243 S.W. 341 | Mo. | 1922
This is a proceeding in mandamus seeking to compel respondent to rescind its action in expelling relator from membership in the respondent society, and to restore his name upon the roll of members. The cause comes to this court upon certification from the Kansas City Court of Appeals. By the majority opinion of that court the judgment was reversed and the cause remanded with directions to the trial court to issue the peremptory writ. ELLISON, J., dissented in a separate opinion, and deeming the majority opinion in conflict with certain decisions of the St. Louis Court of Appeals and of this court, asked that the cause be certified here for final determination.
The material facts in the case, and the law applicable thereto, are thus stated in the minority opinion:
"It appears that the Kansas City Medical Library Club is made up of the members of the respondent, Jackson *151 County Medical Society, and is a practical part of that organization. The relator, then a member of the respondent society, made application to the Library Club to become a member thereof. His application was refused, and he was so notified. He wrote a letter acknowledging the notice to one of the members of the club, with the request that it be transmitted to the club. The letter is too obscene to be printed in full.
"On account of this letter the respondent, Jackson County Medical Society, instituted proceedings to expel him from that society. It required a three-fourths majority to put him out and the vote lacked one of the requisite number.
"It seems that an appeal was taken by respondent to the State Medical Society, and that body determined the appeal by directing the respondent to expel him, and the latter did so by a unanimous vote; whereupon the relator instituted this proceeding in mandamus in the Circuit Court of Jackson County, which court refused a peremptory writ and relator has brought the case here.
"1. Mandamus is invoked when it is desired to have some action commanded to be done when nothing else will adequately subserve the end sought. In deciding whether error was committed in denying a writ, it is important to remember that while the writ should not be capriciously denied, its issuance is highly discretionary. [State ex rel. v. McIntosh,
"So in considering the expediency of the writ, the primary question is by no means confined to what the respondent has done to the complaining relator. It may well be said that a thing of equal importance is to ascertain what has been his conduct, as it relates to the matter in controversy. Mandamus, in its exceptional traits, partakes in some respects, of the nature of equity, in which forum it is a maxim that he who applies for relief by this writ must come with `clean hands,' else the law, regardless of merits, will decline to interfere in his behalf. [Turner v. Fisher,
"These authorities establish, beyond question, that, like in equity, the applicant for relief must present himself with `clean hands' and we naturally turn to the rule in equity to show what the application of the maxim is. In 1 Pomeroy's Equity Jurisprudence, sec. 399, it is said that the misconduct of the applicant must be `connected with the matter in litigation; . . . it does not extend to any misconduct, however gross, which is unconnected with the matter in litigation, and with which the opposite party has no concern.' Citing that text, it is said in Ashe-Carson Co. v. Bonifay,
"In Woodward v. Woodward,
"While a man may be guilty of the highest crimes, or, in his daily walk may be guilty of the grossest misconduct, yet, unless such misconduct connects with the matter in controversy he is not to have his prayer denied. But where, as in this case, the misconduct consists in writing an obscene letter referring to, connecting with, and indeed, wholly made up of, the identical matter in controversy, there is no dissent from the proposition that he shall not have relief by mandamus.
"In this case relator admits that when he was notified that the Library Club had refused his application for membership, he wrote the letter, addressing it to Dr. J.S. Weaver, with the request that he transmit it to the Club. I think from what is said of the letter in the majority opinion, one does not get its true character in a full sense; nor is it certain, from that opinion, that one will understand for whom the letter was intended. I think it shows on its face for whom it was intended; besides, relator admits in his reply that it refers `to the members of the Kansas City Library Club.' The letter, as stated above, is too vile and filthy for entire reproduction. I herewith set it out, using blanks for unprintable words: *154
"`Kansas City, Mo., Dec. 20, 1917.
*155"`Dr. J.S. Weaver, 1221 Rialto Building, Kansas City, Mo.
"`My dear Doctor: The enclosed statement, recently received, indicates that you are an official of the Kansas City Library Club, and in returning it to you as such, I desire to make the following comment, with the request that you transmit the same to the above named club.
"`A short time ago Dr. R.L. Sutton, without suggestion or solicitation on my part, urgently requested me to sign an application for membership in the K.C. Library Club. He now informs me that the application has been refused by vote of those in control, predicated, I presume, upon the litigation in which I have been involved of late and which recently terminated in my vindication. In view of this vindication, I had the impression that the Library Club wanted all the members it could get from the Jackson County Medical Society.
