DeChamplain v. P. & R. Home Ass'n

90 A.2d 603, 171 Pa. Super. 420, 1952 Pa. Super. LEXIS 406
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 17, 1952
DocketAppeal, No. 88
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 90 A.2d 603 (DeChamplain v. P. & R. Home Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeChamplain v. P. & R. Home Ass'n, 90 A.2d 603, 171 Pa. Super. 420, 1952 Pa. Super. LEXIS 406 (Pa. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

Opinion by

Ditheich, J.,

The corporate appellee, P. & R. Home Association, is a nonprofit corporation, incorporated September 6, 1921, under the Act of April 29, 1874, and supplements thereto. It was organized on a nonstock basis for the purpose of maintaining a club for social enjoyment, but at no time was such a club maintained. Its membership was limited to those employes of the Philadelphia and Reading Railway Company, who were also members of Subordinate Lodge No. 168, American Federation of Railroad Workers. A portion of the monthly dues paid to the Lodge by its members was paid over to the Association. Between 1921 and 1942, the year the Lodge was dissolved, the Association received $16,289.67 in dues payments. After dissolution of the Lodge the members continued to pay dues to the Association at the rate of $1 each month. From 1942 to 1950 the amount of the dues paid was $5,337.50.

The Association operated a plan for many years whereby “funeral benefits” were paid to the heirs of deceased members. At a special meeting on March 7, 1946, section 5a of the by-laws was adopted, which provided : “On and áfter May 1, 1946, . . . when a member has paid, his dues iñ full and has become beneficial for the total amount of funeral donations prescribed in [423]*423his particular case ... he shall discontinue paying monthly dues and he shall remain in good standing— which will cease when a full or partial division of the funds of the Association are made among its members . . .” At the same meeting a plan was adopted for final distribution of the assets of the Association among its members “on a basis for each month a member has been a member of the association.” In accordance with section 5a appellants and other members of the Association were notified on March 26, 1946, that they were beneficial for death benefits and would remain so indefinitely without paying dues.

A regular meeting was held June 8, 1950, at which the members present unanimously adopted a resolution to discontinue payment of death benefits, effective August 1, 1950, and to substitute in lieu thereof a division of Association funds among its members or their heirs “in accordance with action taken March 7, 1946.” The action was confirmed at a special meeting held July 20, 1950, without opposition, upon motion “that this be considered the 3rd and final reading, and that it be adopted as read.”

A meeting of the trustees and officers of the Association was held October 3, 1950. It was there agreed that the first distribution of funds of the Association be made on a basis of 95 cents per month for the period during which a member had been continuously beneficial. The determination of the trustees was to be submitted to the entire membership of the Association on October 18, 1950, for necessary approval. The liquidation of the assets of the Association having produced a fund of $19,628.87, under the plan proposed, the 73 members entitled to share in the distribution would receive amounts ranging from $60.80 to $323.

Appellants, members of the Association in good standing, filed a bill in equity on October 14, 1950, [424]*424praying (1) that the Association and its officers be enjoined from distributing the assets except in accordanee with the Act of Assembly; (2) that the rights of ; the members, including appellants, be ascertained and that the assets of the Association be administered in accordance with those rights; and (3) that a receiver be appointed to conserve and administer those assets. The case was heard December 5, 1950, at which time the court, on stipulation of counsel, decreed a partial distribution in the sum of $60.80, the lowest amount proposed to be distributed, to each member in good standing. Prior to the determination of the equity suit, the Association filed a petition for dissolution with a prayer that a distribution based on the plan proposed by the trustees be approved. By stipulation, this petition was consolidated with the equity proceeding.

The chancellor held that the plan of distribution adopted at the meeting of March 7,1946, approved without opposition at the subsequent meetings of June 8 and July 20, 1950, was within the corporate power, and being neither inequitable nor fraudulent was binding on all the members of the Association. The present appeal is from the decree of dissolution which ordered the distribution of the assets as set forth in the petition for dissolution and from the final decree which dismissed the bill in equity. Appellants contend that upon dissolution of a nonstock, nonprofit corporation the assets should be distributed equally among its members at the time of dissolution, irrespective of the length of time of membership.

Section 1001, article X of the Act of May 5, 1933^ P. L. 289, as amended, 15 PS §2851-1001, which governs the voluntary dissolution of nonprofit corporations, is silent as to whether the assets of such corporations must be distributed equally among the members at the time of dissolution; it merely provides, inter alia: “Be[425]*425fore entering the final decree of dissolution, the court shall cause the assets of the corporation to be marshaled and the property rights to be adjudicated, . . . In entering the final decree, the court shall order the distribution of the property and assets of the corporation among the members entitled thereto, . . .” In Nokomis Tribe, etc., Dissolution Case, 331 Pa. 53, 58, 200 A. 23, the Court said: “Section 304 provides for two kinds of nonprofit corporations: those organized upon a nonstock basis, and those upon a stock share basis. It is only in the case of the latter that, upon dissolution of the corporation, the shareholders are entitled to a pro rata distribution of the assets.” The issue in the NoJcomis case, differing from the issue in the case at bar, was whether on dissolution the assets of a local branch or “tribe” of the Improved Order of Eed Men should be turned over to the Great Council of the State pursuant to the by-laws of the state organization, the constitution of the “tribe” and the general laws of the Order promulgated by the national organization by which the “tribe” was bound, or whether they should be divided among the members of the “tribe,” a nonprofit corporation being dissolved.

The chancellor, while recognizing that the issues differed and that the statement quoted from the NoJcomis case was dictum, nevertheless stated that it was not obiter but judicial dictum which, acceording to Commonwealth ex rel. v. Paine, 207 Pa. 45, 56 A. 317, was entitled to receive the respect due the opinion of the judge uttering it. He held that — inasmuch as the dictum in the NoJcomis case was a declaration that “pro rata distribution,” taken as meaning distribution on the basis of the number of shares held, was mandatory only when the nonprofit corporation being dissolved was formed on a stock share basis — where the corporation being dissolved was organized on a [426]*426nonstock basis, though the members might be regarded as holding one share each, a distribution of the assets might be predicated on a plan which did not produce literal equality, so long as it was neither inequitable nor fraudulent.

In our opinion the language of Mr. Justice Stern, even if given the binding force accorded it by the court below, is not decisive of the issue.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re the Board of Directors of the State Police Civic Ass'n
472 A.2d 731 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1984)
Baldwin v. Rose Tree Fox Hunting Club
304 A.2d 505 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1973)
Dissolution of Labor Lyceum
40 Pa. D. & C.2d 580 (Berks County Court of Common Pleas, 1965)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 A.2d 603, 171 Pa. Super. 420, 1952 Pa. Super. LEXIS 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dechamplain-v-p-r-home-assn-pasuperct-1952.