100 Mo. 451 | Mo. | 1890
This is an appeal from the judgment of the circuit court of Jackson county sustaining the demurrer of defendant Bingham to plaintiffs’ second
“ That, on the twenty-first day of March, 1867, the said Widows and Orphans’ Home Society of Missouri, was duly incorporated under the laws of said state as a benevolent and charitable association, the objects and purposes of which were ‘ to provide a home for the orphans and widows of Confederate soldiers from Missouri, who perished in the late war, and to provide the means of feeding, clothing and imparting moral, religious and intellectual instructions to the same, with suitable and proper training in all the domestic and mechanical arts, as well as to provide for their thorough literary training; and, by all practical means, to insure their comfort and well being.’
“That said association, at the time of its incorporation, was composed of thirty members, the following named plaintiffs being a part of the said thirty, that is, Laura Holmes, William Holmes, John B. Wornall, Rebecca Maupin, Sarah T. Ruckle, and Julia Lester; and that plaintiffs, Sarah Tyree, Emily A. Carroll, Julia E. Simpson, and T. B. Lester afterwards became .members of said association, under its laws and regulations regarding membership.
‘That said named plaintiffs are still members of said society. That the articles of association of said society provided that a board of managers should be elected to conduct its business, consisting of thirty ladies chosen from the members, nine of whom should reside in Kansas City, and the majority of said nine residents of Kansas City should constitute a quorum to transact business.
*459 “Said articles of association further provided that each subscriber thereto, by the payment of one dollar monthly, to the funds of the society, should be a member, either male or female; but no male member should be eligible to any place or office in the management of the same, except as trustee, or as member of the advisory committee, and male members should not be allowed to vote.
“Said plaintiffs further state that the said society and the members thereof, immediately after its incorporation in order to execute the purposes of its organization, received and collected from its members the monthly payments, provided for in said articles of association as aforesaid, and through its corresponding secretary and its officers and agents, whom it sent throughout the state of Missouri, solicited and received large contributions in clothing, money, lumber, fuel, provisions, drugs and medicines, from the churches, Sunday schools and various charitable and benevolent persons, not only in said state, but in the different parts of the United States.
“ That said society also collected and received a large amount of money by establishing a dining 'hall at the annual fairs at Kansas City, Missouri, where meals and victuals were furnished by the society for pay to the visitors at such fairs, the provisions and supplies used on such occasions having been donated to said society by the citizens of Kansas City and vicinity.
“That with a part of the money thus collected by said society it purchased the following described real estate situate in Jackson county, in the state of Missouri, to-wit: The northwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section seventeen (17), in township forty-nine (49), range thirty-three (33), and erected thereon buildings and other improvements for the accommodation and comfort .of the widows and orphans aforesaid.
“ Said society used also a part of the funds so collected, as well as a part of the clothing and other*460 donations to it, in supporting and caring for those who were received and cared for by said society at different times, from the time of the incorporation of said society until about March 12, 1874, when the state of Missouri expended large sums of money in erecting buildings upon said property, to-wit: The sum of twenty-six thousand dollars, and fourteen thousand dollars more was expended by the state in furnishing said buildings and other personal property to be used in and about said property.”
The petition then alleges in substance that the defendant, Mrs. Bingham, from the organization of said society, was one of its principal officers; that on the eleventh day of November, 1877, through her influence over the members of said society, she induced it to execute a deed of trust in her favor for fifteen hundred dollars upon said real estate, and afterwards on the fourth day of June, 1878, induced said society to execute a second deed of trust in her favor for fifteen hundred and thirty dollars. That said sums and interest thereon becoming due and remaining unpaid she caused the same to be sold by the trustee on or about the twenty-sixth of May, 1881; that at such sale said property brought the sum of twenty-five thousand, one hundred and seventy-five dollars, and that after payment of the claims of the said defendant there remained in the hands of the trustee the sum of $20,890.97. That at the time of the sale of the said real estate the said defendant Bingham was treasurer of said society, and as such, on the day after such sale, received from the trustee said remainder, and afterwards in the month of June in the same year the said money was voted to her as a gift by said society. That as soon as the members of said society had voted said money to the defendant Bingham théy immediately declared said society disbanded and adjourned, and from that day there has been no meeting of said society. That with a part of the money so received by the said defendant
The question raised by the- demurrer, decided by the trial court, and argued here on appeal is, does the petition state a cause of action in favor of the plaintiffs against the defendant Bingham ?
