280 Mass. 58 | Mass. | 1932
This is an appeal by the defendants from a final decree entered for the plaintiffs upon a bill in equity, brought by the plaintiffs to restrain the defendant corporation, the officers and members thereof, and one other, from representing the corporation to be, and from permitting it to act in and for and by the name of, the unincorporated plaintiffs’ organization, and for an accounting. This case and the case of The St. George Ladies Society vs. Hamaty et al. were sent to a master and were heard together. The master filed an extended report dealing fully with both cases. No objections were formally taken to this report as finally settled, and it was duly confirmed by the interlocutory decree.
The pertinent facts taken from the voluminous report are
On December 26, 1928, a regular meeting of the Ladies Society was held in the church hall. No action was taken in reference to incorporation. At that time the Ladies Society consisted of approximately one hundred fifty members.
From January 2, 1929, on, for many months, regular meetings were held on Wednesday evenings at the church hall with no outward sign of any change in activity. Some members of long standing attended these meetings in ignorance of the incorporation. There never has been any vote to transfer any money or property to the corporation; the bank in which the society funds were on deposit was not notified of any change; money taken in after March 7, 1929, was deposited in the same bank account. The same persons served as officers after the incorporation; the same record book was used, and substantial sums of money, in all $1,100, at meetings were voted and paid to the Church Society. It was never proposed in writing to change the name from St. George Orthodox Ladies Society to St. George Ladies Society or to change the purposes set forth in the by-laws of the St. George Orthodox Ladies Society.
On December 26, 1929, fifty-two women met at the church hall in consequence of a notice to them and to all known members of the Ladies Society not incorporators. There is no evidence that any of the twelve women incorporators was notified of the intended meeting and none of them attended it. At this meeting it was decided that the “Society elect new officers and continue its activities like the past,” that is, as before the incorporation. The officers elected were the so called Hamaty group, and they are the individuals named as representative plaintiffs in this action. Thereafter, meetings were held regularly on Friday evenings in the church hall, with the consent and approval of the Church Society, by such as chose to attend meetings controlled by the Hamaty officers, and meetings were held regularly on Wednesday evenings in the church hall by those who favored the corporation. The Hamaty group kept a new record book — the old one was retained in the possession of the corporation group —-
The defendant Nasim Khouri was a former president of the Church Society. He had long known the by-laws of the Church Society and was familiar with the activities of the Ladies Society. He learned of the incorporation of the Ladies Society after that event. Thereafter he favored the chartered society, did all he could to persuade the Church Society authorities to abandon the demands made for charter and by-law changes and aided the incorporators and the corporation in this litigation. In February, 1930, a voluntary association was formed, called the St. George Orthodox Antiochian Church Society, with by-laws
No objections to the final report being filed, the facts found therein are to be taken as true.
In substance the final decree enjoined the corporation from representing that it was the women’s unincorporated association connected with the Church Society, from using and conducting any corporate business under its corporate name, under the name St. George Orthodox Ladies Society or any similar name except for the purpose of paying such moneys to the St. George Orthodox Ladies Society as are to be paid under the terms of the decree; enjoined the individual defendants from interfering in any manner whatsoever with the activities of the plaintiffs; and decreed that the plaintiffs, the St. George Orthodox Ladies Society, had the exclusive right to the use of the name St. George Orthodox Ladies Society under the constitution and by-laws. In substance, it provided in paragraph 6 that the corporation should pay into court for the benefit of the Ladies Society $1,526.78 within thirty days from the date of the decree; in paragraph 7 that Frances Abosard, in substance, shall pay into court for the benefit of the Ladies Society “such part of said sum as shall not be so paid into court to the amount of . . . $1079.12 within ten days after the expiration of said thirty day period”; in paragraph 8, that the defend
The paragraphs of the final decree before us, numbered 1-5, inclusive, and 8, 9, and 10, are based upon facts which are similar to and essentially like those reported in the case of Balukonis v. Lithuanian Roman Catholic Benefit Society, 272 Mass. 366. In that case some of the members of a voluntary association met at a special meeting, of which only they were notified, and decided to incorporate. A charter was obtained and on the same day the president took it to a regular monthly meeting of the association, which was neither an annual nor a semiannual meeting and for which no notice had been sent to the mem- . bers. The officers elected at this meeting had been nominated in the previous November as officers of the association. In the case at bar the officers named in the charter were still acting as officers of the association and continued so to act for many months. In the Balukonis case the members voted unanimously to accept the work of the board in obtaining the charter. In the case at bar the master finds that in fact there was never any unanimous approval before incorporation of the plan of incorporation, nor was there any unanimous vote to go on after the incorporation. In the Balukonis case there was nothing in the evidence to show action or knowledge on the part of members of the society other than their vote. In the case at bar there is no evidence that any member ever took part in such a vote, and the master finds that on May 30, 1928, the record of the meeting held on May 23, 1928, “did not contain the matter . . . about a vote to go on with incorporation”; and “that at no time did the society ever approve the record in its altered form.” In the Balukonis case no notice concerning the charter was
In the case above referred to it was held that the plaintiffs were entitled to relief; that the association “was not dissolved by the incorporation” (page 370); that there was not even a valid vote of the association that a corporation be formed. McFadden v. Murphy, 149 Mass. 341. Sabourin v. Lippe, 195 Mass. 470, 480. Upon the facts there found, as in the case at bar, no merger of the association with the corporation was accomplished. A merger
The election of new officers by the Hamaty group was legal in this case on the same ground that such action was legal in McFadden v. Murphy, 149 Mass. 341, and in Balukonis v. Lithuanian Roman Catholic Benefit Society, 272 Mass. 366.
As respects paragraph 10 of the final decree, it seems obvious that the exhibits therein referred to are the property of the Ladies Society and not of the corporation or of the individual defendants, and that the association members are entitled to have and control such documents and things as are enumerated in the final decree. McFadden v. Murphy, 149 Mass. 341, 346. Donovan v. Danielson, 271 Mass. 267, 272. Balukonis v. Lithuanian Roman Catholic Benefit Society, 272 Mass. 366, 372.
It is clear, and is not denied by the defendants, that the plaintiffs are entitled to an accounting of the $742.45 which was standing to the credit of The St. George Ladies Society when the defendant corporation was incorporated on March 7, 1929, and assumed through its officers the control of the society’s bank account. It is shown by the society’s records that from March 7, 1929, until February
Paragraph 7 of the final decree should be affirmed for the reason that the treasurer, Frances Abosard, called in the report Frances Bousard, while treasurer of the society represented by the plaintiffs and also while treasurer of the corporate defendant, drew a check for $900, payable to herself, on the funds on deposit to the credit of the plaintiffs and diverted the proceeds to purposes other than the interests of the plaintiffs, and that this action was in violation of the by-law of the association.
We do not find any ground upon which that part of the final decree against Nasim Khouri which is set down in paragraph 9 of that decree can stand; it must therefore be reversed.
It follows that paragraph 9 of the final decree is reversed and that the decree as so modified is to be affirmed with costs.
Ordered accordingly.