Flowers v. Grand Lodge of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen

205 Ill. App. 519, 1917 Ill. App. LEXIS 1213
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMay 9, 1917
DocketGen. No. 21,877
StatusPublished

This text of 205 Ill. App. 519 (Flowers v. Grand Lodge of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flowers v. Grand Lodge of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, 205 Ill. App. 519, 1917 Ill. App. LEXIS 1213 (Ill. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Taylor

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit Court, perpetually restraining the Grand Lodge of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, its officers and agents (defendants), from taking any action in the way of revoking, suspending or cancelling” the charter of Square Deal Lodge No. 752, and from expelling, or attempting to expel from membership, and in any manner interfering with the membership or office of any member of said lodge, for any action of said lodge, or its members, in connection with certain charges made against, and the trial of one William J. Pinkerton, a member of said subordinate lodge.

On October 28,1912, W. Gr. Lee, the president of the Brotherhood, notified Pinkerton, who was the legislative representative of Square Deal Lodge No. 752, that on account of his disobedience of the rules of the Brotherhood, under the terms of section 154 of the constitution, in that he had circulated among lodges and members of the Brotherhood, communications pertaining to the then pending Federal Workmen’s Compensation Law, which reflected improperly upon the conduct of President Lee and the president of the American Federation of Labor, and others, that he was removed. At the same time Square Deal Lodge No. 752 was also notified. On November 11, 1912, the subordinate lodge notified President Lee that they would contest the removal of Pinkerton, and recognize him until the action of the president could be overruled. Subsequently, on November 19th, President Lee notified the subordinate lodge that it was in his power to declare the lodge defunct if it failed to elect a successor to legislative representative, Pinkerton. On December 20,1912, President Lee notified the lodge to proceed to try Pinkerton, on account of his alleged violation of article 154 of the constitution. Pursuant thereto, and in accordance with President Lee’s order, charges were preferred and a trial had, and upon the report of the Trial Committee, which. unanimously acquitted Pinkerton, being presented to the subordinate lodge, it was on February 9, 1913, approved by a vote of forty to one.

On February 7, 1913, President Lee wrote to the vice president, A. F. Whitney, who had been delegated to represent the defendants in prosecuting the Pinkerton case, as follows:

“It is my understanding that you will attend the next meeting of Lodge No. 752, at which the Trial Committee’s report will be presented, and if Pinkerton should be exonerated, as he probably will, because I am of the opinion the Trial Committee was discriminately selected, I wish you to see to it that some brother appeals to this office immediately, as provided in the Constitution. It is not my intention to permit Pinkerton to escape punishment for the flagrant violation of the Constitution referred to in the charges, and in all probability it will be necessary to close Lodge No. 752, which I will have no hesitancy in doing unless they enforce the law.”

On February 17, 1913, President Lee wrote to the officers and members of Square Deal Lodge No. 752, that unless the latter on Sunday, February 23, 1913, rescind the action taken at its meeting held February 9,1913, in refusing to find Pinkerton guilty, '‘and does find brother Pinkerton guilty of said charges, and declares Tiim expelled from the Brotherhood of Eailroad Trainmen, the undersigned, as President of the Grand Lodge, will at once proceed to cite the lodge to show cause why its charter should not be revoked for failure to do so.”

At the next meeting of the subordinate lodge, ¡held on February 23, 1913, the lodge instructed the secretary to advise President Lee that it could not abide by his order to rescind the action Of February 9, 1913; that it refused to act on the ground that it was contrary to section 145 of the constitution.

On February '24, 1913, President Lee wrote to the officers of the Square Deal Lodge No. 752, giving them notice to show cause on or before Friday, February 28, 1913, why the charter of the lodge should not be suspended or revoked, as provided for iii section 42 of the constitution of the Grand Lodge.

On February 26, 1913, the bill of complaint in this cause was filed by William F. Flowers, George Finnegan and Fred C. Caliger, on behalf of themselves and all of the members of Square Deal Lodge No. 752, having been duly appointed a committee for such purpose by the unanimous vote of Square Deal Lodge No. 752, at a meeting held February 23, 1913.

The bill of complaint was answered, a replication filed, and the cause referred to a master, who on October 23, 1914, reported that inasmuch as a large proportion of the members of Square Deal Lodge participate in the insurance features of the Brotherhood, and as President Lee stated as a witness that if the injunction had not been issued against him he would have forfeited the charter of Square Deal Lodge, the latter was entitled to an injunction restraining the forfeiture of the charter of Square Deal Lodge, to prevent the members of Square Deal Lodge from being deprived of certain insurance rights. All of the exceptions of the defendants to the master’s report were overruled, and the report approved and confirmed, and subsequently a decree was entered making permanent and perpetual the injunction theretofore granted in this cause. The decree perpetually enjoins the Grand Lodge and its officers from interfering with the membership or office of any member of Square Deal Lodge No. 752, by reason of anything pertaining to or growing out of the charges made against and the trial of Pinkerton.

The evidence shows that the Brotherhood of Bail-road Trainmen is a labor organization and conducts a fraternal insurance business, paying death and disability amounts, in accordance with its constitution and general rules.

The justice or injustice of the removal of Pinkerton as legislative representative is not a matter which the court, in this cause, may investigate, or of which it may take jurisdiction. The court here cannot adjudicate concerning the controversy between President ’'Lee, on the one hand, and Pinkerton on the other, over the Brantley Workingmen’s Compensation Act. Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen v. Greaser, 108 Ill. App. 598.

The critical question here is whether the threatened revocation of the charter of Square Deal Lodge No. 752 imperils the property rights of the members of that subordinate lodge.

It is contended by appellant that the court may not take 'jurisdiction until the appellees have sufficiently exhausted their remedies within the Brotherhood.

The claim of the appellees is that the injunction of the court is necessary to protect their insurance rights; that without the injunction the appellants will destroy the insurance rights of the individual members of the subordinate lodge. The 184 members of the subordinate lodge hold beneficiary certificates (aggregating $250,000) entitling each of them, or their beneficiaries, to various sums of money ranging from $500 to $1,500 in the event of the disability or death of the member insured. Insurance assessments which have been paid in by the complainants and other members of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen have accumulated so that there is now in the treasury of the Grand Lodge a guarantee fund of over two million dollars. Each of the members of the subordinate lodge who has kept up his insurance has a substantive property right in that fund.

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Related

Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen v. Greaser
108 Ill. App. 598 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1903)
Golden Star Lodge No. 1 v. Watterson
123 N.W. 610 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1909)

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Bluebook (online)
205 Ill. App. 519, 1917 Ill. App. LEXIS 1213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flowers-v-grand-lodge-of-the-brotherhood-of-railroad-trainmen-illappct-1917.