127 F. 635 | 5th Cir. | 1904
after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
The judge of the Circuit Court appears to have made no announcement of the ground on which he sustained the motion of the defendant for peremptory instructions. The motion appears to have been oral, or, if made in writing, is not brought up in the record. In the brief submitted by the counsel for the plaintiff in error it is said that:
“Obviously the court’s direction of the verdict must have been based on the idea that the sovereign camp, the real corporation, was not responsible for the action of the individual members in the initiation, because the method pursued by them was not the method prescribed in the ritual, which was their book of rules given by tlie sovereign camp for just such initiations.”
In the brief submitted by the counsel for the defendant in error are these three suggestions in support of the action of the trial court:
“First. There was no such relationship existing between the sovereign camp and the Water Valley Camp which would make the one responsible for the unauthorized acts of the other, and therefore the general doctrine of master’s or principal’s liability for the acts of the servant or agent does not apply.
“Second. The sovereign camp is nothing more than a mere trustee to distribute the funds of the individual members of the various local lodges, collected for specific benevolent purposes. It has no power to acquire properly, except by contribution from its members, who only contribute for payment of death losses and the actual expenses of carrying out the system of distribution.
“Third. The scintilla rule does not control in the federal court, and therefore, i under the facts of this case, the trial court felt that it would be unconscionable' to permit a verdict for the plaintiff.”
A full examination of the proof in the case clearly shows that the third one of these suggestions is not well taken. It is evidently pointed at the conflict in the testimony on the issue as to whether the plaintiff was hurt in the lodge at Water Valley. On that issue there is evidence tending to support his contention. . If neither of the other grounds justified the withdrawing of the case from the jury, it is clear that it should not have been withdrawn.
As to the second of these suggestions, it is sufficient for us, at this time, to say that except so far as it may be considered in connection with the first suggestion, which we will discuss later, the record does not show us the terms of the charter of the sovereign camp, or of its constitution and by-laws, if such exist; nor is the substance of these shown by any of the testimony offered on the trial.
Before considering the first suggestion made by the counsel for the defendant in error, we will notice the substance and effect of the remark taken from the-brief of the counsel who appeared for the plaintiff in
“It is quite' clear that the servant, acting in the line of his duty, business, and employment, will render the master liable for the acts he does. It is at times difficult to determine what, acts of the servant will be considered to be done within the line of his duty, business, and employment”
The proposition of the counsel is that the members and officers of the Water Valley lodge did the plaintiff hurt, and their principal, the defendant, is liable for damages. The general doctrine here suggested is familiar, but the researches of counsel have discovered very few authorities where issues of this kind have been passed upon, involving injury by initiation in secret orders. In addition to the case mentioned above, he cited the case of State v. Williams, 75 N. C. 134. In this latter case the individual who inflicted the injury was charged with assault and battéry. The proof showed that the prosecutrix had been a member of the Society of Good Samaritans, and, having been remiss in some of her obligations, the society proceeded to perform the ceremony of expulsion, which consisted .of a suspension from a wall by a cord fastened around the' waist. The same ceremony had before been performed in the presence of prosecutrix. As soon as the cord hurt her she was released, and at once fainted. The court, in passing judgment, observes:
“When tbe prosecutrix refused to submit to tbe ceremony of expulsion established by this benevolent society, it could not be lawfully inflicted. Rules of discipline for this and all voluntary associations must conform to tbe laws. If tbe act of tying this woman would have been a battery had tbe parties concerned not been members of tbe Society of Good Samaritans, it is not tbe less a battery because they were all members of that humane institution. Tbe punishment inflicted upon the person of tbe prosecutrix was willful, violent, and against her consent, and thus contained all tbe elements of a wanton breach of tbe peace.”
