278 Pa. 9 | Pa. | 1923
Opinion by
We have before us an appeal from a decree dismissing a bill in equity.
Defendants comprise the full membership of Altoona Castle, a subordinate association in a fraternal beneficial 'organization, of which plaintiff, appellant, is the parent body.
In June, 1920, defendants, by unanimous action, distributed among themselves the sum of $5,900 of funds belonging to their castle. In April, 1921, defendants all signed a resolution formally dissolving the castle and retaining as their own property, for future division among them, the balance in the treasury. Upon the refusal of the Grand Castle’s demand for these funds, plaintiff filed this bill in equity, praying for delivery to it of the cash and property on hand, and for the appointment of a receiver to recover the moneys already distributed.
The court below found the property in controversy constituted a trust fund for the payment of sick and death benefits to the members of Altoona Castle, but concluded that, on dissolution of the latter, its funds could be divided pro rata among its surviving members, and accordingly dismissed the bill. Appellant contends this was error because contrary to the laws of defendant castle, the Grand Castle, and the State of Pennsylvania.
As ordained in the general laws of the parent body, the constitution of Altoona Castle provides, “Any division of the funds among the members is illegal.”
The constitution of the Grand Castle states, by paragraph 67, that “When a [subordinate] castle is ......dissolved it shall......deliver its......funds
The Act of June 20,1883, P. L. 132, is written into the fundamental laws of the order, and this fact, of itself, brings Altoona Castle and its members within the provisions of that statute. After a long preamble stating the purposes of the legislation, which statement is applicable to the condition of affairs here presented, the act provides: “That the funds and effects of unincorporated associations for benevolent, charitable, or beneficial purposes, constituted or organized under any warrant or charter granted by any association recognized or acknowledged as the parent or superior body, where the rules and regulations of such parent or superior body require that, upon the dissolution, expulsion, surrender of warrant or charter, or vacation of the same by such parent or superior body, the moneys, property and effects of such subordinate association shall be delivered and paid to the parent or superior body, are hereby declared to be trust property, and it shall be unlawful for any such subordinate association to divide or distribute the moneys, property or effects, or any part thereof to and among the members of such subordinate association or any member thereof, either directly or indirectly, or by way of donation, but all such moneys, property and other effects of such subordinate associations, upon the dissolution, expulsion, surrender of warrant or charter, or vacation of the same by the parent or superior body
The statute in question is not only an act of our general assembly, but, as already said, it was expressly adopted in the general laws of the Knights of the Golden Eagle of Pennsylvania, and thus it was subscribed to by all members of the order, including defendants, who now contend, however, the Castle of Protection, whereby the trust obligations of the Act of 1883 are to be carried out by plaintiff, affords them no proper protection, because paragraph 69 of the constitution of the parent body provides: “All funds and other property received by the Grand Castle from a dissolved, suspended or defunct castle, or the amount received from sales of such property......, shall be held in trust by the Grand Castle for the use of such members of the defunct, dissolved or
Article 101, above referred to, stipulates that, before a member of a defunct castle can join the Castle of Protection, the dissolution of his castle must have been approved by the executive board of the Grand Castle, and article 107 requires that application for such membership be made within six months after the date of dissolution. Defendants read these provisions as containing stipulations that, on the conditions existing in this case, would bar them from membership in the Castle of Protection; and, they claim, the proviso in paragraph 69, quoted above, as to funds of a dissolved castle becoming the property of the Grand Castle, should no members of the defunct subordinate join the Castle of Protection within six years, is confiscatory.
To the contentions just stated, plaintiff replies: “The fact that the appellees have not applied for membership in the Castle of Protection or that the dissolution [ of their subordinate castle] has not been approved by the executive board, is beside the issue. It could hardly be expected that a dissolution which was irregular in form or prohibited by the laws [of the order] would be approved, until the [required] conditions were complied with, and the limitation of six months as to membership only begins when the dissolution or surrender is approved. There is not the least doubt that after this issue is determined, and the fund paid to the Grand Castle for the use of the members of Altoona Castle in the Castle of Protection, that the dissolution will be approved by
We are of opinion particularly, iñ view of the above italicized concession, or self imposed construction, that the Castle-of-Protection feature of plaintiff’s organization sufficiently protects the membership of defendant body. This provides a trustee to take charge of the sick and death benefit fund and apply it to the purposes originally intended; but, if that security was not afforded members of a defunct subordinate association, as contemplated by the Act of 1883, plaintiff, having incorporated the statute into its laws, could be made to give such protection,- and bring itself within the statute. The provision in the laws of the order, concerning the funds of a defunct subordinate becoming, under certain conditions, the property of the parent body, “for the use of the Castle of Protection,” claimed by defendants as confiscatory, can in no proper sense be so classed; it is a reasonable provision: the Grand Castle is pledged by these laws to finance the Castle of Protection, and the Act of 1883 particularly provides that the “parent or superior body to whom any moneys, property or other effects of [a defunct] subordinate association shall be paid and delivered shall......hold the same for the purposes and intents for which they were......held by such subordinate associations.”
Defendants contend, however, the Act of 1883 “has no application to the present case.” They would have us rule that the statute applies only where the parent, or superior, body is the active force in bringing about the dissolution of the subordinate, that is to say, where it expels or causes the surrender or vacation of the latter’s charter. With this view we cannot agree.
The statute in question is entitled, “An act to provide for the disposal of the property of unincorporated associations, organized for benevolent, charitable or bene
State Council, etc., v. Emery, 219 Pa. 461, differs in essential particulars from the case at bar, and does not control here. In the present instance, as before noted, the Act of 1883 is expressly made' part of the contract between the parties, its terms being written into the law of the order; this was not so in the Emery Case. Here provision is made by the laws of the order for carrying out the trust, features of the Act of 1883, which was not done in the other case. There are many other material differences, which will impress anyone reading the two cases, that need not now be discussed.
True, the writer of the opinion in State Council v. Emery expresses views (not essential to the decision) concerning the proper interpretation of the Act of 1883, and cites certain textbook writers, and cases from other jurisdictions, questioning the legal right of a supreme body to take over the funds of a subordinate association when it expels or cancels the charter of the latter, under authority of general laws of the order providing for
In Schriner v. Sachs, 253 Pa. 611, 617, referring to State Council v. Emery, supra, and Wolfe v. Limestone Council, 233 Pa. 357, both of which are relied on by defendants, we said: “These cases merely decide that [on the facts there involved] a state council, after revoking the charter of a subordinate council, is not entitled to funds contributed by members of the subordinate council for sick and funeral benefits, or property belonging to it and contributed by its members previous to the revocation of its charter.” We repeat, there has been no revocation of charter here; and the authorities in question do not control the present case, for this and many other reasons already indicated.
The compact to which defendants subscribed, upon becoming members of the Knights of the Golden Eagle, stipulates certain benefits to be enjoyed and obligations to be assumed, one of which is, upon a dissolution of their subordinate association, to pass over all funds to the Grand Castle, so that body may continue in its own proper way to carry out the general trust on which such funds had theretofore been held, and this obligation defendants must perform. Of course, no one can compel defendants, or any of them, to accept- the Castle-of-Protection membership offered by the laws of the order and
The decree of the court below is reversed and the bill reinstated for the entry of a proper decree in accord with the views expressed in this opinion; the costs to.be charged on the fund.