Hemphill v. Enterprise Lodge No. 75

66 Pa. Super. 134, 1917 Pa. Super. LEXIS 210
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 16, 1917
DocketAppeal, No. 88
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 66 Pa. Super. 134 (Hemphill v. Enterprise Lodge No. 75) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hemphill v. Enterprise Lodge No. 75, 66 Pa. Super. 134, 1917 Pa. Super. LEXIS 210 (Pa. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion by

Henderson, J.,

The proceeding in the court below was a bill in equity praying for an injunction restraining the defendants from denying the plaintiff the rights and privileges of membership in “Enterprise Lodge No. 75, Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen.” It is averred in the bill and admitted in the answer that the defendant society is an unincorporated beneficial association of which the complainant became a member November 11, 1881, and so continued until July 27,1913, when he was expelled. He held a beneficial certificate issued by the society on which he had paid assessments amounting to $496.25, and which entitled him to benefits if permanently injured and his wife, or other designated beneficiary, to $1,500 in the event of his death. His dues were paid in accordance with the rules of the order and he was a member in good standing until the presentation of the charges out of which the expulsion came. The charges were preferred by two members of the lodge on June 16, 1912, at a special meeting. Three violations of the law of the order were set forth. The first alleged that the plaintiff in violation of his obligation and of Section 2 of Article XXVIII of the Constitution revealed the secrets of the order and its unwritten work and business in the lodge to divers persons. The second averred that the complainant had in violation of his obligation and of Section 5 of Article XXVIII of the Constitution conducted himself in a manner unbecoming a member of the lodge and made false statements to and about a lodge and continually and contumaciously harassed the officers and brethren in and about their efforts to accommodate their grievances under consideration between their [137]*137employers and themselves. The third charge was that the plaintiff in violation of his obligation and of Section 6 of Article XXVIII of the Constitution circulated slanderous and libelous reports about a grand lodge officer.

The constitution of the lodge provides that when charges have been preferred they shall forthwith be referred to a committee of three disinterested members for investigation who shall proceed to try the case in accordance with the mode of procedure prescribed. At the conclusion of the testimony the committee is required to agree on a verdict which shall be reduced to writing and reported at the next regular meeting of the lodge, together with a record of the proceedings and the testimony received. Paragraph J of Section 2 of Article XVIII of the Constitution is as follows: “The report of the committee shall be read and if approved by a majority of the members present it shall be the judgment of the Lodge and shall be so declared by the President and entered in full on the minutes and the Recording Secretary shall forward a copy of the verdict to the accused under seal of the Lodge.” The charges were referred to a committee in accordance with the provisions of the constitution. This committee after having held four meetings for the taking of testimony and the consideration of the case presented a report at a meeting of the lodge held July 27, 1912, in which they found the accused “guilty in manner and form as charged”; whereupon, the following action was had as shown by the minutes of the lodge: “On motion by Bro. Leahy seconded by Bro. Smith that above report be received and recommendation complied with, carried.” No other action with reference to the report was taken and there was no declaration by the president that the report of the committee was the judgment of the lodge. An appeal was taken from this action by the accused in accordance with the laws of the organization and a reinstatement demanded which was refused and it is admitted that he has exhausted all the remedies afforded him by the laws and practices of .the [138]*138organization. The averment of the bill is that his expulsion by the lodge was unlawful because not supported by any evidence of a violation of its laws and because the trial was not conducted in conformity to the provisions of the constitution relating thereto. The learned judge of the court below after a careful consideration of the evidence held that it was destitute of facts which would support any of the charges; that the complainant had not violated any of the by-laws, rules or regulations of the order and that he was improperly expelled from the lodge. The appellant’s contention is that there was evidence to support two of the charges and that the irregularities in the trial were not of such character as to affect the action of the lodge. The jurisdiction of the court to hear and determine the case is not questioned. All that is contended for by the appellant is that if there was evidence in support of the charges and the trial was regularly conducted the defendant is bound by the law of the order and it is not within the capacity of a court of equity to dispose of the case on a consideration of a preponderance of evidence or of some irregularity not of consequence. It seems not to be disputed that the third charge against the plaintiff was not sustained and the first had less merit and less support in the evidence. It apparently had its foundation in the action of the plaintiff in filing a bill in equity in the Oourt. of Common Pleas No. 1 of Philadelphia County asking for an injunction to restrain the officers of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen from proceeding to carry out a plan of federation with the Order of Railway Conductors and the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, a plan of which federation had been submitted to the order to which the plaintiff belonged for approval, this approval to be obtained by a vote of the order. The plaintiff and other members of the lodge objected to the proposed federation and opposed the adoption of the plan. When the votes were canvassed it was alleged by some of the opponents there[139]*139to that many illegal votes were polled, and this was the principal ground on which the plaintiff based his case in the proceeding to restrain the carrying out of the federation scheme. That the plaintiff had a right to go into court to prevent the carrying through of the federation plan can hardly be disputed. It was not a project provided for by the constitution and by-laws of the order, but a movement proposed by some one for the cooperation of the different orders presumably for their common interests. Conceding the propriety of the plan the plaintiff and those thinking with him nevertheless had a right to resort to any lawful means to prevent their own organization from entering into an entangling alliance with any similar body. Moreover, there was no testimony offered in this case as to what was said and done in the proceeding in the Court of Common Pleas No. 1. The most that was attempted was the offer of the opinion of three members of the order that by filing the bill in the latter court there was a revealing of the secrets of the order and its unwritten work. This was clearly not the result of that proceeding and the learned judge has well found that “there was nothing said or done in the course of the proceeding in the Court of Common Pleas No.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 Pa. Super. 134, 1917 Pa. Super. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hemphill-v-enterprise-lodge-no-75-pasuperct-1917.