92 Me. 211 | Me. | 1898
The defendant was a member of the Elm 'City Club, an organized, unincorporated association. He refused to pay his dues to the Club to the amount of twenty-four dollars, and for billiards, five dollars and ninety cents, and this action is brought to recover these amounts.
To obviate the technical objection to the .maintenance of an action at law which arises when an organized, unincorporated association seeks to enforce a claim against one of its members, inasmuch as he would be in such case both plaintiff and defendant, and as well the inconvenience of suing in the names of all the members in an action against a third person, Chapter 191 of the Public Laws of 1897 provides that such an association “may sue in the name of its trustees for the time being.”
In the writ in this case the defendant is called to answer unto “the Elm City Club of Belfast, an organized, unincorporated association, which sues this action in the name of Charles E. Knowlton, Ben D. Field, W. J. Dorman, H. T. Field, John G. Damon, Fred G. White, W. H. Quimby, W. C. Libbey and F. R. Woodcock, its trustees.” The defendant pleaded the general issue, and the case comes to us on report.
The defendant urges that there is no party plaintiff in court, that the Elm City Club is a legal myth, that a voluntary association as such is not recognized in law as a party to an action. The plaintiff replies that if the defendant wished to raise the question of
The defendant in the next place says that the action cannot be maintained, because the parties named were not in fact trustees. This defense should have been made by plea in abatement. The plea of general issue admits the capacity of the plaintiffs. Upham v. Bradley, 17 Maine, 423; Trustees, Ministerial & School Fund in Dutton v. Kendrick, 12 Maine, 381; Abbott v. Chase, 75 Maine, 83.
The defendant next says that indebitatus assumpsit upon an account annexed will not lie for “dues,” but that the suit should have been brought specially upon the defendant’s written contract to pay dues. The by-laws of the association, signed by the members, including the defendant, constitute the contract. Under these by-laws, dues were to be paid quarterly. The amount of the quarterly dues was fixed annually. There is no pretense but that
The defendant further objects that the account annexed is uncertain, indefinite and altogether insufficient. What might have been the result had he demurred, it is unnecessary to say. When a case is submitted to the law court on a report of the evidence, objections such as these are considered as waived, unless the contrary appears. Pillsbury v. Brown, 82 Maine, 450. There is no merit in- the defense. The uncontradicted evidence shows that the defendant was a member of the Elm City Club, that the by-laws provided foi quarterly dues, that the amount of the dues had been fixed, and that neither they nor the amount due for use of billiard tables have been paid.
Defendant defaulted.