Gross Loge des Deutschen Order des Harugari des Staates Illinois v. Brausch

167 Ill. App. 13, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1217
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 16, 1912
DocketGen. No. 16,027; Gen. No. 16,028; Gen. No. 16,029; Gen. No. 16,030
StatusPublished

This text of 167 Ill. App. 13 (Gross Loge des Deutschen Order des Harugari des Staates Illinois v. Brausch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gross Loge des Deutschen Order des Harugari des Staates Illinois v. Brausch, 167 Ill. App. 13, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1217 (Ill. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Smith

delivered the opinion of the court.

By its amended bills of complaint in four cases in the Circuit Court, the Grand Lodge of the German Order of Harugari of the State of Illinois (Die Gross Loge des Deutschen Ordens der Harugari des Staates Illinois), claimed accountings and decrees against subordinate lodges respectively (and their officers), which had surrendered their charters as such lodges to the complainant, but had refused to account and pay over the moneys in their hands in accordance with the regulations, by-laws and rules of the order. In each of the 'bills the subordinate lodge and its officers are made defendants. In all respects, except the amounts claimed the bills of complaint are alike and seek an accounting and recovery upon the theory that the moneys and funds sought to be recovered are impressed with a trust, and on the voluntary surrender of the charter and dissolution of the lodge in each case, such moneys and property should be paid over and delivered to the complainant, in pursuance of the regulations, by-laws and rules of the order.

The cases were consolidated for hearing in the Circuit Court, and a decree was entered in each case dismissing the bill for want of equity. The complainant, the Grand Lodge of the State of Illinois, prosecutes an appeal from each decree, and the appeals in Numbers 16,028, 16,029 and 16,030 in this court have been consolidated by order of the court with number 16,027 for hearing upon one set of abstracts and briefs.

The bills and the evidence show the character of the organization of the complainant and its subordinate lodges. This in part appears in Freundschaft Lodge v. Alchenburger, 235 Ill. 438, and in the same case in this court, Alchenburger v. Freundschaft Lodge, 138 Ill. App, 204.

The averments of the bills and the proofs show that the United States Grand Lodge of the German Order of Harugari is a voluntary organization with a constitution governing its actions and that it is the Supreme Lodge within the order of Harugari. Subordinate to it are the Grand Lodges in the various states, among which is the complainant, the Grand Lodge of the State of Illinois. This lodge exercises the highest jurisdiction in this state and is exercising its power under the fraternal state law of Illinois of 1893. Subordinate to the Grand Lodge of the state are subordinate lodges within the state, consisting of men’s lodges and women’s lodges. Prior to the Constitution of 1904 the women’s lodges had no participation in the death fund of the order, but after that period they became entitled to such participation by paying an increased per capita tax amounting to $1.20 per annum. The order is organized not for pecuniary profit but is a fraternal society.

In the years 1894 and 1895 respectively four subordinate lodges to the complainant, namely, Hertha Lodge No. 73, Einigeit Lodge No. 74, Treue Schwester Lodge No. 79 and Immergruen Lodge No. 82, all of the Hertha Degree, received and accepted their charters from the complainant. The charters of the above defendant lodges were signed by the officers of the United States Grand Lodge, and the State Grand Lodge. The charters for all the four subordinate lodges, defendants, were the same except as to dates and names. They each provided that the lodge should consist of at least five members, and that the books and papers of the lodge must be submitted at all times to the Grand Lodge for examination whenever dissatisfaction is expressed by any member with the decisions and resolutions of the lodge,- that each officer before his installation should be examined as to whether he possessed the "necessary qualifications, by the president or by any grand officer deputized for the purpose. Each lodge was empowered to enact such by-laws as it might deem best for the welfare of the lodge, provided such by-laws should not be in conflict with the constitution of the order. Each lodge was granted all rights and privileges of a lodge as long as it worked within the limits of the constitution. Should, however, the lodge transgress the same, then the charter and papers and all the property of the lodge should be forfeited and delivered to the Grand Lodge. In case the lodge cannot exist all its property must be delivered to the Grand Lodge.

The Hertha degree was a degree used by the order and had for its purpose the giving to women, married and unmarried, the opportunity to participate in advancing the tenets and privileges of the order, such as mutual assistance in sickness, distress and death, as well as the promotion of, social ties among families through'lodge meetings and festivities.

By the Constitution of the United States Grand Lodge it is provided that the State Grand Lodge has final jurisdiction and is the highest tribunal of the order within the state, and that no subordinate lodge can exist without the consent of the State Grand Lodge, and if application for a charter is made the Grand Lodge possesses the power to accept or reject such application, and in case of acceptance it shall recommend the same to the United States Grand Lodge. The State Grand Lodge, with the consent of the United States Grand Lodge, is empowered to shspend any charter for any period of time or to revoke the same, and may also amend the constitution for subordinate lodges within its jurisdiction, in order that the laws shall correspond with the laws of the state where such Grand Lodge exists; also to accept appeals to redress all wrongs existing in subordinate lodges, to designate and regulate all ways and means for its own support, and to perform all other matters which promote the interests of the order, provided the same do not conflict with the laws of the order or country.

The evidence tends to show that the defendant lodges received their charter existence from the Illinois State Grand Lodge, and accepted such charters and acted under the same, recognizing the jurisdiction of the State Grand Lodge. Each of the defendant lodges became and was, pursuant to special act of the legislature, approved March 26, 1869, a corporation, and they each remained a Harugari lodge as such up to or about the first day of October, 1904, when each of the said defendant lodges by unanimous vote, for reasons which are not important or material here, returned the fraternal charter under which they had been existing, through their representatives, to the State Grand Lodge and the State Grand Lodge, the complainant, has ever since had possession of the same. The defendant lodges, however, refuse to pay their funds or deliver their securities over to the State Grand Lodge, according to the by-laws and charter regulations of the order, and have either retained the same or divided the funds and moneys among their members, or have transferred such moneys and funds to new organizations which were organized by the members of the respective defendants when they voted to surrender their charters..

The controversy in these cases arises upon the true intent and meaning of the charter, by-laws, rules and regulations of the order with regard to the proper and rightful 'custodian of the moneys, funds and property of subordinate lodges which have dissolved and surrendered their charters.

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Related

Freundschaft Lodge No. 72 D. O. H. v. Alchenburger
85 N.E. 653 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1908)

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167 Ill. App. 13, 1912 Ill. App. LEXIS 1217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gross-loge-des-deutschen-order-des-harugari-des-staates-illinois-v-brausch-illappct-1912.