Grand District Lodge of District No. 41 of the Grand United Order of Odd Fellows in America v. Víctor Rojas Lodge, Inc.

48 P.R. 542
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMay 27, 1935
DocketNo. 6580
StatusPublished

This text of 48 P.R. 542 (Grand District Lodge of District No. 41 of the Grand United Order of Odd Fellows in America v. Víctor Rojas Lodge, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grand District Lodge of District No. 41 of the Grand United Order of Odd Fellows in America v. Víctor Rojas Lodge, Inc., 48 P.R. 542 (prsupreme 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Del Toro

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Grand District Lodge of District No. 41 of the Grand United Order of Odd Fellows in America, domiciled in San Juan, and Victor Rojas Lodge No. 9728, affiliated with said order and domiciled in Arecibo, brought an action in the district court against Victor Rojas Lodge, Inc., also domiciled in Arecibo, praying for a judgment against the defendant, adjudging it to deliver to the plaintiff Victor Rojas Lodge No. 9728 the building and property described in the complaint, together with the furniture, fittings, and fixtures of the temple therein installed, the books, documents and any •other property, whether money or chattels, belonging to said plaintiff on September 10, 1930, and which might have been •collected thereafter as rent or otherwise by the defendant •claiming to be the successor of the plaintiff, and declaring void the transfer made by the defendant of the said property Tielonging to the plaintiff and its registration in the registry, .and void also, in so far as it implied a transfer to the defendant of the property in question, the mortgage thereon constituted on August 5, 1930, before Notary Susoni, and requiring- the defendant within ten days to render to the ■plaintiff an accounting of the bearer promissory notes connected with such mortgage, and to return the same or the .amount thereof.

In demanding that judgment, plaintiffs based themselves ■on substantially the following facts:

[544]*544The plaintiff first named, District Lodge No. 41, is the directive body in this island with, jurisdiction over all Odd Fellow lodges in Puerto Eico affiliated with the order through its executive committee in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; an order which is an association constituted for the mutual social aid and spiritual progress of its members and which holds properties for the celebration of its rites and the carrying out of its benevolent work. The second plaintiff is a local lodge domiciled in Arecibo, affiliated with the order since May 8, 1916, on which date it received a letter of dispensation, and having its own regulations, of which article 1 provides :

“Art. 1. — This lodge shall hear the name ‘Víctor Rojas,’ and shall have its res’dence in Arecibo, being affiliated with the ‘Grand United Order of Odd Fellows in America,’ of which the general registry shows that its number is 9728, and submitting itself to the provisions of the Grand District Lodge of District No. 41, under the direction of the Executive' Sub-Committee of the order. ’ ’

On December 9, 1925, the plaintiff Victor Eojas Lodge No. 9728 purchased from Luisa Moreno a strip of land located on Cervantes Street in Arecibo, and on March 15, 1926, it rented from the municipality a lot adjoining the strip, and erecting upon both parcels a building to serve as a temple

At a meeting held on September 10, 1930, Eufino Serrano, who was acting temporarily as Grand Noble of the said plaintiff lodge, Eigoberto Campudonis, Secretary thereof, and other members declared themselves free and independent of the plaintiff Grand Lodge of District No. 41 and of the Executive Committee in Philadelphia for the reasons which they set forth, and agreed to form another lodge with the same name, Victor Eojas, which they incorporated under the provisions of the Act providing for associations not for pecuniary purposes, registering the same with the Executive Secretary of Puerto Eico. The lodge so incorporated is the defendant in this suit.

[545]*545Certain members of the lodge who paid dues were'not notified of the meeting held on September 10, 1930, and some members who attended refused to consent to the separation, notwithstanding which the resolution appears to have been adopted unanimously.

No previous notice of the intention to separate was given to the Grand District Lodge under whose jurisdiction the Arecibo lodge functioned, or to the Executive Committee in Philadelphia, and when the former was notified, after the resolution had been adopted, the same was disapproved and declared void by the district lodge, which ordered that the lodge in question should continue to function with the members who had remained loyal.

A few days before the separation, the dissenting members of the lodge, who were in control, executed a mortgage payable to bearer for $4,000, apparently upon the pretext of paying certain debts for the most part already satisfied, but with the real intention of assuring to themselves control of file property in order that they might later carry out the transfer to the new organization.

The seceding members remained in actual possession of the building, furniture, fixtures, and books, and of most of the correspondence and documents of plaintiff, which they continued to hold in spite of the order of the first plaintiff and the demands of the second. On February 5, 1931, after the defendant had been notified of an action of unlawful detainer brought by Victor Rojas Lodge No. 9728, Vicente Vega and Rigoberto Campudonis, calling themselves Grand Noble and Secretary, respectively, of Victor Rojas Lodge No. 9728, appeared before a notary and executed.a deed in which, after setting forth the resolution taken to separate, they transferred to themselves on behalf of Victor Rojas Lodge, Inc., the property in question, and thereafter caused the deed to be improperly recorded in the registry.

The defendant is at present withholding the said property, is hindering the second plaintiff in the collection of [546]*546its rents, and claims to be tlie successor thereof entitled to the enjoyment of its properties.

The defendant answered, in short, admitting the personality of the plaintiff District Lodge, bnt denying that of the Victor Rojas Lodge No. 9728 after September 10, 1930, and denying as well other matter in the complaint. It maintains that at the present time the plaintiff Victor Rojas No. 9728 does not exist, but that Victor Rojas Lodge, Inc., exists in its stead, with full right to the properties in dispute, of which it is now in possession.

The case went to trial, and the court held that when the resolution to separate was adopted, there was no compliance with the rule of the order found in the first section of Law No. 98 of the General Statutes thereof, as follows: “Sec. 1. — Any lodge wishing to separate from the order must advise the Executive Sub-Committee three months in advance, and shall pay all debts owing to the order, sending together with such payment its Dispensation and secret works to the Executive Sub-Committee.” The court then said:

“If the defendant did not follow strictly the procedure provided by the rules of the order, in order that it may be considered no longer affiliated therewith, it is imperative for the court to hold and decide that such separation is void. In other words, a deeis'on is unavoidable holding the defendant’s secession invalid, nonexistent, and void, and defendant must be considered as still affiliated with and owing obedience to the Grand District Lodge of District No. 41 and to the Executive Sub-Committee in Philadelphia, until such time as it is validity and lawfully separated therefrom.

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