Free & Accepted Masons of the State v. Ancient Free & Accepted Masons, Colored

179 S.W. 265, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 917
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 3, 1915
DocketNo. 7380.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 179 S.W. 265 (Free & Accepted Masons of the State v. Ancient Free & Accepted Masons, Colored) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Free & Accepted Masons of the State v. Ancient Free & Accepted Masons, Colored, 179 S.W. 265, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 917 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

TALBOT, J.

The appellant, Free and Accepted Masons of the State of Texas, sued the appellees, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, Colored, and others, to restrain the latter from using a name so similar to that of appellant, and especially from the use as a part of the appellees’ name of the words “Free and Accepted Masons.” Upon the presentation of appellant’s petition a temporary injunction was granted, but upon final hearing judgment was rendered that appellant take nothing by reason of its suit and that the injunction be dissolved. From this decree of the court appellant appealed.

All of the parties to the suit are negroes. Since 1875 the appellant, as a Masonic organization under the name of “Free and Accepted Masons of the State of Texas,” has conducted its affairs and acquired its membership and property. In 1885 appellant was duly incorporated by virtue of the laws of Texas under its said name. In 1908 or 1909 the appellees organized a Masonic order under the name “Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, Colored,” and have since maintained their organization in Texas, using practically the same password, emblems, badges, etc., as those used by appellant and other Masonic organizations. The charter of appellee is dated February 6, 1909, and many of its-members were formerly members of the appellant, and acquired a knowledge of the secret work and principles of Masonry while members thereof. Some of them were probably expelled from appellant’s lodge, and some voluntarily abandoned appellant’s organization and became members of the appellee’s organization. The appellant has a membership of about 7,000 men and 4,000 women-. It owns property of the estimated value of $300,000. This property is not used for profit. It is used for lodge purposes and as homes for orphan children of deceased members of the order and for indigent Masons of the order. The funds necessary for conducting and maintaining the work of the order seem to be raised by dues assessed and collected from its members. The appellee has a membership of about 740 men and about 320-women. It has no capital stock, but some property used for the purpose of conducting the work of the order, and the organization is not for the purpose of making money. Like appellant, its members are required to pay certain dues appropriated to charitable purposes and to care for the sick and wid *266 ows and orphans of deceased members. In other words, the objects of both associations are “charitable and humanitarian.”

No question of property is involved, and the evidence, as we view it, shows no pecuniary injury to appellant by the use of the name .adopted by appellee, under which it maintains its organization, unless the teachings of the appellee’s order, to the effect that it is entirely different from the appellant order and the only regularly constituted Masonic order, which has led some of the latter’s members to withdraw and join appellee order, constitute such property or pecuniary damage. In 1908 some of the former members of the plaintiff order, in conjunction with various other colored men, organized five lodges of the “Ancient Free and Accepted Masons,” and later, prior to March 16, 1909, these five lodges organized the Sunset Grand Lodge of Masons, and on March 16, 1909, the state of Texas granted to the Sunset Grand Lodge of Masons a charter, which showed that the Sunset' Grand Lodge Free and Accepted Masons, Colored, of Texas, had incorporated, and that said charter gave to said Grand Lodge the rights to practice ancient free and accepted Masonry in the state of Texas. Since that time the Sunset Grand Lodge, Ancient Free and Accepted Masons, has been establishing subordinate lodges, practicing free and accepted Masonry, and engaged solely in a benevolent undertaking — the upbuilding of the negro race and the paying of benefits to the widows and orphans of deceased members of said order. The evidence further shows, or tends to show, that no person has ever made application to the defendant order, thinking or believing that he was making application to the plaintiff order; that no mail intended for defendant order has ever been received by plaintiff order; that there has never been any confusion in the minds of the public or in the minds of any person with reference to the identity of these two orders. On the contrary, the undisputed evidence shows that each of these orders has been contending that it was the only colored Masonic order, and that the other was spurious and clandestine.

Appellant presents but one assignment of .error, which is as follows:

“The testimony is conclusive that the plaintiff, long prior to the organization of defendant organization, having theretofore long used the name, was duly and legally incorporated by virtue of the laws of the state of Texas under its said name, ‘Free and Accepted Masons of the State of Texas,’ and that long subsequent to plaintiff’s incorporation, the defendant, without any valid authority pretended to organize a Masonic order and Supreme Lodge in the state of Texas, contrary to Masonic law, under the same, or substantially similar name, to wit, under the name ‘Ancient Free and Accepted Masons (Colored),’ and by virtue thereof began operations in Texas, asserting and pretending that the last-named body was the only true and regularly constituted body of colored Masons in this state, using the same password, emblems, badges, and other insignia common to Masonry, and which had been adopted and used' long prior by the plaintiff. The court therefore erred in not holding that the defendants were infringing upon plaintiff’s corporate name, and in not perpetuating the temporary injunction and permanently enjoining the defendants from operating and continuing the use of any part of plaintiff’s corporate name.”

The proposition asserted and urged under the assignment is:

“Where a corporation has appropriated and used a name for such a length of time as to become identified by the name, and has established a character and reputation under it, it is a fraud on the corporation if this name, or one similar thereto, is assumed by others under circumstances likely to lead the public to believe that the latter is the former body; and where injury will, or is calculated to, result to the former corporation on account thereof, a court of equity will, at the suit of the injured parties, restrain the further perpetration of the wrong.”

It is said that as applied to trading concerns the decisive principle is that no man has a right to sell or advertise his own business or goods as those of another. Williams v. Farrand, 88 Mich. 478, 50 N. W. 446, 14 L. R. A. 161. Therefore one must not adopt a name so similar to that of another as to draw to himself business intended for that other. Chas. S. Higgins Co. v. Higgins Soap Co., 144 N. Y. 462, 39 N. E. 490, 27 L. R. A. 42, 43 Am. St. Rep. 769; Supreme Lodge K. of P. v. Improved Order K. of P., 113 Mich, 133, 71 N. W. 470, 38 L. R. A. 658. In the last case cited it is said that this principle is correctly stated in the following language quoted in the opinion of the court:

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Bluebook (online)
179 S.W. 265, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 917, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/free-accepted-masons-of-the-state-v-ancient-free-accepted-masons-texapp-1915.