Lone Star Lodge, Knights & Ladies of Honor v. Cole

131 S.W. 1180, 62 Tex. Civ. App. 500, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 260
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 29, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 131 S.W. 1180 (Lone Star Lodge, Knights & Ladies of Honor v. Cole) 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
Lone Star Lodge, Knights & Ladies of Honor v. Cole, 131 S.W. 1180, 62 Tex. Civ. App. 500, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 260 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

TALBOT, Associate Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment dissolving a temporary prohibitive injunction and refusing a mandatory injunction prayed for by the plaintiffs. The action was originally brought by twenty-nine persons, members of the Lone Star Lodge, Knights and Ladies of Honor, against William Bepp, Protector of said Lodge, Marie J. Cole, Grand Protector of the Order within the State of Texas, and George Í). Tait, Supreme Protector of the Order, to restrain them from interfering with the affairs of said Lodge. A temporary injunction was issued as prayed for, and the defendants were notified to appear on September 16, 1910, to show cause why said injunction should not be made permanent. On September 16, 1910, they appeared and filed an answer to the rule to show cause and filed also an answer to the petition. The plaintiffs thereupon filed an amended petition making two other members of said Lodge No. 1935, parties plaintiff and, in addition to the persons named, made the Supreme Lodge Knights and Ladies of Honor, Grand Lodge Knights and Ladies of Honor, of the State of Texas, W. J. Condon and Bobert Hunerberg, two of .the trustees of said Lone Star Lodge, and J. M. Cole, husband of the defendant, Marie J. Cole, parties defendant. In said amended petition plaintiffs prayed for another temporary prohibitive writ of injunction and also for a mandatory injunction. The prohibitive writ was granted and the defendants notified to appear September 23, 1910, to show cause why the mandatory writ of injunction should not also be granted. On September 23, 1910, the defendants appeared and filed a first amended original answer and also an answer to the rule to show cause. In said answer they asked that the temporary injunction theretofore granted be dissolved and that said mandatory injunction be refused. On said date the hearing was postponed until the next day and in the meantime Hon. E. B. Muse, Judge of the Forty-fourth Judicial District, and Hon. J. C. Boberts, Judge of the Sixty-eighth Judicial District, exchanged districts. On September 24, 1910, the plaintiffs filed a response to the defendants’ answer to the rule to show cause, and consented that the motion to dissolve the previous injunctions be heard immediately. Thereupon the hearing before Judge Boberts proceeded; but not being concluded on that day it was postponed to and continued on September 28, 1910. The hearing was on the sworn pleadings alone, no evidence being introduced. At the conclusion of the hearing, the court dissolved the temporary injunctions theretofore issued, and refused the mandatory injunction.

The plaintiffs complain of an order of suspension of said Lone Star Lodge No. 1935, issued by-the said Supreme Protector of the Order, George D. Tait, on September 3, 1910, the delivery of certain paraphernalia by the trustees of said lodge to the defendant, Marie J. Cole, as deputy supreme protector in pursuance of said order of suspension, and *504 of the denial of the authority of the plaintiff, B. Both, as financial secretary of said lodge, to collect dues and assessments from the members thereof since said order of suspension. The prayer of the petition is that the judge of the court issue a mandatory writ of injunction, or such other writ as may be proper, to effect the immediate return and restoration unto said local lodge and the plaintiff members thereof of its property set forth in the above petition as having been wrested from it; that the defendants, and each of them, be enjoined from in any manner interfering with the custody and use of said property so long as same may be used by plaintiffs for the benefit of said local lodge; that the defendants, and each of them, be restrained and enjoined from in any manner interfering with the deliberations, meetings or workings of said local lodge; that they, and each of them, be enjoined from in any manner contending, or claiming that said local lodge is dissolved or suspended, and be enjoined from in any manner enforcing or attempting to enforce such contention or claim; that the defendants, and each of them, be restrained from in any manner questioning the legality of payments in the form of assessments, dues or otherwise heretofore made or hereafter to be made by plaintiffs and other members of said local lodge unto plaintiff B. Both as the duly elected and qualified agent and officer authorized to accept and receipt for said payments; that defendants, and each of them, be restrained and enjoined from in any manner asserting, contending or claiming that the rights of plaintiffs, and those for whom they sue, as insured members of the order, have become or are impaired or are not in full force and effect.

The grounds alleged upon which plaintiffs seek the foregoing relief are, in substance, that they are members of said suspended lodge; that said order of suspension was unauthorized and invalid; that the chief purpose of the order is to furnish insurance on the lives of its members out of a relief fund created by dues and assessments paid into the treasury of the local lodge, and by the proper officer of such lodge transmitted to the supreme treasurer of the order, but that one of thq privileges among others of said order is that of giving moral and material aid to its members by holding moral and instructive lectures, and by encouraging each other to obtain employment etc.; that through the medium of said lodge they are entitled to participate in the control and management of the order and in the disposition of the relief fund thereof, amounting to about $300,000; that they are holders of benefit certificates, or contracts of insurance, issued by the order, and make payment of the dues or assessments accruing on account thereof to the order through the agency of said lodge and its officers; that the order of suspension affects their benefit certificates in the order; that it undertakes to impose certain onerous conditions on their rights to maintain the same in force, in that, the effect of the suspension is to compel the members of the suspended lodge to obtain from the supreme secretary of the order a certificate of good standing, and to deposit it in sixty days with such other lodge of the order as the members may desire to join, and to pay there *505 for, in addition to accrued,assessments and pending assessments, the sum of one dollar; that such member must also show that since the suspension of the lodge he has not been sick, or rindergone any surgical operation, nor has he received any serious injury; that if he has, he must be re-examined before admission.

Plaintiffs further allege that the suspension order made by the supreme protector and the wresting of the lodge property, consisting of its charter, emblems, badges, books, etc., used in holding the secret meetings of the lodge in accordance with the ritual and secret work of the order, of the estimated value of $750, is void and of no force or effect because such action was taken ex parte and without notice to the suspended lodge or to any member thereof. They aver that the defendants, Condon and Hunerberg, two of the trustees of said lodge No. 1935, are in sympathy with their co-defendants and have conspired with them to attempt the destruction of said lodge and to wrest its property from it, and that by reason of these facts said trustees are unfit persons to be entrusted longer with the supervision and custody of said property; that the plaintiff, B.

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Bluebook (online)
131 S.W. 1180, 62 Tex. Civ. App. 500, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 260, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lone-star-lodge-knights-ladies-of-honor-v-cole-texapp-1910.