
The question raised is whether the by-law set up in the plea is a bar to the present action.
By-laws of a society are intended for the internal govern *82 ment of its affairs. When they are confined within this scope, courts have no jurisdiction or control over their administration. For example, courts cannot undertake to correct matters which only relate to discipline or procedure in such bodies. By-laws are, however, in the nature of a mutual contract, and to that extent the action of a society under them may be reviewed by a court to preserve personal rights which involve sdmething more than the mere formal action of the "society — such as insurance, rights of property, or an illegal exercise of power.
The by-law in this case raises the question whether the provision to submit to an arbitration which shall be final is binding on the plaintiff as a member of the society.
It is a question involving a pecuniary interest which is termed by most cases a property right.
Upon this question there have been two lines of decision. On one side are those cases which hold that a person who becomes a member of a society thereby agrees to its by-laws so as to be bound by them to the extent of having assented to a tribunal whose decision is to be final and, hence, not reviewable by a civil court; that such an agreement is not contrary to public policy, because by it such person has waived nothing which lie had not the right and power to waive; and that such tribunal is constituted for the express purpose of settling the difference between members and the society without recourse to legal proceedings. Of this class of cases the following are examples: Hembeau v. Great Camp, 101 Mich. 161; Canfield v. Knights, 87 Mich. 626; Osceola Tribe v. Schmidt, 57 Md. 98.
Among the conditions thus imposed, the one upon which this case arises has often been considered by courts', and that is in regard to a by-law which makes a finding by a committee or by arbitrators, not simply a condition precedent to recovery, but a final and conclusive adjudication between the parties, and so a bar to an action.
The by-law in question involves two conditions: one to submit future disputes to arbitration, and another to make the decision final. Both conditions are objectionable as a bar to a suit. The general rule as to arbitrations,, outside of covenants in a deed, is that a party may at any time, before award made, revoke the authority of the arbitrators. Sherman v. Cobb, 15 R. I. 570. It would be idle to compel a party to enter into an arbitration which he can forthwith revoke, and which, in order to preserve his rights, he must reyoke before an award is made. Reed v. Washington Ins. Co., 138 Mass. 572. Hence the agreement to submit such disputes as may arise in the future have no binding force, *84 except in cases where it amounts only to a condition precedent to recovery. The finality of such an agreement is objectionable for several reasons. The reason generally given is that it ousts courts of jurisdiction, and so deprives a party of his rights under the law. While. he may waive those rights in a given case, when he knows the circumstances and the effect of his act, it is held to be contrary to public policy for one to bar himself in advance from a resort to the courts for some future controversy of which he can have no knowledge at the time of the original agreement. At first sight this may seem to interfere with the obligation of a contract, but it is not so. All the elements of the contract affecting-liability remain, the agreement to arbitrate relating only to remedy. It is to be presumed that a just decision will be reached in either case, and hence neither party suffers injury. A resort to the courts may be very necessary to a claimant because he cannot compel the attendance of witnesses before a voluntary tribunal; or the matter may be of so great interest to the members as to preclude impartial arbitrators. The society, on the other hand, may at any time, if it does not wish to arbitrate, compel a claimant to resort to the courts by refusing to arbitrate or to pay; hence the obligation is not mutual, except in theory.
The right.of a party to resort to a court, notwithstanding an agreement to arbitrate, is sustained by the following cases : Bauer v. Samson, 102 Ind. 262; Kinney v. Baltimore, 35 W. Va. 385; Supreme Council v. Forsinger, 125 Ind. 52; Daniher v. Grand Lodge, 10 Utah, 110; Wood v. Humphrey, 114 Mass. 185; Austin v. Searing, 16 N. Y. 112.
Cases involving similar questions have arisen from provisions in policies of insurance. In Nute v. Hamilton Mut. Ins. Co., 6 Gray, 174, a by-law required that an action at law should be brought in a particular county, and the policy was subject to the by-laws. Shaw, O. J., said that the remedy does not depend -on contract, but on law; and a plea that the suit was not brought in the county named in the by-law was held not to be a defence to the action. Ins. Co. v. Morse, 20 Wall. 445, raised the question whether a statute, requiring *85 every foreign, company doing business in the State to enter into an agreement that the company would not remove a suit for trial in the federal courts, was valid. It was held that such a statute was unconstitutional and the agreement void. If by-laws, contracts, and statutes abridging a right of resort to courts of law are invalid when they are .agreed to in express terms, for a stronger reason should they be held to be invalid when they are agreed to only by implication and relate to controversies which have not arisen and cannot be foreseen.
We therefore decide that the plaintiff’s demurrer to the defendant’s plea is sustained.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Majorique Pepin v. Societe St. Jean Baptiste.
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- Published