"`I conclude that the refusal to admit my application is based on personalities. In view of the venality and corruption displayed by certain doctors hired by the prosecution in my case, I do not hesitate to denounce this further attempt to discredit me.
"`Just who is responsible, I cannot say; it may have been the oculist, who, remembering the disgraceful manner in which his parent was shot to death in his office, should have used the liberality that a better intelligence would have prompted; it may have been the surgeon with Teutonic name and Hun training, of whom one might inquire for how long he had been ____ his present wife before his former wife obtained a divorce; it may have been one bone-setter, the off-spring of a self-confessed abortionist; it may have been one so-called paediatrist, hypocrite and professional ____; who ever it was, the refusal to admit smacks of the immorality of the prostitute who smugly announces that all women are without virtue, because if that were true she would be on a par with any.
`"In conclusion, you may tell the bunch of sons-of ____, among the membership of the Kansas City Library Club, to go and ____ themselves.
"`With assurance of appreciation and esteem to Dr. Sutton and yourself, I remain,
"`Yours very truly, "`B. Clark Hyde.'
"Words omitted would not be repeated by men even in private conversation. A part of them refers to the wife of one of the members.
"Now the question is, shall a court lend its aid to one who confesses to have written such a letter? In view of the nature of the writ of mandamus, as we have set out above, shall a court be required to restore a person of that character to membership and social intercourse with the very persons to whom he sent the letter?
"2. The other reason why the writ should be refused is that relator has not that severable proprietary interest in the respondent society which is a necessary requisite to his right to relief. It is alleged that the society owned a piece of real estate worth $12,000 and that he paid his dues. But that does not show a right in him sufficient to ground an application for a writ of mandamus. [Lawson v. Hewell,
"We have not been cited to a case on this question from our Supreme Court, but the St. Louis Court of Appeals several times has stated that a property right in the relator must exist in order to justify interference by the courts. [Lysaght v. Stonemasons' Assn.,
"The courts have generally held that rights in the nature of insurance in benevolent or mutual benefit societies are property rights which will be protected by extraordinary writs. And so where there is membership in clubs, or other societies, for the pleasure of the *156 members, the membership being represented by stock, they have valuable, severable property rights, which they may transfer to others and which would be subject to the payment of debts, or descend to heirs. But a member of a voluntary association like the one before us, not organized for profit, with no severable pecuniary interest in the property which it possesses merely as an incident to its existence, has no such pecuniary property right as will justify the extraordinary remedy by mandamus. Otherwise, the court, through that writ, would be called upon to test the expulsion of members of churches, or social associations. The members of such associations may change, but it has not been thought that they, their creditors or their heirs, as the case may be, have any interest in the property of the society. The church, or other society, may own property as a necessary incident in carrying out its object, but no retiring member takes any share of the property with him. The by-laws permit his voluntary withdrawal, if his dues are paid up. Such withdrawal severs his connection with and interest in, the society, with no suggestion that he has any property right.
"Nor does the fact that such voluntary societies are charted or organized under the statute relating to religious or benevolent associations affect the question, as will appear by examination of the foregoing authorities.
"In the cases cited on this subject in the majority opinion, I find State v. Georgia Med. Society,
"For the foregoing reasons I think the judgment should be affirmed; and deeming the foregoing decision to be in conflict with Lysaght v. St. Louis Operative *157
Assn.,
I. A painstaking examination of the record and briefs submitted in the Court of Appeals and a careful consideration of the authorities cited in the foregoing opinion, leads usConflicting to conclude that the trial court properly declinedDecisions. to issue the peremptory writ. With the exception of the concluding paragraph of the foregoing minority opinion, bearing upon the question of conflict in decisions, we fully agree with what is said in said minority opinion, and with that exception we hereby adopt the same. Upon the subject of conflict we would add the following:
An examination of the majority opinion before us reveals the following language:
"The evidence shows that membership in the respondent corporation was valuable to relator, both in a professional and business way, and that relator has been deprived of his corporate rights, which we think is a pecuniary right as that term is used in the cases. [State ex rel. v. Georgia Medical Society,
Scrutinizing the authorities cited we find that State ex rel. v. Georgia Medical Society, supra, is the only case which confirms the proposition enunciated. What the court there said apropos of the Georgia Medical Society, at page 626, was that: "When the voluntary society accepted the charter, it became a private, civil corporation, and the corporators, then in being, acquired a property in the franchise, and every person who has since become a corporator has acquired a like property. *158 The property which the corporator acquires is not visible, tangible property; but it is none the less property, because it is invisible and intangible."