This case might be authority, more or less persuasive, to support a conviction on a charge of assault and battery made against the individual members of the Water Valley lodge, who are shown to have struck the blow of which the plaintiff complains. In the other ’case cited the proof showed that the plaintiff, in the course of his initiation, was blindfolded by the conductor of the lodge, who was in the anteroom, and was then taken by him and given in charge to the conductor who was inside of the lodgeroom, and while in his charge the linen cover of an organ was held before him, and he was pushed violently by some one or more of the members at the small of the back, and sent forward about seven feet, and, at the same time coming in contact .with the organ cover, which was held so as to catch him a little above the knees, he was tripped, and, going beyond the cover, either at the side or at the other end, he struck the side of his head upon the floor, and, as he says, the’ cover was then raised, and his feet were raised by it, so that his back was hurt, and he felt he was hurt in the back. When he got up, the ceremony was then properly proceeded with. On the issue as to whether the plaintiff was hurt, the appellate court found that there was evidence to support the claim, and they would not be justified in interfering with the decision of the'trial court. On the issue as to the lia
“This proceeding, being taken in open lodge, while the principal officers and a number of the members were present, so as to constitute a full and perfect meeting, and where none but members and the candidate were or could be present, is manifestly a proceeding taken with the knowledge of all those who were there and who represented the corporate body; and where it appears that these and the other proceedings had taken place on such an occasion, and that they were allowed and not checked, it shows, I think, they were taken also with the consent of the body which was then in open lodge assembled.”
The opinion closes with this paragraph:
“The plaintiff has claimed compensation. That has been awarded to him. It will be better in all such bodies to enforce rigidly the directions given by the ritual of this order — ‘no rough usage to be allowed to the candidate’ — for a practical joke or lark at such time, although sport to the one party, may be very hurtful to the other, and might end quite differently from what was desired or what xjossibly could have been expected.”
If the Water Valley lodge or camp was a corporate body, authorized to sue or liable to be sued, and had been sued in this case, the authority just considered might be held to sustain a judgment against it for damages. In the Phoenix Lodge Case we may infer from the fact that the suit was entertained, and from the use of the language “corporate body,” as shown in the extract from the opinion given above, that this lodge was incorporated, so as to make it a legal entity and liable to suit as such. The report of the case does not furnish more satisfactory proof on this point. In the case before us the local camp, or lodge, as it is more frequently called by the members — probably because they are members also of other associations in which a like organization has the name of lodge — appears to have had a complete organization, presided over by a chief officer, who was aided in the conduct of its regular business by other officers, all of whom appear to have been selected and elected by the members of the lodge, and to fill places and stations in the lodge which could be filled, in the absence of the regular incumbents, by any of the obligated members present. It appears to have had appointed times of meeting at a designated hall, suitably equipped, and members of a given lodge, when a change of their residence or other cause made it desirable for them to change their connections from one local lodge to another, were able to do so under the respective rules. It was evidently a fully organized body — whether a corporate body or not is not expressly shown by the pleadings or the proof, or otherwise, except as it may be inferred from the admission of the counsel for defendant that the charter of the local camp of the Woodmen of the World was issued and granted by the sovereign camp under the laws of its order. Doubtless the Phoenix Lodge of I. O. O. F., above referred to, which appears to have been a corporate organization, had, besides its own corporate entity, if it was a legally incorporated body, a charter from the supreme or grand lodge of that order, or from some superior body in whose jurisdiction it was embraced, and from whom it derived its powers to initiate members and confer the degrees it was authorized to confer.
