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ARBITRATION

Volume 2 · 120 words · 1823 Edition

is where the parties, injuring and injured, submit all matters in dispute, concerning any personal chattels or personal wrong, to the judgment of two or more arbiters or arbitrators; who are to decide the controversy: and, if they do not agree, it is usual to add, that another person be called in as umpire (imperator or impar), to whose sole judgment it is then referred; or frequently there is only one arbitrator originally appointed. This decision, in any of these cases, is called an award. And thereby the question is as fully determined, and the right transferred or settled, as it would have been by the agreement of the parties or the judgment of a court of justice. See Law.