132 N.Y.S. 871 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1911
The plaintiff, a membership corporation, was incorporated in the State of Illinois in March, 1893. It consists of commission merchants, about 380 in number, and its purpose is set forth in its certificate of incorporation as follows: “The object for which it is formed is mutual aid in business, promotion of the best interests of shippers and receivers, and to promote good feeling among all its members with a special outlook for their welfare, and to foster and encourage by all lawful and proper means and in a fraternal and friendly spirit by organized effort their welfare.”
Branch leagues of the plaintiff were formed in several cities and one in the city of Buffalo early in 1908. The defendant became a member of' the plaintiff in 1894 and of the Buffalo branch when it was established.
Article 18, section 4, of the constitution and by-laws of the . plaintiff provides: “In the event of any dispute, or difference, arising between a party not a member of the League and a member of any Branch League, the party not a member may demand a trial of the case before the Arbitration Committee of the Branch of which the other party is a member, and it shall be the duty of said Arbitration Committee within thirty days to take up the matter and within ninety days report their decision to both of the parties-interested.”
In case either party is dissatisfied an appeal may be taken to the branch league, where a new trial is to be had, and a further appeal is permitted by the aggrieved party to the national executive committee, which is a committee of the parent organization and is composed of one member elected by each branch league. The party not a member must declare, however, in writing his willingness to abide by the decision of this final tribunal, and a retrial does not seem to be required on this final appeal. By section 5 of article 18 of the constitution refusal of a member to submit a disputed account to the arbitrament of the branch league is to be followed by his expulsion from the plaintiff.
In 1908 a claim against the defendant was presented by Loomis & Son, of Victor, N. Y., to the Buffalo branch league for a sum alleged to be due to them for a quantity of potatoes sold to him. The gist of the demand was that the sale had been made and the defendant refused without cause to accept the potatoes, and the claimants sold them at a loss, for which they sought to hold the defendant liable. The matter was submitted to the arbitration committee, consisting of three members of the branch league, and a trial was had, the defendant being represented by counsel, and a decision in writing signed by the three members of the committee was rendered in favor of Loomis & Son for seventy dollars and thirty-one cents damages, and ten dollars fees of the stenographer who took and
At the outset, it is contended by the respondent that the plaintiff had no authority to consider and pass upon the claim of Loomis & Son, as they were not members of the plaintiff. The.constitution and by-laws of the plaintiff distinctly provide for the determination of such a claim. It is not important whether the defendant could be compelled to comply with this
He claims that he was not given a fair trial and that the branch league and the national executive committee were composed in part of members who were biased and prejudiced against him. A man named Paine was one of the arbitration committee who decided adversely to the defendant. He was, of course, a member of the branch league, and when the new trial was heard by that body he was present and may have participated. The defendant objected to him acting when the retrial was on, and also to the participation of other members who were present. There was no charge that any one of these men had any bias or animosity against the defendant, or that he was interested in the litigation or even friendly to the claimants. The objection to Paine was that he had been a member of the arbitration committee and, consequently, had united in the determination against the defendant. The objection was not a valid one. A judge who tries an action may, by statute, be prohibited from participating in the decision of the case on appeal if he is then a member of the appellate court. The prohibition is wholly statutory. It may be that a man who is open to conviction and impartial may be the better qualified to reach a just determination of the action or proceeding upon the review by the appellate tribunal.
Paine was a member of the executive committee, the ultimate tribunal, and the defendant again objected to him taking part in the decision or being present at the hearing. The chairman of the committee replied that he had no authority to exclude Paine from attending or participating, as he was regularly a member of the appellate body. The defendant asked to be represented by counsel, and when this was refused, then in his own behalf, which was also denied. Loomis & Son were not present either in person or by counsel. Paine took part in the discussion of the appeal and may have voted,
After the decision the defendant met the chairman of the executive .committee “ and asked him whether they had gone over all the evidence, and he told him no, that they had not, that they only went over such part as he thought was essential to the case.”
In the first place, I doubt the competency of the admissions of the chairman of this tribunal to impeach its determination, and whatever there is in the record in any way assailing its validity is by declarations of the kind adverted to. Passing that, however, there is nothing in this informal street conversation with the chairman warranting any imputation upon the fairness of the conduct of the executive committee. The chairman was not required to read all the evidence or proceedings in the record presented. Other members may have read it and reported accurately its contents. Because of the division at one time among the members of the committee considerable discussion. arose, so that they would be apt to ascertain what the record contained. The decision finally allowed one-half of the claim presented. The record is not before us and for aught that we know the evidence.supported the conclusion reached. The value of the produce was in controversy, and it is not unreasonable to infer there was a divergence in the testimony of the witnesses on this subject. The presumption is that the evidence sustained the decision.
