Ferris v. Thaw

5 Mo. App. 279, 1878 Mo. App. LEXIS 30
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 12, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 5 Mo. App. 279 (Ferris v. Thaw) 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
Ferris v. Thaw, 5 Mo. App. 279, 1878 Mo. App. LEXIS 30 (Mo. Ct. App. 1878).

Opinion

Bakewell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action is upon a negotiable promissory note for :$4,000, dated Oct. 3, 1870, at twelve months, executed by •“ Charlie Thaw, W. M. Polar Star Lodge, No. 79,” to the [283]*283order of “ John W. Luke, Treasurer,” and by him indorsed. There was a verdict and judgment for plaintiff; and defendants appeal.

On the trial, evidence was introduced tending to show that on Sept. 30,1869, Polar Star Lodge, No. 79, of Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, was a voluntary association of persons, organized according to masonic rules, and meeting in St. Louis. Appellants and others were members of the association. In September, 1869, the lodge desired to assist the Masonic Hall Association, a corporation owning the masonic building in St. Louis in which Polar Star Lodge met. The Masonic Hall Association was embarrassed, and. the lodge agreed to purchase $5,400 of its second-mortgage bonds. In order to make the purchase, it became necessary to borrow $4,000 ; and that this might be done, a note was made by defendant Thaw, worshipful master of the lodge, to the order of defendant Luke, who was then its treasurer. This note was indorsed by Luke, by all the defendants except Defriez, and by eight other members of the lodge; and on the security of this note, plaintiff advanced $4,000. All of the appellants were present at a lodge meeting held six days before the date of this note, at which meeting the matter was discussed, and the fact stated, and entered in writing on the proceedings of the lodge, that the note had been executed and indorsed, and by whom, and that the moneys received had been paid over to the Masonic Hall Association, which had transferred, as security, $5,800 second-mortgage bonds. This action was ratified by a vote of the lodge at which all the appellants were, present. The coupons of the mortgage bonds were used by the lodge for paying rent to the Masonic Hall Association for the room in which the lodge met, and the semi-annual interest on the note was paid by the lodge. Before the maturity of the note, the lodge caused articles of incorporation to be filed in the Circuit Court, and obtained a certificate of incorporation; but no copy of the articles [284]*284was ever filed with the secretary of state; the incorporation, therefore, was never consummated. When the original note matured, in September, 1870, the lodge could not conveniently pay it; and, at a meeting of the lodge,Luke and Thaw were appointed a committee to hypothecate the bonds or renew the lodge note, as they sawproper. The committee determined to renew the note ; and, in renewal, executed the note in suit, on which, up to Jan. 17,1876, the semiannual interest seems to have been paid. The old note was taken up by the new note, now in suit; and, together with the new note, there were deposited with the banker of plaintiff the Masonic Hall Association bonds for the face value of $5,800, then worth eighty-five cents on the dollar. A witness says that these bonds were deposited as collaterals. No writing to that effect was given ; and it seems that the Polar Star Lodge had free access to these bonds, and regularly used the coupons. What the bonds were worth at the-date of the suit, or what has become of them, does not appear. The action of the committee in renewing the note was ratified at a meeting of the lodge, at which Thaw saj^sthat himself, Luke, Ryder, Defriez, Rogers, — that is, all the appellants, — and others, Avere present.

The petition of plaintiff alleges the steps taken toward the incorporation of the lodge by the appellants and others of whom it Avas composed, and the failure of these measures, and that no corporation Avas created ; but that the articles of incorporation provided that the worshipful master and the treasurer should be officers of the lodge, and that Thaw and Luke Avere such officers, and acted as such with the-consent of the other defendants when the note was executed ; that defendants, acting and representing and holding themselves out to plaintiff as a corporation, did, on Oct. 3,1870, borrow of plaintiff $4,000, for the purposes of their organization as declared in their articles of association, for which they issued, under the hand of Thaw, the master aforesaid, and the seal of the association, the note in suit, which is [285]*285described; that defendants did cause said Luke, treasurer as aforesaid, to indorse and deliver the same to plaintiff as the note and obligation of the association; and that the note was made and delivered to plaintiff by defendants, and each of them, in the exercise of such powers as the articles of association purported to give to them as a corporation. The answer of Luke and Defriez and Thaw is a general denial, and alleges that the lodge was incorporated on June 11, 1870. The answer of Rogers and Ryder admits that they were members of the lodge, but denies all other allegations of the petition.

The note in suit, filed as an exhibit and offered in evidence, does not show any seal. The seal of the lodge appears to have been impressed only on the original note, which it was given to renew. On the part of the plaintiff, the jury were instructed that if they believed from the evidence that defendants, composing Polar Star Lodge of Masons, No. 79, representing themselves as a corporation, had not filed their articles of incorporation with the secretary of state, they were not a corporation ; and if defendants were members, Thaw, master, and Luke, treasurer, of the lodge at the date of the note in suit, and defendants, or any of them, authorized Thaw and Luke to execute and indorse the note in suit as the note of the lodge, or received the benefits of the note, or assented to, ratified, or approved the execution of the note as the note of the lodge, the jury should find for plaintiff against such defendants. Also, that if defendants, or any of them, were on Sept. 27, 1869, and up to Oct. 3, 1870, members of Polar Star Lodge, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, No. 79 ; that on Sept. 24, 1869, Thaw was worshipful master of the lodge, and, us such, borrowed of plaintiff $4,000, which the lodge received of Thaw ; and that Thaw, as worshipful master, executed the note of the lodge for that amount, and delivered it to plaintiff; and that defendants, or any of them, at a meeting of the lodge, voted to approve the action of Thaw [286]*286in executing the note or obtaining said loan, then the jury will find that the defendants so approving and voting are liable in this action to the plaintiff for the amount due upon said note, or any renewal thereof.

At the instance of the defendant the court instructed: First, That the minutes of the lodge are not conclusive evidence of authority to execute the note sued on, against any defendants not shown to have been present voting affirmatively ; Second, That the majority of members present at a lodge meeting could not bind the minority to any personal obligation on the note in suit, and that the jury must find for any of the defendants whom they find to have been not present at the meetings of which the records were read, and not to have agreed to or ratified the act of Thaw in executing the note, so as to make the act of Thaw their act; Third, That if, at any lodge meeting, Thaw was authorized by a majority vote to execute the note sued on, nevertheless he did not act as the agent of any defendant not present at such meeting, and his act would not bind such defendant, unless. Thaw, in making the note, expressly acted as his agent, and plaintiff so understood it, and such defendant assented to and ratified the act; Fourth,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Mo. App. 279, 1878 Mo. App. LEXIS 30, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferris-v-thaw-moctapp-1878.