Commonwealth v. Heilman

88 A. 666, 241 Pa. 374, 1913 Pa. LEXIS 794
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 27, 1913
DocketAppeal, No. 410
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 88 A. 666 (Commonwealth v. Heilman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Heilman, 88 A. 666, 241 Pa. 374, 1913 Pa. LEXIS 794 (Pa. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Elkin,

The historical view of the origin and groAvth of the [388]*388Junior Order of United American Mechanics will be helpful to a proper understanding of the questions raised by this appeal. This order was first instituted by the organization of Washington Council, in German-town, Pennsylvania, in 1853. It is a voluntary,' secret, patriotic and beneficial society. In the plan of organization it was provided that the original council should act as a state council until six such councils were organized, and it did so act until eight councils were instituted. In 1860 these eight councils formed what was called a state council which at that time acted as the governing head of the order. As the order grew new councils were established from time to time not only in Pennsylvania but in adjoining states, notably in Delaware and New Jersey. The State Council of Delaware was organized in 1868, and of New Jersey in 1869. These state councils were instituted by virtue of warrants or charters granted by the State Council of Pennsylvania. For reasons which do not appear in this record but evidently deemed wise by the members of the order at that time, and no doubt because the order had outgrown state limitations, a National Council was organized in 1869 by duly elected representatives of the order in different states. The organization of the National Council was a voluntary act on the part of the entire membership of the order whose representatives were elected for this express purpose. The intention was to create a supreme governing head of the order as the most effective means of promoting its growth and extending its influence. After the National Council had been créated in the manner stated a constitution and by-laws were adopted and proper officers elected: From 1869 until the present time the National Council has directed the affairs of the order and has been recognized, except in a few instances in later years, one of them being by the appellants in this case, as the supreme authority of the organization. In the constitution and bylaws it is provided that the National Council shall be [389]*389the supreme head of the order with power to make rules of discipline and general laws for the observance and government of the entire order. For more than forty years it has exercised these powers and has directed the affairs of the order according to the plan of organization which provided for (1) a National Council; (2) state councils working under charters or warrants legally granted and not suspended or revoked; and (3) councils holding charters or warrants duly granted and not suspended or revoked. While this was the plan adopted by the national council, it must be regarded as the plan of the whole organization, because the entire membership of the order commissioned their representatives to formulate and adopt such a plan, and it has been accepted as the law of the order for more than forty years. It will thus be seen that the National Council as the supreme head of the order exercises general supervision and jurisdiction in all the states, territories and countries in which branches of the order are established; the state councils while acting under the national council have jurisdiction in their respective states within certain limitations; and the councils or branches which are created by'the state council are subordinate to both the state and national councils. In other words, the national council, state councils and subordinate councils are but component parts of the plan adopted by the members for the promotion of . the best interests of the order. They are not separate and distinct parts acting independently of each other, but were intended to form a harmonious, orderly system for the transaction of the business of the order and the promotion of those principles for which it was organized. It is doubtful if anyone would; have asserted a different view if the order in its various parts had remained as an unincorporated association of members. But it did not so remain and this is what gave rise to the present, controversy. In 1870 the State Council of Pennsylvania was incorporated by an act of the legislature, and the appellants [390]*390contend that they are acting under their charter powers and are not bound by the constitution and by-laws of the National Council. In order that the act of incorporation should be properly construed it is necessary to keep in mind the situation of the state council at that time and the purpose for which the charter was granted. The state council was in existence as an unincorporated society at the time the Act of 1870 was passed. Indeed, the purpose of the act is declared to be the creation of the members of the state council into a body politic and corporate for the “promotion of the principles of said association.” The act did not create a new society, nor was it the foundation of a new organization. It simply gave corporate form to an unincorporated branch of a society already in existence. It was not intended to create a new society with a purpose different from that of the old order, but, on the other hand, the manifest intention was to preserve the old order, and to make the incorporated branch an integral part of it. This is not a new view, nor one adopted for the first time to meet the contingencies of the present case, but it was the view accepted and acted upon by the national council, state council and members of the order from the time the act was passed in 1870 until the difficulties arose which gave rise to the present controversy. The contention now made that the state council can secede and act independently of the national council, and without reference to the constitution and laws of the supreme body does not appeal to us as sound. We find nothing in the Act of 1870, properly construed, to warrant such action. It was provided in that act that the officers of the unincorporated society should continue in their respective stations until successors were elected and that the rules and by-laws in force should remain good and valid until altered, amended or abrogated. The general objects of the unincorporated society were written into the act as the declaration of purpose for which the charter was granted. There cannot be the slightest [391]*391doubt that the legislative intent was to give corporate form to a society already in existence for the purpose of better promoting the principles of the order. There is no indication of a different intent. That the officers and members of the state council so understood the act is shown by a resolution adopted in 1883 instructing the board of officers to have the objects named in the charter amended so as to conform with those, adopted by the national council in 1882. In obedience to these instructions the officers of the state council presented a petition to court asking that certain amendments and alterations be made to said charter, and the prayers of this petition were granted and the amendments allowed. All this was done in order that the state council as an incorporated body might act . more completely in harmony with the national council, and the charter as amended shows conclusively that the state council intended after its incorporation to act as an integral part of the national organization and acknowledged obedience to the constitution and laws of the supreme head of the order. In this respect the charter powers of the state council are somewhat analogous to those corporations which are created for the express purpose of carrying out the provisions of a will.

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Bluebook (online)
88 A. 666, 241 Pa. 374, 1913 Pa. LEXIS 794, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-heilman-pa-1913.