The only thing in the shape of a law, statutory or fraternal, brought up in this record, is the ritual prescribing the ceremony for communi
The case of Kinver v. Phoenix Lodge, supra; may be considered -as authority, more or less persuasive, for holding that whether it be a part of the regular prescribed ceremony of initiation or not, if the lodge would be responsible for the injury inflicted if it had been done during the progress of the regular ceremony and had been a part of it, the lodge would be equally liable when done, as this was done, in open lodge, when those present, as the members and officers here were present, would be taken as representatives of the organized body, and the body itself be held liable for their conduct. But, as we have already said, this case, for some reason, is not brought against the local lodge, but against the sovereign camp, and that brings us to consider the first of the suggestions made by the counsel for the defendant in .error. There is nothing in this record to show that the Sovereign .Camp of the Woodmen of the World did not exist, duly organized as such, before it became a corporation, and was duly organized as such under the laws of the state of Nebraska; nor is there anything in the nature of the case which excludes this assumption. The establishment of fraternal and benevolent associations may have a different and much wider foundation, for their support than the terms of a statutory charter may furnish. The great religious communions, branches of that .spiritual body Of believers which constitutes the chujrph and pervades civilization with its beneficence — not alms for the comfort of the physical man only, or chiefly, but fraternal fellowship and helpfulness, for the culture and upbuilding of the soytl and inspiring its possessor with the desire and ability to live a better life — have an organization complete, which is independent of the state. To the vital Organs and functions of this spiritual body it is convenient and useful to add cer
The secular interest may largely predominate in the fraternal order of Woodmen of the World, especially in ifs protection degree; but to hold that because the sovereign camp is admitted to be 'incorporated for some purposes not shown, and because it is not shown whether the Water Valley Camp is or is not incorporated, and because the Water Valley Camp is authorized by warrant or charter from the sovereign camp to communicate its protection degree to worthy applicants according to a ritual prescribed by the sovereign camp, that thereby the sovereign camp is put in such a position of master or principal of the Water Valley Camp as to constitute the latter the servant or agent of the former, so as to render the sovereign camp liable in civil damages to the plaintiff for injuries claimed by him to have been inflicted on him by the Water Valley Camp, or some of its members, in open lodge, while communicating to him the protection degree, is to carry the rule relied on far beyond the bounds of reported adjudications. The prosecution of suits against the great corporation carriers and other huge corporate industries, for the recovery of damages for personal injuries resulting from the negligent or wrongful action of their employés and agents, has become almost a separate industry, engaging the services of a large section of the legal profession. These cases crowd the reports of all the courts of last resort. To such an extent has that been done in late years, and is being done now, that appellate courts are familiar with the growth and extended application of the rule or rules determining the liability in civil actions of the principal or master for the conduct of the agent or servant, acting in the line of his duty, business, or employment.
The view we have taken of this case makes it unnecessary for us to consider, or at least to cite from, the current of authorities, beginning with the earlier cases of McManus v. Crickett, 1 East, . 106, and Wright v. Wilcox, 19 Wend. 343, 32 Am. Dec. 507, down to the more recent cases, one of the most interesting of which is Richberger v. Express Company, 73 Miss. 161, 18 South. 922, 31 L. R. A. 390, 55 Am. St. Rep. 522.
As has been already said, we are not furnished in this case with any proof as to the extent of the power and obligations conferred upon the Sovereign Camp of Woodmen of the World by its organization under and by virtue of the laws of the state of Nebraska. The proof bearing at all on the subject tends to support the second suggestion of the counsel for the defendant in error, to the effect that the sovereign camp is a mere trustee to distribute the funds of the individual members of the
In Knights of Pythias v. Withers, 177 U. S. 263, 20 Sup. Ct. 613, 44 L. Ed. 762, it appears that a general law of that order provided:
“Sec. 6. The secretary of the section shall forward to the board of control the monthly payments and dues collected immediately after the 10th day of each and every month.”
In that suit, which was on a certificate of insurance, the Supreme Court held that this secretary was the agent of the board of control as to the receiving and forwarding of the monthly payments and dues required to be collected and forwarded. And if this action were against the sovereign camp on a certificate of insurance it might be held, and doubtless would be held, that either the local camp or some one of its officers rvas the agent of the sovereign camp for the purpose of collecting and forwarding the assessments and dues, if, by the general laws of the order, these were required to be forwarded to the sovereign camp or to a certain one or ones of its officers. In such a suit the doctrine of agency, as the same has been so often and exhaustively considered in reference to policies of insurance issued by mutual or general stock companies, would be instructive and useful in enabling us to determine the relations between this local camp, or certain of its officers, and the sovereign camp, in connection with its contract of insurance issued in the shape of a certificate to members who had received the protection degree. But the numerous cases which fill the books, founded on these contracts of insurance by commercial companies, do not help us to determine the question of the liability sought here to be enforced against the sovereign camp. Taking all the proof in this case, we think the first suggestion of the counsel for the defendant in error is well taken, at least to this extent: that the plaintiff has not shown that there does exist between the sovereign camp and the Water Valley Camp such
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.