Judges: Wheeler, Beach, Gager, Curtis, Burpee
Filed Date: 2/21/1922
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The plaintiff Grand Lodge is a voluntary association having headquarters at Washington, D.C., and the plaintiff Davison is its secretary-treasurer. The Grand Lodge, a trade organization composed of machinists, has subordinate lodges chartered by it in various cities in the United States; these lodges are also voluntary associations. A subordinate lodge, known as Lodge No. 30, duly chartered, existed in Bridgeport prior to August 8th, 1919. The defendants were the *Page 237 officers and trustees of Lodge No. 30 on August 8th, 1919. The defendants, as officers and trustees of Lodge No. 30, then had and still retain in their possession all funds and property of Lodge No. 30, amounting in value to about $7,000.
The plaintiffs claim the right to the possession of this property, but the defendants deny such right and refuse to deliver the possession of the property to the plaintiffs. The constitution and by-laws of the Grand Lodge are made part of the finding. The plaintiffs claim that the following provisions of the constitution of the Grand Lodge and of the subordinate lodge, entitle the plaintiffs to the possession of such property. Article V, § 10, of Constitution of Local Lodges as prescribed by the Grand Lodge, provides as follows: "The trustees of each local lodge shall be legally liable to the General Executive Board for all funds and other property under their control. Trustees who have Two Hundred ($200) Dollars or more in their care shall be put under bond in a bonding company designated by the General Executive Board." Article II, § 8. "Merging or Disbanding. In case of a lodge lapsing, it shall be the duty of the recording secretary, in conjunction with the trustees, to send all funds and property belonging to said lodge to the General Secretary-Treasurer, to be held intact for a period of six months. If within that period application is made by at least seven (7) members in good standing in that community, said funds and property belonging to the lapsed lodge shall be returned to the applicants, and the lodge reopened."
The plaintiffs claim that the revocation of the charter of the subordinate lodge No. 30 was a "lapsing" of the lodge, and that under Article II, § 8, the possession of the property of the lodge was then the right of the Grand Lodge. The defendants claim, on *Page 238 the contrary, that the revocation of a charter is not the lapsing of a lodge, and that the right of the Grand Lodge to possession of the property of a local lodge arising from Article II, § 8, as quoted, does not come into effect by the revocation of its charter.
Primarily, the right of possession of the property of a voluntary association is in the association, that is, in its members or their officers and agents. Curtiss v.Hoyt,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.