The Widows and Orphans’ Home Society of Missouri was- incorporated under an act approved March 19, 1866. Sess. Acts, 1866, p. 69. The entity created by an incorporation under this act,' in contemplation of law, is a private corporation for such charitable or benevolent purposes as are set out in the articles of association. The character of the corporation in this case, as it appears from the allegations of the petition, is in conformity with this ideal. The object and aim of this association was to raise a fund to be appropriated to the benefit of a particular class of persons in existence, limited in number, capable of definite ascertainment, and who never had,' and, probably, never would,
The receiver thus appointed is authorized to administer upon the assets of such corporation, and, after payment of its debts, to distribute the remainder “among the persons who were members of such corporation at the time of such dissolution or forfeiture, or their legal representatives, in equal shares, unless, for good cause shown, the court shall otherwise order,” provided, however, that “if, upon such dissolution or forfeiture, it shall appear that any property vested in said corporation was held by it upon trust for any charitable purposes” such property shall not be so distributed, but shall be vested in trustees for the charitable purposes for which such corporation held the same. This law made it the duty of the attorney general or circuit attorney, upon written complaint mad©
The controversy, in its present shape, is between private citizens in respect of private rights, and is governed by the general law regulating civil actions between private citizens. For the protection of those rights, whether formerly of legal or equitable cognizance, there is but one form of action, and every such action must be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest, except that an executor or administrator, a trustee of an express trust, or a person expressly authorized by statute, may sue in his own name without joining with him the person for w'hose benefit the suit is prosecuted.
The petition fails to disclose any beneficial interest in the plaintiffs in the fund sought to be recovered in this action; in fact, counsel for plaintiffs frankly admit
. That the fund was a charitable fund there is no question. That a court of equity will lend its powers to discover and secure it for the purposes for which it was donated, whenever it is called upon to do so by the proper parties, there can be no doubt.
The Widows and Orphans’ Home Society of Missouri became the trustee of that fund, capable in law and equity of suing for, recovering and managing it for the purposes of the trust. That for such misuser, as is set out in the petition, it could be called to account by the attorney general, by virtue of the statute cited, and the interest of the beneficiaries protected by a receiver appointed in the quo warranto proceeding, who by suit could invoke the aid of a court of equity to protect that fund for their benefit against the trustee, or those dealing with it, no one will question. But that the plaintiffs are not trustees of that fund in their individual character simply because they were members of the corporation, and could not be called upon by any person interested in it to respond for its misappropriation by others than themselves is equally clear. And it follows that, not being trustees of and having no interest in the fund, except the sentimental one that every person who contributed to it may be presumed to have, that it should be applied to the purpose for which it was contributed, they have no such interest in the fund, and sustain no such relation to it, as to give them a cause of action for its misappropriation.
There is, of course, no analogy between the position of the plaintiffs in this case as members of a benevolent corporation without capital stock, and organized, purely for the benefit of others, and the position of stockholders of a corporation organized for business purposes with
The state of facts set forth in the petition show a cause of action in the trustee corporation in the beneficiaries of the trust fund, and a state of facts which would authorize the state to proceed by quo warranto for the dissolution of the corporation and the appointment of a receiver, by whom that fund could be recovered and appropriated to the beneficiaries of the trust. But the plaintiffs, not being trustees of that trust fund nor having any interest in the subject-matter of the action, it is not seen how their suit can be maintained, and the court committed no error in sustaining the demurrer. Judgment affirmed.