It is well settled that when a person becomes a member of an association and its charter provides a method for adjusting difficulties and settling conflicting demands, he assents to the scheme adopted; and, in the absence.of fraud or imposition or gross injustice, he will not be heard to impeach in the courts the validity of the decision against him, and the courts cannot examine the merits of the controversy. (Matter of Haebler v. N. Y. Produce Exchange, 149 N. Y. 414; Lewis v. Wilson, 121 id. 284; Baxter v. McDonnell, 155 id. 83, 101 et seq.;
When the defendant became a -member of the plaintiff he agreed to abide by its constitution and by-laws, which defined his relations to the organization, and was the contract by which he was to be bound. (Matter of Haebler v. N. Y. Produce Exchange, 149 N. Y. 415, supra; Belton v. Hatch, 109 id. 593; Bachmann v. New Yorker Deutcher Arbiter Bund, 64 How. Pr. 442.)
In the case first cited the court used this language (at p. ■ 421): “The relator had a right to become a member of this corporation, and to agree to be governed by its charter and by-laws, and when he did so they expressed the contract by which he and every other member were bound, and which measured their rights, duties and liabilities as members thereof.
"" * * ‘A member of a corporation may so hedge himself in by agreement as to yield the protection which one seeks in the ordinary affairs of life, and enlarge the authority that may be used against him.’ [People ex rel. Elliott v. N. Y. Cotton Exchange, 8 Hun, 216, 220.] Hence, to determine the rights of the parties to this controversy, we must be governed by the provisions of the appellant’s charter and the by-laws it has adopted. As the members, who assented to them, are bound by the charter and by-laws of the corporation, their rights are to be measured by them, and a member should not complain of an expulsion or suspension where the proceedings are authorized and are fairly conducted under its laws.”
The defendant consented to submit his claim to the original arbitration committee, and then by appeal he called upon the other tribunals to act upon the claim against him. He set these tribunals in motion to try and determine the validity and justness of the claim against him, and is effectually estopped from attacking successfully the jurisdiction of the tribunals or of their composition. (People ex rel. Brewster v. “ Old Guard,” 81 App. Div. 418, 485.)
Section 4 of article 13 of the constitution and by-laws confers authority upon each branch league to adopt its own by-laws if not in conflict with the constitution and by-laws of the national organization. In pursuance of this authority the
In view of the objects designed- to be accomplished by the organization the financial integrity and standing of its members was of special importance. The payment of his obligations, by each member of this small body was deemed necessary to its maintenance. In order to aid in the accomplishment of this purpose and to avoid litigation on the part of its members the plan mentioned for. the' speedy and just adjustment of disputed accounts was embodied in the organic: law of the plaintiff. In order to make still more effective this feature of the scheme the subordinate league in Buffalo imposed expulsion as the penalty to the member refusing to conform to the decision against him. This by-law is in harmony with the spirit of the organic law' and within the compass of the authority to make by-laws bestowed upon the branch league. The local league was composed of a few men and if a member repudiated the decision of that body or of the ultimate tribunal his continuance in membership might become an element of discord and impair the usefulness and efficiency of the organization.
The right of a voluntary association to provide in its constitution or by-laws expulsion as a penalty for an infraction or disobedience of its laws seems to be well settled. (1 Cooley Brief Law of Ins. 128 et seq.; Niblack Ben. Soc. & Acc. Ins. [2d ed.] § 38, et seq.; Matthews v. A. P. S. N. Y., 136 N. Y. 333, 339 et seq.; Taufer v. Brotherhood of Painters, 131 App. Div. 838.)
Such is the law in the State of Illinois, which granted to the plaintiff its charter. (Allen v. Chicago Undertakers Assn., 232 Ill. 458; People v. Board of Trade, 224 id. 310.)
None of the evidence in any of the hearings where the claim of the defendant was considered is before us, and we are not to assume that he did not have a fair trial or that the decisions
The judgment should be reversed.
All concurred, except McLennan, P. J., who dissented.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide event on questions of the law and facts.