Bowers v. Grand International Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers

246 N.W. 362, 187 Minn. 626, 1933 Minn. LEXIS 864
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 13, 1933
DocketNos. 29,185, 29,186, 29,187.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 246 N.W. 362 (Bowers v. Grand International Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowers v. Grand International Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, 246 N.W. 362, 187 Minn. 626, 1933 Minn. LEXIS 864 (Mich. 1933).

Opinion

Hilton, J.

These three actions were considered together in the lower court. In each defendant appeared “specially and not generally, and for *627 the sole purpose of questioning the jurisdiction of the court over the person of said defendant, and for the purpose of having the pretended service of the summons and complaint on said defendant adjudged null and void and in all things vacated and set aside.” A notice of motion was served in each, supported by petition and affidavit. There was a counter affidavit on behalf of each plaintiff. The motions of defendant were in all things denied, and appeals taken to this court. For the purpose of the appeals the cases were here consolidated.

These actions were to recover from defendant (hereinafter for convenience referred to in the impersonal singular) as damages an amount paid by plaintiffs for certain bonds of the B. L. E. Bealty Corporation. The claim in each case, broadly, was that the bonds were worthless; that false and fraudulent representations were made by defendant in regard thereto with the intent to deceive plaintiff; that plaintiff believed and relied thereon to his damage in the amount so invested.

Defendant is a voluntary unincorporated association composed of more than 75,000 locomotive engineers residing throughout the United States and Canada, of whom about 5,000 reside in Minnesota. Individual members of the defendant are associated together in local lodges known as divisions. Each local division elects its own officers, who are not, as such, officers of defendant. The officers of the defendant are elected in triennial conventions by delegates elected by its membership. The declared purposes and objects of defendant are primarily to combine the interests of locomotive engineers, elevate their social, moral, intellectual, and financial interests, and promote their general welfare and the welfare of their families and dependents.

Plaintiffs. McIntosh and DeBar, during the times mentioned in the complaints, were members in good standing of the defendant. Plaintiff Bowers is not such a member as far as the record discloses. The amounts paid for the bonds by plaintiffs were, in the order in which they are above named, $1,000, $11,500, and $600.

*628 Plaintiffs sought to obtain jurisdiction of the defendant by service of summons and complaints upon one G. N. Wyman of Waseca, Minnesota, a locomotive engineer residing therein, who at the time of the attempted service was chief engineer (head) of division No. 9. He was also an associate and member in good standing of defendant. Wyman at once’ sent the summons and complaint in each case to defendant at its home office in Cleveland, Ohio. The defendant has no offices or officers in Minnesota. The question is whether service on Wyman conferred jurisdiction. The applicable statute is G. S. 1923 (2 Mason, 1927) § 9180, which reads as follows:

“When two or more persons transact business as associates and under a common name, whether such name comprise the names of such persons or not, they may be sued by such common name, and the summons may be served on one or more of them. The judgment in such case shall bind the joint property of all the associates, the same as though all had been named as defendants.”

Defendant contends that it has never been engaged in business of any kind within the state of Minnesota or elsewhere that subjects it to service of process as was here attempted.

The claim of plaintiffs is that the defendant in its own name and also through ownership of all or the majority controlling stock of certain corporations has been engaged in numerous lines of businesses, including that of banking, securities, real estate, coal mining, sale of coal, manufacturing clothing, and various and sundry other lines of business, which it has carried on as an association during and at all the times and dates involved, and has been carrying on said businesses in the state of Minnesota and various other states of the United States, and that said businesses have been carried on by the defendant and its various members as partners and associates under a common name. Further, that during all the times in question defendant has been engaged in many activities having no connection with the activities of the labor union and quite apart from the promotion of the interests--©! their members.

The record discloses that defendant has been largely interested in corporations engaged in 36 different lines of business, in some of *629 which concerns it owned all or the controlling stock. In 1920 it organized a national bank tinder the name of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers Co-operative National Bank of Cleveland, holding 51 per cent of the stock thereof. In 1929 the defendant became interested in the Standard Trust Bank, which it organized under the laws of the state of Ohio. The latter corporation took over the assets and assumed the obligations of the national bank. In 1925 the B. L. E. Realty Corporation was organized under the laws of the state of Florida. Defendant owned all of the stock of that corporation. In addition it organized and owned the majority controlling stock of the Brotherhood Holding Company and the Brotherhood Investment Company, both Ohio corporations. The latter corporation guaranteed the bonds issued by the B. L. E. Realty Corporation, both as to principal and interest. Defendant also owned the majority controlling stock of the Midwest Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers Securities Corporation. It appears that this corporation was one of the financial companies organized by defendant for the purpose of. taking control of 51 per cent of the stock of the Transportation Brotherhood National Bank of Minneapolis then held by the Brotherhood Holding Company. It also appears that it was the intention to take controlling interest in any of the brotherhood institutions which might be organized in the vicinity of Minneapolis in the future. The general character of the business was to be the handling of bonds, stocks, and general securities.

At the trial a large amount of documentary evidence, consisting principally of the files in the office of the securities division of the department of commerce, was introduced. This documentary evidence had been presented at a hearing before that division in support of an application for registration and permission to sell stock of the Midwest corporation, hereinbefore referred to. At that hearing defendant appeared by counsel. Oral arguments Avere made and briefs filed.

On May 1, 1925, a letter, signed by Warren S. Stone, defendant’s president, and by William B. Prenter, its general secretary-treas *630 urer (later its vice president and then president), was addressed and sent to defendant’s membership, to the stockholders of the Brotherhood Investment Company, and to all persons interested in the brotherhood’s financial movement. It stated that pursuant to a resolution adopted by the advisory board of defendant they were proceeding to organize the Midwest Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers Securities Corporation; that defendant’s interests already controlled a successful and rapidly growing bank in Minneapolis.

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Bluebook (online)
246 N.W. 362, 187 Minn. 626, 1933 Minn. LEXIS 864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowers-v-grand-international-brotherhood-of-locomotive-engineers-minn-1933.