US SUPREME COURT DECISIONS

THORNTON V. CARSON, 11 U. S. 596 (1813)

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U.S. Supreme Court

Thornton v. Carson, 11 U.S. 7 Cranch 596 596 (1813)

Thornton v. Carson

11 U.S. (7 Cranch) 596

Syllabus

An award is not void because it is in the alternative and contingent, nor because one of the alternatives requires the party to do an act in conjunction with others not parties to the award and over whom he has no control. chanrobles.com-redchanrobles.com-red

Page 11 U. S. 597

Two actions of debt, commenced at law by Carson against Thornton upon two bonds for the payment of money, were referred, by consent under a rule of court to arbitrators, who awarded that the first action should be marked and considered settled, and that the other also should be marked and considered settled provided that the defendant, Thornton, in conjunction with the trustees of the gold mine company of North Carolina, should convey and secure by a deed and assurance legally executed, with proper and usual covenants, unto John K. Carson, his heirs and assigns, for the benefit of the said John, and the heirs of Thomas Carson, deceased, on or before the 1 January, 1811, one eleventh part of all the minerals and mines that might thereafter be found upon a tract of land in the County of Montgomery and State of North Carolina, which by deeds bearing date 5 December, 1805, was conveyed by the said John K. Carson to the said William Thornton, and by the said William Thornton to the said trustees of the gold mine company, and that if such conveyance and assurance should not be made on or before the said 1 January, 1811, then in the first suit, judgment should be entered up by the court for the plaintiff (Carson) for the penalty of the bond, to be released on the payment of a certain sum expressed on the award, and also in the second suit judgment should be entered for the plaintiff for the penalty of the bond to be released on the payment of another sum also expressed in the award, and that upon receiving such conveyance and assurance, Carson should convey to Thornton five shares in the gold mine company of North Carolina which Carson had subscribed for on 1 April, 1806.

Exceptions were taken to this award 1st, because it is not final; 2d, because it is uncertain; 3d, because it is unreasonable; 4th, because it is contingent and conditional; 5th, because it is against law, and 6th, because it is no award.

But the court below overruled the exceptions and rendered judgment for the amount of the money mentioned in the award. chanrobles.com-redchanrobles.com-red

Page 11 U. S. 598

The defendant Thornton brought his writ of error, and his counsel insisted upon the following errors.

1. That the award was not final or certain, because its final determination depends on a contingency, and would be an award in favor of the plaintiff in one event and in favor of the defendant in another. It was also uncertain because there was no way of ascertaining whether the act to be done by the plaintiff in error and the other persons was or was not done, nor whether the conveyances were made as directed, nor whether they were "proper and sufficient," nor how nor by whom the entry was to be made in the suit, and the arbitrators could neither reserve this to be determined by themselves, nor leave it to be done by others.

It was also uncertain because it is not stated when the entry ("settled") was to be made in the suit in the one event, nor the judgment for the plaintiff in the other.

2. The award was bad because it required the plaintiff in error to do what was manifestly out of his power, viz., to get other persons to join him in executing a deed, which, if not impossible, was at least unreasonable.

It was also unreasonable because it required a deed to be made by the plaintiff in error, who is stated to have no title nor interest in the thing to be conveyed, and because it only required that the deed should be made, not that it should be delivered, so that the same would not have been binding upon the defendant in error; and therefore the award being uncertain, unreasonable and inconclusive as to one party, was to be so considered as to both. And

3. That the award was repugnant and void, being at first in favor of the plaintiff in error and determining that the suit should be entered "settled," and afterwards awarding that a judgment should be entered for the defendant in error upon a certain contingency. chanrobles.com-redchanrobles.com-red

Page 11 U. S. 599



























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