65 Md. 236 | Md. | 1886
delivered the opinion of the Court.
It is not our purpose, nor is it necessary, to review in detail the mass of testimony, oral and documentary, contained in, and by agreement made part of, this record. All that need be done is to state briefly the origin of the “ Endowment Sinking Fund,” over which the controversy has arisen, arid its status on the 10th of July, 1884, when the original bill in this case was filed.
The “Independent Order of B’nai B’rith,” (membership in which is confined to Israelites,) was instituted about forty years ago, and has sirice increased to such an extent that it now has numerous Lodges in most of the States of the Union. Originally the Order resembled in its main features that of the “ Odd Fellows ” and other similar voluntary organizations, for benevolent purposes, such as alleviating the wants of the poor and needy, visiting and attending the sick, and protecting and assisting the widow and orphan. The primary or subordinate Lodges are grouped into Districts, over which are District Grand Lodges composed of delegates elected by the subordinate Lodges upon a prescribed basis of representation. Above these is a “ Constitution Grand Lodge ” which meets once in seven years, composed of one delegate chosen by each Lodge from among its Past Presidents. There is also an Appellate Court for the settlement of controversies’ arising within the Order. Among the general laws is one which requires each subordinate Lodge to obey the ordinances, laws and resolutions of the “Constitution Grand
Jedidjah Lodge of Baltimore was the oldest and largest primary Lodge in this State. At first it belonged to District No. 1, and in 1852, received its documentary charter from the Grand Lodge of that District. Afterwards, it fell within the limits of District No. 5, and in 1867, received a similar charter from the Grand Lodge of that District. This latter District, whose limits were enlarged and changed, now includes the State of Maryland, the District of Columbia, and the States of Virginia, North’ Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia. There are thirty-four subordinate Lodges in this District, and of all these, Jedidjah Lodge, continued to be the largest in numbers up to the time the litigation in this case commenced. Two other facts important to be stated in this connection, and important to the decision of the questions before, us, are that in December, 1853, Jedidjah Lodge was incorporated under the Act of 1852, ch. 231, then in force, and in February, 1870, District Grand Lodge, No. 5, was also incorporated under the general Corporation Law of 1868, ch. 471.
For along period after its organization, Jedidjah Lodge divided its income into two funds: 1st, a beneficial fund, devoted to the expenses of the Lodge, the support of sick and distressed members, and for such useful and benevolent purposes as the Lodge might see proper to promote,
On the 7th of February, 1884, the District Grand Lodge, at a meeting held in Norfolk, Va., changed the form of registration, and directed that the bonds be registered “in trust for the Endowment Sinking Fund of District Grand Lodge, No. 5.” The effect of this was, or was supposed to be by those who opposed it, to vest the equitable title to the bonds in the Grand Lodge, and practically to take its fund away from each subordinate Lodge, or at least to deprive such Lodge of all control over it; and Jedidjah Lodge, at a meeting held on.the 6th of July following, by a very large majority of its members, refused to allow its bonds to be so registered. The same action was also taken by another large Lodge, and was defended upon the grounds first, that the Norfolk law was irregularly and illegally passed, and second, that the fund belonged to the Lodges, they having paid it in from their own means, and the Grand Lodge had no right to take it away from them by any legislation whatever.
Immediately afterwards, on the 10th of July, 1884, a small minority of the members of Jedidjah Lodge filed the original bill in this case against the five trustees of the Lodge. They also, but without any authority whatever, made the Lodge itself a party complainant with them. The main charges in this bill against the trustees are, that they have conspired with certain other members of the Lodge, fraudulently to deprive the Lodge and the complainants of all the funds in their hands, and to fraudulently divert them from the trust purposes to which they were devoted; that without any legal authority, they have
But another phase of the case is presented by what took place pending these proceedings. It appears that the District Grand Lodge, at a special meeting held on the 19th of August, 1884, forfeited the charters of these two
At the hearing the Court passed a decree directing the funds and securities in the hands of the receiver to be delivered and restored to the custody of Jedidjah Lodge, dismissing both the original and supplemental bills, without prejudice, dissolving the injunction, and discharging the receiver. Prom this decree, the District Grand Lodge, the complainant in the supplemental bill, has appealed.
As the case is thus presented, we do not see how .it is possible to reverse this decree. The Act of 1852, ch. 231, under which Jedidjah Lodge was incorporated, vested it with the usual corporate powers, including that of holding, using and disposing of property, real and personal, to the amount of $>50,000 ; and the Legislature reserved to itself the right “ to modify, amend or annul the charter of any corporation that may be formed or established under and by virtue of this Act.” Nothing can be plainer than the proposition, that the charter thus granted by the State cannot be forfeited by the Grand Lodge, whether acting in its conventional or corporate capacity. That charter can be annulled by the Legislature, or forfeited under such proceedings for that purpose as are authorized by statute or by the common law, and in no other mode, nor by any other agency. The utmost effect, therefore, that can be attributed to the action of the Grand Lodge on the 19th of August, 1884, is the forfeiture of the documentary or conventional charter which it granted to the appellee in December, 1853. But the appellee and the other defendants to the supplemental bill stand upon this State charter, which is still in force. They hold the funds in controversy, and have the right to hold them under the corporate powers thus conferred, and they so hold them, entirely unaffected by the forfeiture, by virtue of which alone the appellant, in its supplemental bill,'claims them. The affirmance of the decree may, therefore, be
Decree affirmed.