Loveland Camp No. 83 v. Woodmen Building & Benevolent Ass'n

116 P.2d 195, 108 Colo. 297
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJuly 21, 1941
DocketNo. 14,786.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 116 P.2d 195 (Loveland Camp No. 83 v. Woodmen Building & Benevolent Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Loveland Camp No. 83 v. Woodmen Building & Benevolent Ass'n, 116 P.2d 195, 108 Colo. 297 (Colo. 1941).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Young

delivered the opinion of the court.

*299 Loveland Camp No. 83, Woodmen of the World, William G. McGeorge and John H. Popp, for themselves and all other members of said camp, were plaintiffs in an action in the district court of Larimer county against the Woodmen Building and Benevolent Association, a corporation, U. O. Chambers and J. D. Biker, defendants. The relief sought in the action was the removal of a cloud from the title to a lot and building existing by reason of a deed executed in an attempted conveyance of the property in 1929 from Loveland Camp No. 83, Woodmen of the World, to the Woodmen Building and Benevolent Association, a corporation, which deed, plaintiffs allege, was void and they ask that it be so declared, and that defendants be required to account to plaintiffs for all monies received by it as rentals for the property since the date of the purported conveyance.

At the close of the evidence introduced by and on behalf of plaintiffs, defendants moved for a nonsuit. The motion was sustained and judgment of dismissal was duly entered. Plaintiffs seek a reversal of this judgment. They assign certain errors on the admission and exclusion of evidence, but if further proceedings there shall be these questions may not arise ■ and we do not pass upon their merits. The only assignment we deem it necessary to consider in disposing of the case here is whether the nonsuit was properly granted; or, in other words, whether the plaintiffs’ evidence, for the purposes of the motion accepted as true, viewed in the light most favorable to.plaintiffs, entitled them to any relief.

Loveland Camp No. 83, Woodmen of the World, is a subordinate lodge of the Woodmen of the World, a corporation. The subordinate lodge is an unincorporated voluntary association operating by charter granted by the parent organization. In addition to its fraternal character the parent lodge operated as a fraternal life insurance company. In 1929 its insurance rates were greatly increased, resulting in much dissatisfaction among the members, many of whom dropped their in *300 surance and ceased their affiliation with the fraternity. In Loveland Camp No. 83, due to this disaffection arising from the increase in rates, a scheme was conceived and fostered by E. S. Allen, an attorney, and others who were members of the local camp, to transfer the lodge building to a corporation to be organized and to issue stock in this corporation to all of the then members of the local camp, to each in an amount equal to the amount of his assessments that had been applied to the purchase of the building conveyed, during his membership in the camp. Such a company was organized and by vote of the members of the local camp the managers were authorized to deed the property to the defendant corporation which, in addition to assuming the indebtedness against the building, agreed to pay notes owing by the local camp to certain of the members, aggregating $450. The value of the property involved nowhere appears, nor does it appear from the evidence, if the $450 represented by said notes was paid by the new company, when or in what manner the indebtedness was liquidated.

The new company elected a board of directors and immediately assumed the management of the property. The Loveland Camp paid a monthly rental for the use of the lodge room, and it appears that the ground floor of the building and the facilities of the lodge room from time to time were rented to other persons and societies and the income therefrom received by the new company.

The parties to the controversy are not in disagreement that prior to the conveyance the property was owned by Loveland Camp No. 83, an unincorporated voluntary organization. Nor is there disagreement that at common law such organizations could convey their property only by deed signed by all of the individual members of the organization. “Since a voluntary association has no separate entity, and therefore cannot, as such, acquire or hold property, the ownership of any property or funds in form acquired or held by it is *301 vested in the members jointly, and they accordingly have the right to manage, control, and dispose of such property or funds at their joint pleasure.” 5 C.J., p. 1359, §86, 7 C.J.S. Association, §7. The question whether Love-land Camp No. 83 might have conveyed its property in such manner is not before us, because no attempt was made to have all of the members of the camp join in the transfer. The attempted conveyance was under the statute (section 41, chapter 40, ’35 C.S.A.), which vests unincorporated voluntary organizations, such as Love-land Camp No. 83, with the attributes of a legal entity to the extent that they may hold property “by the name and number” of the local society or lodge and may make conveyances of property by the presiding officer and secretary under the seal of the subordinate body.

The question, as we view it, and which is determinative of the whole issue here involved, is not whether the members of the local camp, as owners of the property, had a right to convey it, but whether in making the attempted conveyance the local camp observed the statutory prerequisites, and, if it failed to observe them, what the effect of such failure is upon the validity of the deed. The statute under which the convey anee'was attempted to be made is as follows:

“Any Masonic body or lodge of Odd Fellows or other like benevolent and fraternal society duly chartered by its grand body according to the laws, constitution and usages of such fraternity, and not wishing to become a corporate body, may take and hold real estate for its use and benefit by purchase, grant, devise, gift or otherwise, in and by the name and number of said body, according to the respective registers of the grand body under which the same may be holden, and the presiding officer of such body, together with the secretary thereof, may make conveyances of any real estate belonging to such body, when authorized by said body, under such regulations as the said society or its grand body may see fit to make; but all such conveyances *302 shall be attested by the seal of said subordinate body.”

It appears from the record that there was no constitutional provision or bylaw of either the parent body or the local camp specifically providing any regulations with respect to the conveyance of the real property of a subordinate camp, or which affirmatively provided that such transfers might be made, or that expressly prohibited their being made. We are of the opinion that in the absence of such regulations made either by the local camp or its grand body, or both, of the dignity of a constitutional provision or bylaw binding upon all of the members of the local camp, that no valid conveyance could be made except when authorized by the unanimous consent of the members of the local camp.

We have arrived at this conclusion by an analysis of the statute and a consideration of its evident purpose. The title of the act is as follows: “An act concerning the holding and conveying of real estate by Masonic bodies; and by lodges of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows, and other like benevolent and fraternal societies.” S.L. 1893, p. 85, c. 46.

The words used indicate that the act relates to the holding and conveying

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Bluebook (online)
116 P.2d 195, 108 Colo. 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loveland-camp-no-83-v-woodmen-building-benevolent-assn-colo-1941.