Graham v. Eminent Household

70 S.E. 649, 135 Ga. 777, 1911 Ga. LEXIS 78
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 22, 1911
StatusPublished

This text of 70 S.E. 649 (Graham v. Eminent Household) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graham v. Eminent Household, 70 S.E. 649, 135 Ga. 777, 1911 Ga. LEXIS 78 (Ga. 1911).

Opinion

Beck, J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.)

As will be seen by reference to the case of Eminent Household of Columbian Woodmen v. Thornton, 134 Ga. 405 (67 S. E. 849), and the statement of the issues involved in that case and the evidence introduced touching the issues arising there, the statement of facts as set forth there may be considered in connection with the preceding statement of facts made in the case at bar. The former statement of facts throws additional light upon certain phases of the struggle between two factions in the order, which has culminated in a test of the right of the Eminent Council to elect certain ritual officers having the right to vote at the meeting of the Eminent Household. As the constitution and by-laws of the order originally stood, paragraph 2 of article 3 was as follows: “The officers shall be Eminent Consul, Eminent Director General, Eminent Banker, Eminent Physician, Eminent Cardinal, and Eminent Counsellor, who shall constitute the Eminent Council. There shall be Ritual Officers as follows: Eminent Pilot, Eminent Picket, Eminent Guardsman, and Eminent Herald. All of these officers, together with Households or Royal Households, as represented by their Heralds or Royal Heralds, shall' constitute the Eminent Household, which shall, after its first session, meet annually at such time and place as shall be determined at said first session.” And article 23 is as follows: “Amendments of the Constitution and Bylaws can be made upon a favorable vote for such amendment by a majority of the Households voting upon the question, if such amendment be approved by the Eminent Council. In the event of disapproval by the Eminent Council of a proposed amendment, notice thereof, with the reason for such disapproval, shall be sent to the Households within thirty days after such disapproval, but such amendment may nevertheless be made, by a favorable vote thereon, by two thirds of all the Households within thirty days after date of such’notice. The result of such vote shall be certified by the Worthy Consul and Worthy Clerk, and transmitted to the Eminent Consul, who shall lay the same before the Eminent Council, and it shall be the duty of the latter to declare the result to the Households and modify the Constitution and By-laws accordingly. [783]*783Amendment of this Constitution can also be made by the Eminent Council or by two-thirds vote of the Eminent Household.”

Subsequently, on November 11, 1904, thé Eminent Council directed an application for an amendment of the charter of the Columbian Woodmen, so that paragraph 4 of the charter would read as follows: “The Eminent Household shall be composed of its officers as honorary members without vote, except in the case of an equal division the Eminent Consul, being the presiding officer, shall have power to cast the determining vote, and the delegates or Heralds from the Households or Eoyal Households.” And it appears that on December 15, 1904, an amendment to the charter in the language just quoted was granted by the secretary of State. On June 5, 1909, another amendment to the charter was granted by the secretary of State, striking the amendment of December 15, 1904, above set forth. Shortly after the amendment to the charter of December 15, 1904, the by-laws of the order were amended so that “Paragraph 2” (article 3), which defined the membership of the Eminent Household, closed with th,e following language-: “but the Eminent Officers shall be without vote,'except that in case of •an equal division the Eminent Consul may cast the determining vote.” And on August 26, 1909, “Paragraph 2,” last referred to,was amended by striking out this last-quoted amendment to the constitution and by-laws, leaving the provisions of “Paragraph 2,” which defines who should constitute the Eminent Household, as it stood originally in the constitution and by-laws.

1. It is unnecessary for us to consider the question whether or not the secretary of State had the authority to grant an amendment to the charter of the order, containing the provision limiting and defining the rights of the officers as members of the Eminent Household as it is expressed in the amendment of December 15, 1904; because the provisions of that amendment were annulled by the amendment of June 5, 1909. The secretary of State had the same authority to grant the second one of these amendments as he had to grant the first, and the Eminent Council, as appears from the entry on the book of minutes of that body, struck from the constitution and by-laws the provision which had there been inserted after the grant of the amendment to the charter of December 15, 1904, to the effect that “the Eminent Officers shall be without vote, except that in case of an equal division the Eminent [784]*784Consul may cast the'determining vote.” We do not think, however, in view of the limited powers of the secretary of State and the character of his duty ’in reference to the granting of charters, that either of the amendments, so-called, to the charter should be treated as having effect other than as a part of the constitution and by-laws of the order properly adopted. See, in this connection, the case of Eminent Household v. Thornton, supra. When the provisional organization and control of the order passed from the incorporators, as it did when they' met and accepted the charter and adopted a constitution and by-laws providing for the election of Eminent officers and of the Eminent Council, the Eminent Council became vested with all the power and authority that could be legally conferred upon them by the constitution and by-laws adopted. One of the original by-laws, after providing that the Eminent Household should have the chief legislative and judicial administration and control of the affairs of the order, and that its jurisdiction and powers should be supreme, declared that “said jurisdiction and powers shall be vested in the Eminent Council when the Eminent Household is not in session.” Another, after providing-how amendments could be made to the constitution and by-laws by certain bodies known- as Households, also provided that “Amendment of this constitution can also be made by the Eminent Council, or by two-thirds vote of the Eminent • Household.” The original constitution and by-laws were adopted immediately after the acceptance of the charter by the incorporators, who constituted the entire membership of the order at that time. Under the provisions of the original constitution and by-laws the Eminent Council was created and organized. In the election of the ritual officers, whose election has given rise to this action, the Eminent Council did nothing more than to fill offices which were expressly provided for in the original constitution. The evidence as to whether there was a necessity to fill these offices before the meeting of the Eminent Household was conflicting. But, even in the absence of evidence upon that question, it would seem that the Eminent Council, when we consider the broad powers conferred upon them by the constitution relative to the order, were in the exercise of d right plainly within the purview of the constitution which called them into being.

But it is also insisted by the petitioners, who contest the right of [785]

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Related

Eminent Household v. Thornton
67 S.E. 849 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1910)

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Bluebook (online)
70 S.E. 649, 135 Ga. 777, 1911 Ga. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-eminent-household-ga-1911.