Grand Lodge, Colored K. P. of Grand Jurisdiction v. Sanford

289 S.W. 456
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 16, 1926
DocketNo. 450.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 289 S.W. 456 (Grand Lodge, Colored K. P. of Grand Jurisdiction v. Sanford) 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
Grand Lodge, Colored K. P. of Grand Jurisdiction v. Sanford, 289 S.W. 456 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

GALLAGHER, C. J.

This suit was instituted by J. W. Sanford and C. H. Thomas, appellees herein, against Grand Lodge of Colored Knights of Pythias of the Grand Ju-lisdiction of the State of Texas, and the Knights of Pythias of North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa, and Australia, appellants herein. Appellees prayed for an injunction restraining appellants from denying to appellees their rights as members of said order, and for a mandamus requiring appellants to reinstate appellees as members of said order and to recognize them as such, with all the rights and privileges of membership, and in addition thereto for damages for alleged illegal suspension from said order in the sum of $21,150.

Appellant Knights of Pythias of North America, South America, Europe, Asia, Africa, and Australia, is a duly incorporated fraternal beneficiary order, and its authority is supreme. It is designated herein as the Supreme Lodge. Its presiding officer is called the Supreme Chancellor, and he represents it in the interim between sessions. Appellant Grand Lodge of Colored Knights of Pythias of the Grand Jurisdiction of the State of Texas is a corporation and a subordinate lodge under the jurisdiction of said Supreme Lodge, and is designated herein as the Grand Lodge. Appellees, prior to their expulsion from the order, were each members of a local lodge, subordinate to and under the control and jurisdiction of said Grand Lodge, and had been such members for several years. As such members, they held certificates of insurance entitling their respective beneficiaries to funeral benefits and death benefits amounting in the aggregate to $575.

The Grand Lodge is composed of its elective officers, delegates from the subordinate lodges, and certain nonvoting members, the basis of whose membership is not disclosed by the record. The presiding officer of the Grand Lodge is called Grand Chancellor. The constitution of the Grand Lodge provided at the time the issues herein involved arose that a regular convention thereof should be held annually on the first Tuesday in June at the place selected by the previous annual convention. It further provided, in case of calamity or imperative exigency, the Grand Chancellor might, with the consent of certain other Grand Lodge officers, select a time and place when and where such convention should be held.

The Grand Lodge convention was held in Dallas in 1923. Prior to the time of such meeting the Grand Chancellor concluded that the interests of the membership of the Grand Lodge as such and of the Grand Lodge as a corporate body would be greatly advanced by having the annual convention begin on Monday instead of Tuesday, and acting un.-'der his construction of the exigency clause *457 of the constitution, and, with the consent of ! the proper officers, he called the convention to meet in Dallas on Monday instead of Tuesday. This action was approved and ratified by tine Grand Lodge convention when it met. The Grand Chancellor then in office had served as such for several years, and was reelected at that convention. He claimed that the change of the day of meeting from Tuesday to Monday resulted in the largest attendance in the history of the Grand Lodge and in a saving to said lodge of expense in a sum exceeding $10,000. The city of Fort Worth was duly selected by the Grand Lodge as the place for the annual meeting in 1924. The Grand Chancellor, with the consent of the proper officers, again declared an imperative exigency and called said convention to meet on Monday, June 2d, instead of Tuesday, June 3,1924. Thirty days’ notice of said change in the date of meeting was given to each of the subordinate lodges of the order. Approximately 500 members of the Grand Lodge met on said date in response to said call. The Grand Lodge convention was duly opened, and it then as a body ratified the action of the Grand Chancellor in calling said meeting for Monday instead of Tuesday. The constitution and laws of the order contemplated that a convention of the Grand Lodge would remain in session for four days.

The order of business provided for action on the reports of the Grand Lodge officers arid directors and the election of officers for the ensuing year on the second day of the session, but it further provided that such order might be transposed by the presiding officer under certain circumstances. There was testimony that the constitution required that the officers of the Grand Lodge be elected by ballot. At the Dallas convention the officers had been elected prior to Wednesday, which day would have been the time for such action set by the order of business if the convention had met on Tuesday. The manner of election at that meeting was by a verbal motion to suspend the rules and order the Master-at-Arms to cast the unanimous vote of the lodge for the re-election of all the Grand Lodge officers then serving. This motion was carried unanimously, the ballot east as therein directed, and all of said officers declared duly elected to their respective offices for the ensuing year.

Appellees were dissatisfied with such procedure and with other rulings of the Grand Chancellor at the Dallas convention, and considered such rulings unfair, arbitrary, and oppressive. Appellees, on the 2d of June, 1924, together with four other members of said Grand Lodge, filed suit in a civil district court of Tarrant county against the Grand Chancellor, the Grand Keeper of Kecords and Seals and his. assistant, in which they set out their complaint of the alleged premature meeting of said Grand Lodge and of the manner in which the officers of that body had been elected at Dallas, and alleged that said officers were misapplying the funds of the order and had already converted $30,000 of such funds to their own use. They further alleged that the defendants in said suit had declared that they would, pursue the same course with reference to the election of officers for the ensuing year, and that they would'in fact do so unless restrained by the court, and that said defendants had formed a conspiracy to control the convention and secure their re-election against the will of the members of the Grand Lodge. They prayed for a mandatory injunction against the defendants in said suit, commanding them to conduct the election of officers “in any other manner than by ballot,” and restraining them from conducting the business of said Grand Lodge “in any other manner than as provided by law.” The injunction was granted as prayed for and duly served during the morfiing session of the Grand Lodge on that day. The injunction was ignored, and all the Grand Lodge officers were re-elected to their respective offices for the ensuing year in the same manner as in Dallas. The court which issued said injunction subsequently held that the language of the same as set out in the writ served on the defendants was insufficient, and that no contempt was committed by the defendants in ignoring such injunction.

Appellees, with other disaffected members, of the Grand Lodge, met on Wednesday, in the Grand Lodge room at a time when that body was not in session, and, purporting to constitute the regular and constitutional convention, of said Grand Lodge, elected a full roster of officers for such Grand Lodge. Shortly thereafter appellees, joined by the other persons so elected to office by them and those acting with them, filed an amended, petition in said suit, in which they made all the newly elected officers of the Grand Lodge parties defendant. They alleged in said petition that they were the duly and constitutionally elected officers of the Grand Lodge, and that the.

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Bluebook (online)
289 S.W. 456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grand-lodge-colored-k-p-of-grand-jurisdiction-v-sanford-texapp-1926.