Florence M. & R. Supply Co. v. International Agri. Cor.

WALKER, P. J.

This ivas an action on an account. By plea 2 the defendant set up:

“That prior to the bringing of this suit the subject-matter thereof was submitted by the plaintiff: and defendant, by mutual agreement between them, to arbitrators, and the defendant alleges that the arbitrators rendered their award in'words and figures as follows, to wit.”

Here ivas set out the alleged award, in which the parties to the arbitration were mentioned as “the International Agricultural Corporation and Major A. J. McGarry.” The averments of this plea are plainly to the effect that the plaintiff corporation participated in a submission to arbitration of the subject-matter of this suit, and that the alleged award resulted from that submission and arbitration. Obviously this plea is not subject to the grounds of the demurrer to it Avhich suggest its failure to-show that the plaintiff was in any way connected Avith or bound by the alleged arbitration, and that it shoAvs on its face that the plaintiff had no connection whatever Avith the alleged arbitration and award. The plaintiff’s participation in the submission to the arbitration of which the alleged award Avas the result could not well have been more pointedly averred. *466The remaining ground assigned in the demurrer to this plea is:

“That said plea is contradictory, in that it alleges an arbitration, and the award set out therein shows an •award had between defendant and A. J. McGarry.”

We are not of opinion that the averments of the plea are contradictory in the particular mentioned. While the award on its face does not suggest that it embraces any matter of controversy between the plaintiff and the defendant, nothing in its terms is necessarily inconsistent with the averments of the plea to the effect that the subject-matter of this suit was submitted to arbitration by the plaintiff and the defendant, and that the award embraced the claim sued on. If the plaintiff participated in the submission and arbitration, as the averments of the plea plainly allege that it did, it was bound by the finding that the defendant is “not to pay for crusher or any repairs for same.” The complaint in the case did not inform the court of the items embraced in the account sued on. It might be that that account was for the repairs mentioned in the above-quoted finding, for which, by the terms of the award, the defendant was not to pay. The conclusion is that the plea mentioned was not subject to demurrer on the grounds assigned.

The plaintiff sought to prove the account sued on by the testimony of A. J. McGarry. He stated that his business was running a foundry and machine shop, the name of which was that of the plaintiff, Florence Machine & Railroad Supply Company, a corporation of which he was president and general manager when the items constituting the account sued on were furnished. On the cross-examination of the witness there was exhibited to him a contract made by him with the defendant for the erection of a phosphate rock crusher, which *467contained provisions requiring him to replace any part of the machinery which might break or prove defective within one year after it was placed in operation, and for the arbitration of matters of disagreement arising out of the contract. The witness admitted on his cross-examination that the account sued on was for repairs of the crusher furnished within a year after its erection. There ivas also exhibited to the witness a number of letters written by him to the defendant in reference to the work done under the contract, and to the- arbitration of the matters as to which there was disagreement. These letters were written on stationery of the plaintiff, the Florence Machine & Railroad Supply Company. Some of them were signed in the name of that company, and some by “A. J. McGarry, President.” In one of the letters Avhich Avas signed in this Avay it Avas stated: “We are always willing and stand ready at any time to replace any broken parts Avhich. is caused by faulty material or Avorkmanship.”

An arbitrator was named in a letter signed “A. J. McGarry, President.” The defendant’s communications AArere addressed to “A. J. McGarry, Pres. Florence Machine & Railroad Supply Co.” It might well be that the plaintiff coporation undertook to carry out the contract Avhich was made by its president in his individual capacity, and the correspondence offered in evidence indicated that this Avas done, and that the plaintiff corporation, not its president in his individual capacity, was the party dealt Avith in the controversy as to the performance of the contract, and in the submission to arbitration of matters in dispute. In the first award that was made the plaintiff and the defendant were named as the parties to the arbitration. The defendant, in a letter addressed to “Maj. A. J. McGarry, Pres. Florence Mach. & R. R. Co.,” agreed that the two arbitra*468tors who joined in that award should meet again with a third man to he selected by them, go over the matters in controversy, and make an award, “with the understanding that, when such an award is made, it is to be a final settlement of all matters pertaining to the crusher, appliances, screens, and repairs.” Shortly afterwards another award was made pursuant to the suggestion contained in that letter. Under its plea of the general issue and its two special pleas setting up the two awards, it was permissible for the defendant to introduce evidence tending to prove that the items embraced in the account sued on where not chargeable against it, but were furnished by the plaintiff corporation pursuant to an obligation imposed by a contract entered into by its president, the performance of which it undertook in its own or in his behalf, and that the submission to arbitration was participated in by the plaintiff corporation, claiming under the contract entered into by its president, who seems to have had practically exclusive control of its operations. That such a state of facts existed was indicated by the correspondence brought out in the cross-examination of the witness, and we are not of opinion that the court was in error in admitting in evidence that correspondence, the contract to which it had reference, and the award made on a submission to arbitration to which there was evidence tending to prove that the plaintiff corporation was a party. It was open to the plaintiff to rebut the inferences that might be drawn from the facts elicited in the cross-examination of its witness; but it was not entitled to have the evidence of those facts excluded, as that evidence was pertinent to issues raised by the pleadings in the case.

Affirmed.