Scates v. Wilson
Scates v. Wilson
Opinion of the Court
(after stating the facts of the case, as above detailed) said : The plaintiff in error seeks to reverse the judgment, because, as his counsel contends, the defendants in error had no right to submit the suit brought by them against Rice to arbitration, and because the act of limitations is a bar to the action. The demurrers and the instruction moved are but different modes of raising these questions.
The declaration alleges the assignment, the suit brought, the agreement to refer, the award that the bond had been discharged by payments and offsets claimed by the obligor, and the judgment thereon. From these facts it infers the liability of the assignor; and, as I think, rightly infers it. Whether the award bound him or not, the judgment of the court is to be presumed to be right until the contrary is shewn. This was a sufficient foundation for the assumpsit, unless the defendant could controvert the facts found by the award, and shew that the judgment was erroneous. The assignees had a right to submit the case to arbitration, even though the award might not bind the assignor, or be evidence against him; and the judgment was binding, unless he could make it appear that the facts stated in the award, upon which the plaintiffs lost the cause, did not exist. These facts he was at liberty to controvert, and I presume he did controvert them before the jury, who distinctly reaffirm them in the special verdict.
The judgment must therefore be affirmed.
The other judges concurred. Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Scates v. Wilson & Edmunds
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- Published