263 Mass. 264 | Mass. | 1928
These are two suits in equity brought to recover certain property, or its value, to which the plaintiffs claim title.
The “Order of United American Men of North America” is a national, fraternal corporation organized for social and
The cases were consolidated by order of court and referred to a master under a rule issued in the first case upon an agreement of parties that the second case should be disposed of upon the master’s report.
The master found that, in 1921, a majority of the members of the Housatonic council decided that association with the parent organization was no longer desirable, and by a series of votes all funds and other property in the hands of the treasurer and trustees of the council were transferred to the local council of the Knights of Pythias, another fraternal organization existing for like purposes. Subsequently all except four of the members of the Housatonic council applied for membership and were received as members in the Knights of Pythias; the charter and rituals of the Housatonic council were sent by mail to the secretary of the State council, and the charter of the local council was declared forfeited.
The first suit is brought by the State council and the State Councillor of the State Council of Massachusetts against certain persons named as the last installed officers of the local council, to recover certain money and other property. The constitution of the State council, to which the local council was answerable, provided, in part, in § 4 of art. XII, that “Should a Cofineil neglect or refuse to make returns or pay
The master states that if “Housatonic Council surrendered its charter, or if its charter was duly revoked by the State Councillor, subject to the approval of the Board of State Council officers, .the funds and effects of the local Council thereupon reverted to the State Council, and it then became the duty of the last installed officers, including the defendants, to deliver such funds and effects forthwith to the. plaintiff, the State. Councillor.” The master found that after the local council “had failed to make its returns to the State Council for a period .in excess of twelve months . . . and had likewise failed to pay its per capita tax for that period, the State Councillor, after due notice, and after providing an opportunity for a hearing, duly declared the Charter . . . forfeited on October 15, 1923”; he further found that such action was duly approved by the board of State council officers on January 15, 1924, and that, consequently, the charter of Housatonic council was revoked as of October 15, 1923. It is found that the defendant Mooney turned over to the Knights of Pythias the funds in his hands amounting to $687.89. This amount was contained in three items, namely, the watchers’ fund, the general fund, and the contingent fund. These the master found were funds of the council. The contingent fund was reported semiannually as an asset of the Housatonic council, and, regardless of its origin, it must be considered as property of the council and hence deemed to have been dedicated to its purposes, subject to the constitutional provisions above quoted which purport to be applicable to all funds-belonging to the council. The bonds and other assets held by the trustees also were turned over to the Knights of Pythias by the defendants Perley, Morong and Brown, in pursuance of the votes of the council.
The question is whether the provisions in the constitutions of the State and local councils, and in the charters granted to the latter, requiring the surrender to the State council of the funds and other property of the local council upon the forfeiture of its charter, can be enforced by law. This question was referred to but was not decided in McCarty v. Cavanaugh, 224 Mass. 521, 525. It is manifest that the acts of the local council amounted to a forfeiture of its charter. The master found that the purposes of the local, State and national organizations were identical. The funds, therefore, can be used by the State council only for the purposes for which they could have been used by the local council. The money and other property in question, accumulated from whatever sources, were held in trust by the local council and its officers to be paid over to the State council on dissolution of the local council and the forfeiture of its charter. State Council v. Sharp, 11 Stew. 24. Knights of Pythias v. Germania Lodge, No. 50, 11 Dick. 63. State Council v. Enterprise Council, No. 6, 5 Buch. 245. State Council of the Order of United American Mechanics v. Hotaling, 184 App. Div. (N. Y.) 750. In Knights of Pythias v. Germania Lodge, No. 50, supra, the subordinate council on abandonment of the organization voted to pay over its funds to a sick benefit society not connected with the order; this was held to be a breach of trust. See also Koerner Lodge, No. 6, Knights of Pythias v. Grand Lodge, Knights of Pythias of Indiana, 146 Ind. 639, 654, 655. Under the constitution in the case at bar the funds and other property can be used by the State council only for the purposes for which they could have been used by the local council.
As the money and other property of the local council was held in trust to turn over to the State council in case of disso
No error of law is disclosed by the record.
Final decree affirmed.