153 Wis. 13 | Wis. | 1913
The court properly dismissed the action as to' the American Society. The plaintiff stood in no contractual , relation to it and the services were not rendered under such circumstances as to imply an intention on its part to pay therefor, within the rule of Wojahn v. Nat. Union Bank, 144 Wis. 646, 129 N. W. 1068, and kindred cases. The services were not performed at its request, and there is nothing to show that it knew they were being rendered for the Wisconsin State Union, except the fact that, out of every initiation fee of one dollar, eighty cents were sent to it, fifty cents of which went to support the official paper of the Society and thirty cents to the support of the Society itself. It is also true that membership in the Wisconsin State Union entitled one to membership in the American Society. But plaintiff was hired exclusively by the Wisconsin State Union and was paid by it. The fact that his services to it ultimately benefited the American Society cannot, under the circumstances of this ease, be held to raise an implied promise on its part to pay therefor. It would be a dangerous and unreasonable doctrine to hold national unions or lodges responsible for services rendered to subordinate local unions or lodges on the ground that such services ultimately benefit the national union or lodge. The subordinate union, for the purposes of furthering its own interests, must alone be held liable-for services rendered it under an express contract by it to pay therefor, in the absence of facts or circumstances raising an implied promise to pay on the part of the superior -union or lodge. Especially must this be so where, as here, the subordinate union alone paid for such services for several years, and the action was for a balance due under the same contract under which services had been rendered to, and payment made by, it.
Was the action also properly dismissed as to the Wisconsin
“In the absence of statutory regulation permitting an unincorporated society to sue or to be sued in the name by which it is commonly designated, the members must sue or be sued as partners or persons jointly interested. The court will not permit them to sue or to be sued in the character of a society, nor will courts of equity lend their aid to petitioners coming before them in such a character. It is the exclusive prerogative of government to create corporations, and to invest them with power to sue,_ as such, by their corporate name; and upon principles of policy the courts of the country do not sit to determine upon charters granted by persons who have not the prerogative to grant charters.”
The defendant Wisconsin State Union, however, did purport to come into court and it answered to, and litigated, the merits. This it could not do as an association. As such it had no standing in court whatever and the court was power
The powers of this court under sec. 3071, Stats., are very broad and intended to cover every contingency that may arise upon any appeal. Pursuant to such powers the judgment as to the defendant the American Society of Equity of North America is affirmed. As to the defendant the Wisconsin State Union of the American Society of Equity the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded with directions to permit the plaintiff within thirty days after the remittitur is filed to substitute as defendants herein the individual members of the board of directors of the Wisconsin State Union at the time its answer was served, and for further proceedings according to law.
The mandate is made for further proceedings according to law because it appears by the record that the trial court never passed upon the merits of plaintiff’s exceptions to the findings of fact of the referee. The trial court should pass upon plaintiff’s motion to modify the referee’s report and enter judgment against the substituted defendants for such sum, if any, as it may find is due the plaintiff.
By the Court. — Ordered accordingly.
A motion for a rehearing was denied, with $25 costs, on April 8, 1913.