38 N.J. Eq. 24 | New York Court of Chancery | 1884
This suit is brought by the State Council of the Order of United American Mechanics of the State of New Jersey, a corporation under the laws of this state (P. L. of 1871 p. 356), to recover certain money belonging to Delaware Council, No. 53, of this state, a subordinate council chartered by the complainant in November, 1870, which money, according to the charter, on the dissolution of the subordinate council, whether by forfeiture of
The defendants, by their answer, insist that the state council has not authorized this suit; that the contingency on which their council was, by its charter,, bound to deliver over its funds and property to the state council, has not occurred, seeing that the charter of the subordinate council has not been forfeited, because the constitution of the complainant provides that a charter of a subordinate council shall not be forfeited until such council shall have been duly notified and opportunity offered to answer the charges preferred against it, and no charges have been preferred against their council. They also insist that the state council has, since the granting of the charter to their council, passed laws or made orders appropriating to itself funds and property delivered to it by a disbanded council, unless reclamation thereof, by a re-organization, be made in three years, and that such provision is in violation of the rights of subordinate councils ; that the state council is insolvent, and that their council was informed by the state councillor and state council secretary, at one of its meetings, held while the subject of the distribution complained of was in contemplation, that it had a right to make such distribution. They also urge that their council is a corporation under the laws of this state, and that, therefore, suit should be brought against it, and not against them, for any relief to which the state council may be entitled in the premises.
The defendants have willfully violated the law of the society in dividing up its funds among themselves and taking them to their, own use. Of these funds, part, at least (that called the widows’ and orphans’ fund), was the accretion of years, and it is
It is not necessary for the complainant to show a vote of the state council to authorize the bringing of this suit. The suit is
The fact that the subordinate council was incorporated does not affect the right of the complainant to recover the moneys received by the defendants. The complainant has a right to follow the trust fnnds into the hands of the defendants.
Delaware council was in fact dissolved. It formally disbanded, divided up its funds among the members, and surrendered its charter. That was a dissolution. There will be a decree that the defendants pay to the complainant the council and widows’ and orphans’ funds, and the costs of this suit.