McCaffrey v. Pittsburgh Athletic Ass'n

293 A.2d 51, 448 Pa. 151, 1972 Pa. LEXIS 445
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 28, 1972
DocketAppeal, No. 133
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 293 A.2d 51 (McCaffrey v. Pittsburgh Athletic Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCaffrey v. Pittsburgh Athletic Ass'n, 293 A.2d 51, 448 Pa. 151, 1972 Pa. LEXIS 445 (Pa. 1972).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Eagen,

This appeal arises from a decree of the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County which denied equitable relief to appellants, all members of the Pittsburgh Athletic Association.

The gravamen of their complaint was that a certain bylaw purportedly passed at a meeting held November 14, 1967, which limited the transferability of certain membership certificates unlawfully deprived them of vested property rights.1 Secondarily it was contended [153]*153that even if the questioned bylaw were found to he a proper exercise of corporate power, passage still had to be declared a nullity since the enactment did not receive the required two-thirds vote mandated in the bylaws.

After preliminary objections to this complaint were dismissed, the matter came on for trial before Silvestre J., sitting as chancellor. At the completion of testimony the chancellor entered his adjudication and decree nisi dismissing the complaint. Exceptions were subsequently dismissed and a final decree was entered by the court en banc. This appeal was then filed.

Trial of the issue disclosed the following facts:

The Pittsburgh Athletic Association, a nonprofit membership corporation, was incorporated by decree of tbe Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County on December 24, 1908, at No. 120 First Term, 1909. The Association’s underlying purpose was and is the maintenance of a club for athletic exercises and social enjoyment.

Life membership was established under the original bylaws of the organization in 1908. Between the year of its establishment and 1923, some 164 original life memberships were sold by the Association, 122 of which are presently outstanding. Such membership called for an entrance fee of one thousand dollars.

The legend on the life membership certificate reads in pertinent part as follows:

“Life Member”
“The membership hereby represented is perpetually exempt from dues and assessments but is subject to all other bylaws and rules.
[154]*154“This membership is transferable on the books of the Association upon assignment and surrender of this Certificate in accordance with the provisions of the bylaws.” [Emphasis supplied.] On the reverse of the certificate is a provision for its assignment and transfer “according to provisions set forth in the bylaws of said Association.”2

During the intervening years between the foundation of the group and the inception of this lawsuit, the provisions in the bylaws dealing with life membership have been amended on several occasions.

Prior to February 6, 1922, the relevant portion of the bylaws provided that:

Section 4. “Life membership shall be transferable on the approval of the Board of Directors, subject to the regular action of the Membership Committee, upon the payment of a transfer fee equal to the amount of the resident initiation fee in force at the time transfer is made, and such members shall be exempt from the payment of dues and assessments. The Association has first opportunity to purchase any life membership which may be offered for sale.”
Section 9. “Each Life Member shall pay an entrance fee of $1,000 and shall be exempt from the payment of annual dues.”3

[155]*155In 1948 the word “Perpetual” was added to the title of Life Membership, so that it read in the bylaws “Life [Perpetual] Membership.” In 1954 the bylaws were again amended by making the life membership transferable only to resident members. Finally, the amendment of November 14, 1967, which gave rise to the present dispute provided as follows:

Section 5. “Life Membership shall be transferable to a Resident member only on the approval of the Board of Directors, subject to the regular action of the Membership Committee, upon the payment of a transfer fee equal in amount to the Resident initiation fee in force at the time transfer is made, provided there be credited on such payment in the amount of any initiation fee already paid by him, and such member shall be exempt from the payment of dues and assessments.
“Effective ten (10) days following the enactment of this amendment Bylaw, all Life Memberships in existence will be entitled to one (1) transfer as set forth above, and if and when said transfer takes effect, the new certificate will be marked with the legend, ‘This certificate is non-transferable’. However, the Life Member holding the new certificate will have all the other privileges of Life Membership as set forth herein, with [156]*156the exception of transfer rights and any rights incidental thereto.
“No Life Memberships, in addition to the 157 outstanding shall be issued. The Association has first opportunity to purchase any Life Membership which may be offered for sale.”

Appellants assert that the effect of the 1967 amendment was to convert what had been a life membership, exempt from dues and assessments and heretofore continuously transferable, subject to the bylaw regulations, to a life membership which would be terminated at the death, resignation or expulsion of the transferee of the present holder. The inherent defect, in their estimation, is the deprivation of contractual and property rights; rights which were vested in the holders of life memberships and which cannot be divested without their consent. The property right so vested is declared to be the unqualified right to transfer each such certificate in perpetuity, exempt from dues and assessments in the hands of the holder.

It is appellee’s position that while in past practice life memberships have been transferred beyond the life of the original life member, such transfers have always been made pursuant to the bylaws of the Association and their subsequent amendments. It is argued that the transferability of a life membership arose out of and exists solely by virtue of the bylaws of the Association and that an amendment limiting transferability is within the power of the Association, despite the fact that it may restrict privileges which were previously permitted by the liberal policy.

The chancellor concluded that it was necessary to strain the definition of life membership in order to find a perpetual right of transferability and declined to do so. \He further found by analysis of the contract between the Association and its members that any right [157]*157of transferability emanated from the bylaws and as such, was subject to future amendment. On this basis he found that the Association was acting within the parameters of its authority in amending this bylaw and accordingly dismissed the complaint.

Two issues are presented for our determination: first, whether the court below erred in determining that life membership holders did not have a perpetual right to transfer such memberships; and second, whether it is now open to appellants to argue that the amendment did not receive the necessary vote of the membership.

We take as our starting point scrutiny of the term life member, in general and in the context in which it appears in the membership certificate document. While there is a dearth of cases on the point the term “life membership” was discussed by the court in

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
293 A.2d 51, 448 Pa. 151, 1972 Pa. LEXIS 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccaffrey-v-pittsburgh-athletic-assn-pa-1972.