Grand Lodge United Bros. of Friendship of Texas v. Rose

243 S.W. 496, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1113
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 24, 1922
DocketNo. 6443.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 243 S.W. 496 (Grand Lodge United Bros. of Friendship of Texas v. Rose) 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 United Bros. of Friendship of Texas v. Rose, 243 S.W. 496, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1113 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinions

Appellee, S. B. Rose, brought this libel suit against the Grand Lodge, United Brothers of Friendship of Texas, a fraternal benefit society, and against its grand officers. There was a jury trial which resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff for $1,000, against the Grand Lodge and W.F. Bledsoe, its president, and that the plaintiff recover nothing as against the other defendants; and the Grand Lodge and Bledsoe have appealed.

The basis of the plaintiff's suit is the following document, which was issued and circulated by the defendant Bledsoe, acting as Grand Master of the Grand Lodge. None of the other defendants signed the document themselves, though their names appear there-on, but were placed there by the defendant Bledsoe, apparently without authority from the other defendants:

"Tack up in the Hall.
"Open Letter to the Jurisdiction of U. B. F. S. M. T. of Texas.

"October 21, 1918 — Greetings:

"Dear Brothers and Sisters: It becomes fittingly necessary in the life and activity of our great order for us to do some plain talking about the conditions of our Grand Lodge, and its destroyers and enemies. We begin with the Grand Lodge sessions at Tyler, Texas, August 1918. The entire staff of officers were elected by the delegates representing your subordinate lodges and temples; this was done by a unanimous vote after space was given for any members of the Grand Lodge to run for office who felt disposed to do so — there were none.

"Permit.
"Grand Master W. F. Bledsoe made it plain to the Grand Lodge that we had no permit, and would not receive one, until the property named by the Commissioner of Insurance had been disposed of, and further stated that he was doing his utmost to sell immediately. He then turned to C. H. Griggs, who had been sulking in his tent because he had not been appointed Grand Secretary, and said: `Griggs, you have been very busy around the Commissioner's office. Am I telling the thing as it is? Griggs said `Yes.' So you see nothing concerning the permit was hidden from the Grand Lodge.

"Cause of Delay of Permit.
"The world's war caused a serious decline in the value and sale of property, and instead of it taking the Grand Master ninety days, as he stated to the Grand Lodge, it took him 365 and more, and then suspended members gave him no little trouble by tampering with the sales. Yet with all these embarrassments he delivered the goods.

"The Emergency Convention.
"Do you remember about ten years ago, when Jesse Mosely, Sam Rose, Lawson Woods, and others of their stripe, attempted to sell out, break up and deliver to Gaines and Perry, the Grand Lodge of Texas. Take a look into the minutes of the N. G. L. at St. Paul, Minn., and you will see where they received $50.00 each for Fraternal Treason, Texas G. L. U. B. F.

"In that case, as in this, they called a provisional Grand Lodge emergency convention. Sam Rose, though suspended from the order, declared himself Grand Master; Jesse Mosely declared himself Grand Secretary. They promised the women a Grand Temple. We stopped them then and we shall stop them again if it becomes necessary. They thought that you belonged to that class of giddy headed women that would forfeit your membership in the order and $500.00 policy for something that they could not give. We ask you to stand nobly, as you have always stood, and give these suspended members and Grand Lodge traitors a good dose of `hemlock' which will settle their activities forever.

"Jesse Mosely the Noted Fraternal Bandit.

"After losing every point in trying to destroy and sell out the U. B. F. Grand Lodge of *Page 498 Texas, went into Mexico and joined the Mexican army, passing for a Spaniard. Not satisfied with his failure to break up the order in the United States, returns from Mexico and tried to secure Negro citizens to arm themselves and fight against their own country. He paid the penalty of a traitor, and that was death, but he was by far a better man than any of those who are now trying to destroy one of the race's most beneficial and foremost organizations in a crisis like this — the world war.

"The Emergency Convention is nothing less than an Emergency Mob, composed of defeated candidates, suspended members, kicked out, and put out, officers from K. P. Grand Lodge — I mean Frierson. Now see how these men stand in the order: Frierson, Lawson Wood, Sam Rose, and the Hon. M. H. Broyles are all suspended members from the order, and the membership of Texas is hereby warned to have nothing to do with them in private or public, as U. B. F. S. This little `gang' is what is left of the Sam Rose-Mosely outlaw set of 1908. St. James Lodge No. 6 is standing by the Grand Lodge. Frierson and Woods, formerly belonged to this lodge, but they are now suspended, both from the local and Grand Lodge.

"`Fight or Desert' — Is the Grand Lodge
Command.
"Fight is to win and desert is to die.

"All officers and members commanded to drive Kaiser Frierson and his invaders from the Grand Lodge of Texas, and thus prove to the world that our motto means something — `United we stand, Divided we fall,' and any officers or members taking part with these suspended members, along with traitors and slanderers of the order, in a convention whose purpose is to discuss the affairs and business of the order in any way, have violated their oath and obligation, and at the same time made themselves liable to the law of the order, and will be dealt with in strict accordance to the law. This is no threat, it is the simple, plain law.

"Thanks the Commissioner.
"We wish to thank the Commissioner for giving us more time on the Houston building, and also for the courtesy given our Grand Master in getting the real estate incident closed and our permit granted and hereby pledge that the financial condition of the order will be very critically guarded, and every interest protected, and also for the good will he extends to us for forty-seven years more of great success.

"Attorney General.
"We thank the Attorney General for his kind words of inspiration and hope, that he found our Grand Lodge in better condition than ninety per cent. of such organizations.

"Brothers and Sisters, the world looked upon you, in going through the recent crisis, and a volume of praise comes from every nook and corner, now that the danger and trouble are over, why keep up the excitement? `Peace be still, no harm cometh.' Keep that trashy literature out of your lodges and temples. No delegates elected to this meeting in Waco by the lodge and temples. No U. B. F. S. M T. money spent in attending such meetings that has come through the legal channels.

"Our Grand Lodge is in better condition than it has been in many a year. We have paid up to the hour all claims matured. Let us all get down to business, and we shall make the world proud of our service.

"The Grand Master's Annual visit, which has been detained on account of selling the property, was received with an ovation until checked by the epidemic. We trust that the members will use every precaution to protect themselves and not depend on homemade remedies, but secure the service of the best skilled physicians, and have yourself properly treated. The Medical Director reports great activity in the new member increase, so do your best in the one thousand membership drive.

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243 S.W. 496, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 1113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grand-lodge-united-bros-of-friendship-of-texas-v-rose-texapp-1922.