The agreement of 15th of March, 1871, is entitled as of a term of this court. It states the time when the writ was returnable and when it was entered ; it recognizes the *158suit as “now pendingit refers “all matters, charges, accounts and claims” involved in the suit for which this action was brought and “all matters, charges, accounts and claims” involved in the account in offset to two referees therein named, with power to choose a third in case they fail to agree, the three, or a majority, to have all the powers given to the referees named ; and it provides that the decision of the referees is to be final and is to be reported to the court and judgment is to be entered thereon, which judgment is to be final. .
There is no mistaking the intention of the parties. The action was to remain on the docket until the award of the referees was returned, and then judgment was to be rendered thereon. The agreement excludes the idea of a discontinuance, and it affirms the idea that the action was to remain on the docket until its final disposition in accordance with the terms of the agreement. If the clearly expressed will of the parties is to govern, there has been no discontinuance.
When parties select another and different tribunal from that in which a case is pending to settle their controversies, as when they enter into a reference of a pending suit at common law or into a statutory submission, the cause thus referred is thereby discontinued. Mooers v. Allen, 35 Maine, 276.
But when the terms of the agreement provide that the action is to remain upon the docket, and that judgment thereon is to be entered in accordance with the award of the referees, there is no discontinuance. In ex parte Wright, 6 Cow. 399, the court say “A general submission to arbitration is a discontinuance. Not so of a submission, where a judgment on the report - or a cognovit is to follow. By the very terms of the submission the cause is to be 'continued in court.” To the same effect is the decision of Savage, C. J., in Green v. Patchin, 13 Wend. 293. A mere submission to arbitration will not be a discontinuance of a pending suit, when by express agreement or necessary implication the cause is to be retained on the docket until the arbitration is perfected by •an award, and such an agreement will be implied from the stipulation that judgment shall be entered on the report or award. Lary v. Goodnow, 48 N. H. 170, reaffirmed in Weare v. Putnam, *15956 N. H. 49. So, in Rogers' heirs v. Nall, 6 Humphrey, 29, it was held that the court had power to enter up judgment upon an award made in a case pending in court, though the submission was by arbitration bond and not by rule of court, provided the submission contained a stipulation that the award -shall be made the judgment of the court.
Here, too, one of the referees declined to act. In Chapman v. Seccomb, 36 Maine, 102, it was held that, where the parties to an action pending in court agree in writing to refer it, with stipulations that it shall be withdrawn, each party to pay his own cost; if one of the referees declines to jict, the agreement becomes inoperative and the action may stand for trial.
The pro forma ruling of the presiding justice was erroneous. The cause is still pending and it will stand for trial in its order upon the docket.
Exceptions sustained.
Walton, Yirgin, Peters and Libbey, JJ., concurred.