321 Mass. 468 | Mass. | 1947
The plaintiff appeals from a final decree dismissing his bill after the entry of interlocutory decrees sustaining the demurrers of the defendants.
The case made by the bill is as follows: The plaintiff is a member in good standing of Regas Phernaios, a voluntary unincorporated society established for the purpose of promoting the welfare and mutual interest of “members of the Greek race” residing in Boston and other parts of Massachusetts, and brings this bill on his own behalf and on behalf of other members of the society who may wish to join. The defendants are also members of the society and have been officers of it.
The grounds assigned by each defendant in support of his demurrer are the same. One of them is that the bill is not sufficiently definite and certain. Since we are of opinion that the demurrers were rightly sustained on this ground, it is unnecessary to consider the other grounds.
It is an elementary rule of equity pleading that the bill
Decree affirmed with costs.
In these decrees the plaintiff was given leave to amend but he never did so.
Giatas and Gikas were secretaries and Georgian was treasurer.