Colley v. Wilson

86 Mo. App. 396, 1900 Mo. App. LEXIS 362
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 18, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 86 Mo. App. 396 (Colley v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colley v. Wilson, 86 Mo. App. 396, 1900 Mo. App. LEXIS 362 (Mo. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

BIGGS, J.

The Brotherhood of Railway Trackmen is an unincorporated society with an insurance feature. The society consists of one grand division and local divisions holding charters from the grand division. The grand division is composed of a grand chief foreman, a vice grand chief foreman, and a grand executive committee composed of five members and delegates elected by the local divisions. The grand division meets biennially and in the interim the business of the brotherhobd is conducted by the grand chief and the executive committee. At the times hereinafter stated the defendant, John T. Wilson, was and is now the grand chief of the order with his general business office in the city of St. Louis. The members of the executive committee are non-residents of the state of Missouri, and no two of them live in the same state. None of them are parties to this action. John T. Colley, the husband of plaintiff,' died in October, 1891. At the time of his death he was recognized as a member of the brotherhood and held a certificate of insurance in the order for one thousand dollars for the benefit of plaintiff, who was his wife, which certificate the executive committee decided had been forfeited, and which the defendant refused to pay. According to the terms of the certificate and the by-laws of the association the amount of the certificate was to be paid out of a death fund, for the accumulation of which regular monthly assessments of one dollar were required of the members. And the by-laws also provide that if at any time the amount realized from the regular ’assessments should prove inadequate to fully discharge the death losses, the' executive committee must order special assessments. By the constitution, all money belonging to the order is paid directly to the grand chief, and he is made its sole custodian. In the first instance it is for the members of the executive committee to determine what death losses shall [401]*401or shall not be paid, and to order the grand chief to pay snch as they may find to be just. The present proceeding is in equity, in which the plaintiff seeks to have her claim declared to be a legal one, and to make it a charge against the money in the hands of defendant and belonging to the death fund. As to the merits, the defense is that Colley, in an application for reinstatement to membership, misrepresented his age. Another plea is an alleged want of necessary parties defendants, and another that the plaintiff did not exhaust her remedies within the order, that is, she did not prosecute an appeal from the adverse decision of the executive committee respecting her claim to the biennial meeting of the grand division, as provided in the by-laws of the society. The court found that the plaintiff’s claim was valid; that the defendant as grand chief had sufficient money belonging to the death fund to pay it, and that the money was within the jurisdiction of the court. A decree was thereupon entered declaring the amount of the claim a charge upon the fund and ordering the defendant to pay. The defendant has appealed from the judgment.

It is undisputed that the plaintiff has availed herself of her only remedy (Hammerstein v. Parsons, 38 Mo. App. 332), and it is also undisputed that the members of an unincorporated society may provide for trustees in whom their property may be vested and by whom and against whom all suits pertaining to the business of the company may be prosecuted. Kuhl v. Meyer, 35 Mo. App. 206; Ibid, 42 Mo. App. 474; Ibid, 50 Mo. App. 648. But counsel for defendant earnestly urge that the by-laws and constitution of the society make the grand chief foreman and the members of the grand executive committee trustees of the business and property of the society, and that they were all necessary parties to the action. This question lies at the threshold of the case [402]*402and ought to be disposed of first. We answer first that the members of the executive committee' were not necessary parties for the reason that they are not trustees of the money and property belonging to the brotherhood. The defendant is the sole trustee and custodian thereof. It is true that the defendant can not rightly dispose of the money except in payment of claims approved by the executive committee, but it does not follow from this that the funds of the association in his hands can not be reached by claimants, except in actions wherein the members of the executive committee are parties. The latter we regard as an auditing committee merely, and in no manner responsible for the funds of the society, and over which they have no direct control. We therefore hold that the defendant being the sole trustee and custodian of the fund, was the only necessary party. In support of this the action may be rightly regarded as one to enforce an equitable Hen against a particular fund in the hands of defendant, and as he was before the circuit court, and as ■the fund was within its jurisdiction, the right of the court to ■entertain the action was unquestioned. 1 Pom. Eq. Jur. (1892), sec. 165.

But if it be conceded that the members of the committee are trustees, we can not concede the further position that the actioiq must abate because they were.not made parties. Courts of equity ought not to require citizens to do •impossible things in order to rectify their wrongs or establish their property rights. Under the contention of counsel it would be impossible for plaintiff to institute her action (for the defendant lives in Missouri, and the members of the executive committee are non-residents, and no two of them live in the same state), unless she had (the right to recover from the individual members of the order, which we decided in a similar case did not exist (Hammerstein v. Parsons, [403]*403supra). Mr. Story in his work on Equity Pleading, section 135a, says: “If courts of equity are in the habit of declining to act in the absence of particular parties, merely because there is a possibility of their decree working some injustice to persons not represented or before the court, there would seem to be at least an equally strong ground to assert, that where the injury, by abstaining from the exercise of jurisdiction on account of a defect of such parties, will be positive, immediate and irreparable, they ought to assert jurisdiction. In such cases if there is no possibility of bringing such parties before the court, the general principle would seem to apply, that parties should be dispensed with who are beyond the reach of the court from a moral or physical impossibility, and that the court should decree according to the merits of the controversy between the parties.”

Again, it is urged in bar of the action that the plaintiff failed.to present her claim to the biennial meeting of the grand division, The by-laws of the society required this. The courts have universally sustained such requirements as conditions precedent to the right to sue, unless the claimant shows some valid excuse for a non-compliance, or the requirement is found to be unreasonable. The circuit court in its1 written findings of fact found that the defendant and the executive committee had the plaintiff’s claim under consideration at the meeting of the regular biennial convention of the brotherhood, which was held in the city of St. Louis in December, 1898, and that the committee failed to advise the plaintiff of its adverse decision, until the convention had adjourned. Upon these findings the court decided the question of the right to, maintain the action against the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
86 Mo. App. 396, 1900 Mo. App. LEXIS 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colley-v-wilson-moctapp-1900.