Ladies' Benevolent Society No. 2 v. Benevolent Society No. 2

3 Tenn. Ch. R. 100
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 15, 1875
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Tenn. Ch. R. 100 (Ladies' Benevolent Society No. 2 v. Benevolent Society No. 2) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ladies' Benevolent Society No. 2 v. Benevolent Society No. 2, 3 Tenn. Ch. R. 100 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1875).

Opinion

The Chancellor :

The bill is filed to secure, upon the. ground of contract and resulting trust, an undivided interest in a small tract of land alleged to have been purchased with the joint funds of the two litigant societies, as a graveyard within which to bury the deceased members of both. When the bill was originally filed, I granted an injunction inhibiting the defendant from interfering with such lawful use by the complainant of the cemetery as it had previously enjoyed. I afterwards overruled a demurrer, because I thought there was equity in the bill. And sub-, sequently I refused to dissolve the injunction, upon the coming in of the answer, because, while its assertions fully met the equity of the bill, its facts did not, leaving the rights of the parties, even upon the showing of the answer, in grave doubt. 2 Tenn. Ch. 77. Upon the hearing of the cause, recently, on its merits, precisely the same difficulty was suggested by the evidence. The witnesses on each side, were very positive in their assertions of'opinion which were directly in conflict, while, in the main, they all agreed upon the same state of facts. It is obvious, under such circumstances, that the opinions are entitled to little or no weight. The duty of the court is carefully to scrutinize the facts, and from them form its own opinions. Both sets of witnesses, if they agree upon the facts, and only disagree in their inferences, are probably honest, and the case may be decided against either side without any imputation on its. character for integrity and truthfulness.

The substance of the bill is that there were two societies; [102]*102organized by the colored citizens of Edgefield for the same benevolent purposes, namely, to aid the destitute and needy •of their race, to administer to the sick, and bury the dead. One of these societies was composed of colored females, the other of the colored males. That, while one in object, they were separate and distinct in organization, having different presidents, secretaries, and treasurers; that the •cemetery in dispute was bought in common, each society paying one-half of the purchase-money ; that the defendant society recently undertook to • break up the complainant .society by merging the two treasuries into one; and that .a portion of complainant’s members went over to the defendant society, while the residue kept up the organization, and procured a charter of incorporation through this court to enable them to assert their rights.

The bill is based upon two other averments of facts, which were not sustained by the evidence. One is, that .at the time of the alleged disagreement the ^vo societies, although meeting in the same room, met always at different .hours ; and that there was an express contract that the title to the cemetery should be taken to the two societies. The weight of evidence is that the two societies met, at the period mentioned, in the same room, and at the same hour, though it seems the collections of the females were made at a different time from those of the males ; and the evidence does not establish clearly that there was an independent contract that the title to the cemetery should be made to both societies. Unless, therefore, the complainant can show that it had a separate existence, notwithstanding the fact of its meeting .with the defendant, and can, moreover, satisfactorily prove the payment of an aliquot part of the purchase-money for the cemetery, so as to raise a resulting trust, it will fail in its case. The very fact, moreover, that they have made such material assertions of fact, and failed to establish them, tends to weaken their position.

The pi’oof on both sides shows that as early as 1866 [103]*103there were two separate societies in Edgefield organized for the same purposes, one composed of males, the other of females, and holding their meetings at different places. Afterwards they met at the same place, — Payne’s Chapel,— but on different days. Subsequently, as an economical arrangement, they agreed, at the solicitation of defendant, through its president, as he himself says in his deposition, to meet in the same hall at the same hour. All the witnesses agree that, although they thus met together, the female society had its own president, secretary, and treasurer, the president and treasurer being women, but the secretary being a male, a member of the other society, selected by the women to perform the duties of secretary, which consisted, it seems, in reading the constitution and by-laws and calling the roll. Thus far the facts are admitted by all parties. But the question not definitely determined by these facts remains, Was the female organization independent of, or subordinate to and only a part of, the defendant’s organization? One would suppose that the fact could readily have been shown, if it were the one way or the other. But the evidence of the defendant’s own witnesses, — and I propose to look principally to them, because I think the facts deposed to by them are in accord with the evidence on the other side, — leaves the point in singular obscurity.

Neither of these societies had any charter of incorporation at first. They were both voluntary associations, with a constitution and by-laws of their own adoption. On March 14, 1868, the Legislature incorporated Adam Young and others, under the name of the Nashville Colored Benevolent Society, for the same objects as the objects of these Edgefield societies, with power to establish branches; and in October or November, 1868, this new corporation did organize a branch in Edgefield, the defendant in this case. Adam Young, the head man, it seems, of the Nashville society, and his associate in this work of organization, [104]*104state that at this meeting both males and females were present, and they express the opinion that both were embraced in the same charter. If this were the fact, and both of these societies were being held together in the same room, at the same hour, though the time of this union of forces nowhere distinctly appears in this record, and were embraced in the branch charter as one body, it is clear the complainant'would be entitled to no relief. The opinions-of the witnesses are expressed very positively, but the facts, deposed to are too meagre to entitle their opinions to much weight. The subsequent facts are utterly irreconcilable with such a conclusion. Let us commence our investigation with an abstract of what the answer says on this, subject.

The answer says that the defendant was organized under a charter from the mother society, and a body of ladies, were united together for the purpose of assisting each other, without any charter, and, some five years since (which would be 1869), “united with respondents under their charter (it being read to them at the time), and have been working under their jurisdiction from that time to the filing-of complainant’s bill.” This statement of the answer, it will be noticed, admits that the defendant received its charter as a separate body, the females being still a separate, body without a charter. If this be true, — and for the purposes of this suit it cannot be disputed, — the witnesses Young- and Bell are simply mistaken in supposing that the females were chartered with the men. The coming together of the two bodies was after the defendant received its charter. This fact is also shown by the evidence of the defendant’s, president, who says he became a member after the incorporation, and was elected president in 1870, and in his official capacity made to the complainant the proposition to. meet the same night, on the ground that it would save expense.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Tenn. Ch. R. 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ladies-benevolent-society-no-2-v-benevolent-society-no-2-tennctapp-1875.