Oakley v. . Anderson

The action was commenced under the "Processioners' Act." The Code, Vol. 1, ch. 48.

(109) The processioner went upon the lands on 16 July, 1885, and being forbidden by the defendant Anderson to proceed farther, made his report to the clerk. A jury was then summoned by the sheriff, under a proper order, consisting of five freeholders. viz: B. A. Thaxton, C. C. Cozart, C. C. Townsend, R. A. Stanford, and A. S. Moore, all of whom met upon the lands in dispute, with C. A. Whitfield as surveyor, on 6 August, 1885, when the parties entered into the following contract, viz; It is agreed by the parties to this action that the jury be constituted arbitrators, and as such they settle the dispute in all things. and their award to be final and a judgment of the court in the cause, this 6 August, 1885, upon a penalty of five hundred dollars for failure on the part of either one who may refuse to abide thereby.

On the same day the following paper writing was filed as the award.: *Page 115

We find as our award in this cause that the lands between the disputed lines be divided into equal parts, giving plaintiff one-half thereof and defendant one-half thereof, by a line running half way between the two disputed lines, south 88 1/2 degrees east to the creek, and that plaintiff pay one-half the costs and the defendant the other half the costs, to be taxed by the clerk.

(Signed) B. A. THAXTON. R. A. STANFORD. C. C. COZART.

To which award the appellant filed exceptions and insisted:

1. That said submission was not made under a proper order of the court, and therefore no judgment can be entered thereon.

2. That said submission was made to five persons and that only three of said persons have signed the award, and for that reason no judgment can be entered upon said award.

The clerk overruled the exception and confirmed the report of the jury as arbitrators, from which ruling of the clerk the defendants appealed to the judge of the Superior Court, who at the August (110) Term of the Superior Court for the county of Person affirmed the judgment of the clerk, and from that judgment the defendants appealed to this Court.

The plaintiff contends that the report of the three freeholders was a compliance with section 1928 of the code, and their report was made by them as freeholders appointed to procession the land in controversy under that section.

The defendants on the other hand insist that it was not a report of freeholders under that section, but a submission by agreement of the parties to the five persons named as arbitrators, and the report was the award made by them under the submission, and this difference, in their contentions, present the first question for our consideration.

We are of opinion that it cannot be upheld as a report of freeholders under the processioning law, for the one reason, if no other, that they were not sworn. But besides, the law, section 1927, requires that the courses, length and course of each line, which shall be accompanied by a plat. The return of the freeholders to this Court was wanting in all these requirements. It does not pretend to give the boundaries of the land of the petitioner, and that was the very object of the law, but only to establish a line between the lands of the disputants, and give each the land on his side up to that line, and then it undertakes to decide how the costs should be paid, which was no part of the duty of the freeholders in the processioning act. *Page 116

But the report does contain many of the characteristics of an award of arbitrators. In the first place, where the five persons summoned by the sheriff met on the land on 6 August, 1885, before they were sworn to act as freeholders, for the record does not show that they were ever sworn, the parties entered into a contract by which it was agreed "that the jury" (that is the five persons summoned as freeholders) " be constituted arbitrators, and as such they settle the dispute in all things, and their award to be final, and a judgment of the court in the cause, (111) upon a penalty of five hundred dollars for the failure of either one who may refuse to abide thereby."

It is expressly agreed that the five persons named, without any oath being administered to them, hold be constituted arbitrators, and they are not only to establish disputed lines but settle the dispute in all things. That is within the power of arbitrators, but never of freeholders, under the law of procession, And then the report of these doings is called anaward, it was agreed that it shall be judgment of the court, the parties evidently supposing that such an award might be made a rule of court. And then a penalty is fixed, which is to be incurred by the party who should fail to abide by the award. This is often resorted to in submissions to arbitration to secure a compliance with their awards, k but such a thing is unheard of in the report of freeholders under the procession law. And lastly, the three persons who undertook to act as the arbitrators, in their award, adjusted the costs between the parties. Arbitrators have an implied authority to adjudicate concerning the costs of the cause — Morse on Arbitration and Award, 623 ; Watson on Arbitration and Award, 98. but the freeholders have nothing to do with the question of costs, and the very fact that they should have awarded the payment of the costs shows that they believed they were acting as arbitrators under the submission of the parties and not as freeholders, acting with the processioner. They themselves called it their award They say "we find as our award in this cause," etc. Our opinion is the freeholders acted as arbitrators, and the paper writing filed by them with the clerk was their award.

This brings us to another questions: As an award of arbitrators, was it such as a judgment of the court might be rendered thereon? We think it was not, for the reasons set out in the two exception taken by the defendants If the second exception should be sustained, it renders it unnecessary to consider the first, for if the award was void, of course no judgment could be rendered thereon.

(112) The submission in this case was to five persons as arbitrators, and only three concurred in making the award. In Norfleet v.Southall, 7 N.C. 189, it was held that when a reference is made to several persons the concurrence of all is necessary unless it is expressly *Page 117 agreed that a less number make the award; and to the same effect is Mackeyv. Neill, 53 N.C. 214. And these decisions are by no means affected by the provisions of subdivision 2, sec. 3768 of The Code, for that section has reference only to the construction of statutes an has no application to the private agreements of parties, such as the submissions to arbitrators and the like.

Our opinion is there is error, and that both the exceptions taken by the defendants should here be sustained. The judgment of the Superior Court is therefore overruled.

Let this be certified to the Superior Court of Person County, to the end that the case may be proceeded with according to law.

Error. Reversed.