However, as pointed out in the minority opinion, the Georgia case fails to follow the better considered rule that the property right which is violated must be a severable proprietary right. As said in Lawson v. Hewell,
And as said in Wellenvoss v. Grand Lodge, Knights of Pythias,
The rule is thus well stated in the mandamus proceeding of People ex rel. Rice v. Board of Trade,
"It may be that, where a corporation is created for the purpose of pursuing some pecuniary business *159 for the acquisition of profits and gains for its members or stockholders, and a member is deprived of a right or privilege conferred by its charter, a court would, by mandamus, compel the body to admit such member to the exercise of his rights. In that case, a member or shareholder has such a pecuniary interest as might enable him to be protected or be admitted to the exercise of such rights by legal process; but courts never interfere to control the enforcement of the by-laws of merely voluntary associations created for the advancement of religious, moral or social principles, or merely for amusement."
What the St. Louis Court of Appeals said in Lysaght v. St. Louis Operative Assn.,
In Froelich v. Musicians Ben. Assn.,
These last two enunciations are in entire accord with the principle announced in the decisions of the foreign jurisdictions quoted above. And, when applied to the particular facts before the court, what was decided by the St. Louis Court of Appeals is not in conflict with the conclusion reached by the minority opinion of the Kansas City Court of Appeals herein. In both the Lysaght and Froelich cases the property right which plaintiff was held entitled to was an interest in a fund *160 accumulated to defray funeral expenses of members. Clearly the facts in those cases are not analogous to the facts in the case under review.
The case of State ex rel. v. Bridge Co.,
There is nothing inconsistent with that pronouncement and the reasoning of the minority opinion before us. The minority opinion goes but a step farther and holds that the applicant for a writ of mandamus must come into court with clean hands, which we think is sound.
II. In addition to the reasons for sustaining a denial of the writ, as discussed in the minority opinion of the Court of Appeals, we are impressed with the argument advanced in behalf of respondent that a refusal to issue the writ will notDiscretion. be reversed on appeal unless a flagrant abuse of discretion by the trial court is clearly shown.
It has often been held that the findings of the trial court in a mandamus proceeding, as to the facts in the case, when supported by substantial evidence, will not be disturbed on appeal. [State ex rel. v. Dreyer,
In Moody v. Fleming,
In People ex rel. v. Jeroloman,
In Chesebro v. Babcock, 59 Conn. l.c. 217, the court said: "The granting or refusing a mandamus is a matter resting in the sound discretion of the court and the exercise of that discretion is not the subject of revision on appeal."
In Vincent v. Ellis, 88 N.W. (Iowa), l.c. 838, the general rule is thus expressed: "The granting of a writ of mandamus is not a matter of right, and rests very largely within the discretion of the court. It is true that such discretion must not be abused or exercised arbitrarily; but the rule that the order of the trial court upon an application of this kind will not be disturbed is so well established that it has often been held no appeal will lie therefrom unless it plainly appears that the complaining party has a clear, legal right at stake, and no other adequate remedy at law exists."
People ex rel. v. Interurban Ry. Co.,
Other cases which are illustrative of the rule that an appellate court will not interfere with the judgment of the trial court unless an abuse of discretion is shown are: Tuttle v. Iron Natl. Bank, 62 N.E. (N.Y.) 761; Achuff's Appeal, 12 Pa. Sup. 573; City of Little Rock v. United States, 103 F. 418, l.c. 426; Moores v. State,
In 26 Cyc. 507, the doctrine is summarized thus: "On appeal or error in mandamus proceedings the appellate court cannot consider the weight of conflicting evidence, or review the discretion of the court below in granting or refusing the writ, where it appears to have been lawfully exercised and no abuse is shown."
In the case at bar there is no contention that there was any abuse of discretion by the trial court. And under all the circumstances we feel that the writ was very properly denied.
Let the judgment of the circuit court be affirmed. It is so ordered. All concur.