Gardner v. East Rock Lodge, No. 141

113 A. 308, 96 Conn. 198, 1921 Conn. LEXIS 66
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 20, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 113 A. 308 (Gardner v. East Rock Lodge, No. 141) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gardner v. East Rock Lodge, No. 141, 113 A. 308, 96 Conn. 198, 1921 Conn. LEXIS 66 (Colo. 1921).

Opinion

Gager, J.

Prior to May 18th, 1917, the plaintiff had for many years been a member of the defendant lodge, a subordinate lodge of an order known as Improved Benevolent Protective Order of Elks of the World, having a Grand Lodge and subordinate lodges throughout the United States, and existing to promote the welfare *200 and happiness of its members, to perpetuate itself as a fraternal organization, and to protect and assist its members and their families. On and after May 18th, 1917, plaintiff was suspended by defendant, following acts claimed to warrant his suspension, deprived of all privileges of membership, such as access to and use of the clubrooms, receipt of sick benefits, and the like. He thereupon brought this action, claiming an injunction, (1) prohibiting the defendant from refusing to allow him access to the rooms of said society, participation in its said meetings, or the rights to enjoy the privileges and advantages of being a member of this society; (2) compelling the defendant to restore plaintiff to all the rights, privileges and advantages of the membership in the society; (3) $1,000 damages; (4) such other relief as equity might require.

The trial court found the charges upon which plaintiff had been tried and suspended unfounded, and the action of the lodge against him improper and erroneous, but held that he could not recover in this action, since, as was admitted, he had not attempted first to seek redress by appeal within the order — had not exhausted the remedies provided by the order.

The first question upon the finding of the court is, then, whether, under the rules of the order and the circumstances of the case, the plaintiff was bound to exhaust, by appeal, the remedies provided in the order before applying to the courts. The constitution and laws governing subordinate lodges provides:—

“Article XI.

Decisions, Opinions, Appeals, Etc.

“Section 1. Questions arising in lodges shall in the first instance be decided by the lodge, the Exalted Ruler rendering the decision of the same, either party having the right to appeal from adverse decisions upon subjects as follows:

*201 “ (1) From the Exalted Ruler’s decision to the judgment of the lodge, a two-thirds (2/3) vote being required to overrule such decision.

“ (2) From the decision of the lodge to that of the District Deputy.

“(3) From his decision to that of the Grand Exalted Ruler.

“ (4) From the Grand Exalted Ruler’s decision to the Committee on Appeals and Grievances, which will report its findings to the Grand Lodge at its next annual session.

“In all appeals of this kind, except that under the first heading, a brief written record of the facts in the case must be presented by the appealing party and an opportunity given, with due trial to the adverse party, for a written statement in reply. ”

Article XIII, offenses and trials, defines the offenses which subject the individual to trial and punishment. Section one is as follows: “(a) Offenses against statutory law. (b) Offenses at common law, such as misrepresentation and fraud, (c) Offenses against the moral law, not punishable as crime, (d) Offenses against the constitution and laws of the order, (e) Offenses genererally, which involve violation of obligation. ”

In § 6 of Article XIII, the penalties provided are as follows: “(a) Reprimand or censure in open lodge, (b) Suspension for a definite time, (c) Expulsion, (d) Fine not exceeding five ($5) dollars. ”

In Article XIII are also provisions as to the procedure, which are not now of consequence. This is all that is contained in the constitution and laws with reference to trials and appeals. A ritual for the use of the subordinate lodges is also provided, which, in the obligation undertaken by a member, requires the new member to swear, inter alia, “that I will never appeal to the courts to right a supposed or imaginary wrong without first appealing to the counsels of the order. ”

*202 Deferring other points raised by the appeal, we will first consider this one of failure to exhaust the right of appeal within the order. The case relied upon to sustain the ruling of the trial court is McGuinness v. Court Elm City, 78 Conn. 43, 60 Atl. 1023. In that case the society had a by-law specifically providing: “A member shall not resort to the civil courts for redress for an alleged injury until he has exhausted every means of appeal in the order. The penalty of noncompliance with this law shall be expulsion from the order. ” The by-laws of that society further provided that any aggrieved party, failing to take an appeal from any such action or decision, should be bound thereby “and shall have no further recourse whether in law or in equity in respect to the subject-matter of such action or decision.” This court held that the by-law was valid and binding upon the member, and stated the rule in these words, page 47: “In cases like the present the general rule is that a failure to exhaust the remedies provided by the laws of the order, for the redress of injuries of the kind complained of in this case, is a bar to relief for such injuries in the courts.” A number of authorities are cited. It is to be noted, however, that the McGuinness case is not necessarily decisive of the case now before the court, for that was one in which by the by-laws there was an express agreement to exhaust every means of appeal in the order before appeal to the courts. The present case contains no agreement, unless it is to be implied. In the quotation from the constitution and by-laws set out above in Article XI, after providing that questions arising in lodges shall in the first instance be decided by the lodge, the provision is: “Either party having the right to appeal from adverse decisions upon subjects as follows ” — and then the successive appeals are designated. In Article XIII, relating to offenses and trials, no reference is made to appeal, and *203 we neither find nor are referred to any other provision as to appeal, except that in the ritual there appears the provision above quoted with reference to never appealing to the courts without first appealing to the counsels of the order. It is claimed by the defendant that this last part of the initiation obligation or oath is the equivalent of the agreement in the by-law in McGuinness v. Court Elm City, 78 Conn. 43, 60 Atl. 1023. We have no occasion to pass upon this point, in view of our conclusion as to the rights and obligations created by Aftide XI, as hereafter stated.

The question, however, returns, whether, under Article XI, the right of appeal there given in effect creates an obligation to appeal before taking the case to the civil courts, or is permissive merely. The defendant treats it as creating a duty which must be fulfilled before appealing to the courts, as is held in the McGuinness case, while the plaintiff treats it as simply permissive, and therefore creating no obligation disabling a member from appealing from any decision in the order direct to the courts.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 A. 308, 96 Conn. 198, 1921 Conn. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-east-rock-lodge-no-141-conn-1921.