3 Kan. App. 288 | Kan. Ct. App. | 1896
The opinion óf the court was delivered by
The petition in this case alleges that the plaintiff is a corporation organized for the purpose of prospecting for gas, oil and mineral in and about the city of Le Noy, and that shortly after its organization there was organized in the city of Le Noy a society known as the Le Noy Aid and Improvement Society, which was not incorporated, and was organized as an auxiliary to the Le Noy Coal and Mining Company, for the purpose of assisting said company in the raising of a fund to carry on its work ; that, in pursuance of its organization, the said society, by the aid and assistance of the mémbers of said company, secured a sum of money'which was contributed with the express understanding on the part of all who secured the fund that said money should be held in trust by said society until it should be required for use by the
Upon the petition a temporary injunction was granted by the probate judge of Coffey county, and afterward an answer was filed denying the material allegations of the petition and alleging certain affirmative defenses. A reply was thereupon filed and, the cause coming on for-final hearing, judgment was rendered by the district court in favor of the defendants and against the plaintiff upon the pleadings in said action, from which judgment th’e Le Noy Coal and Mining Company brings the case here for review.
The final injunction in this case was properly refused. A fair and reasonable .construction of the petition shows that the claim of the plaintiff was that the money in question was received and held by the Le Noy Aid-and Improvement Society in trust for the plaintiff.' Such being the case, no final order could be made with respect to the fund unless the society was a party to the suit: In this case the society was not incorporated, and was, therefore, in the nature of a partnership, each individual member of which had an interest in any order which might be made concerning said fund. It may well be said that those who were made defendants in this cause were only nominally interested. It is true it appears that Mrs. E. Crowl was a member of the'society, and therefore had the same interest as any other member thereof; but she is made a party in this case not as a member
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.