Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge v. Most Worshipful Hiram Grand Lodge

273 P. 648, 85 Colo. 17
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedDecember 10, 1928
DocketNo. 11,875.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 273 P. 648 (Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge v. Most Worshipful Hiram Grand Lodge) 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
Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge v. Most Worshipful Hiram Grand Lodge, 273 P. 648, 85 Colo. 17 (Colo. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Adams

The names of the parties appear here in the same order as in the trial court. They will be referred to as plaintiff and defendant or defendants. The name of plaintiff is “Most Worshipful Prince Hall Grand Lodge, Free and Accepted Masons of Colorado and Jurisdiction.” The name adopted by defendant is “Most Worshipful Hiram Grand Lodge, Free and Accepted Ancient York Masons of Colorado and Jurisdiction, National Compact Prince Hall Origin.” Both are organized, or attempted to be organized, as corporations not for profit under the Colorado statutes. One John James, a member of defendant lodge, is also named as a defendant, but the principal contestants are the two lodges, and the determination of their respective claims is decisive as to James. We therefore discuss them only, and reference hereafter to the defendant in the singular, means the defendant lodge.

Plaintiff sued defendants (to obtain an injunction restraining them from using the corporate name adopted by defendant lodge, on the ground that such name is similar to that of plaintiff, and liable to be mistaken for the name of the latter. The suit was also to have defendants restrained from using Masonic emblems and the insignia of that order. Plaintiff was nonsuited, and it brings the case here for review.

*19 Plaintiff filed its articles of incorporation in the office of the secretary of state on July 14, 1923. Defendant filed its articles in the same office on January 26, 1926. Each lodge is composed of colored men. Each is organized for general charitable, benevolent and fraternal purposes. Each has its principal office in the city of Denver, and each has subordinate lodges, or “Blue” lodges, in various parts of the state.

Before plaintiff was incorporated, it operated as an unincorporated 'association, continuously since the year 1876, under a name like the one now used, except the words “Prince Hall,” which were added when it was incorporated. It has a membership of about eight hundred in this state. It claims to be independent of any national grand body or superior.

Defendant claims to be subject to a national grand lodge, with headquarters in the state of Georgia, and that it is operating in this state pursuant to authority derived from such national grand body. How long defendant functioned in Colorado, or attempted so to do, as a Masonic lodge before its incorporation is not clear, but it appears inferentially that this did not occur before the year 1925.

Although defendants introduced no evidence, nevertheless the articles of incorporation of both corporations, certified copies of which were produced by plaintiff, are of the same general character, except as here noted. They go into minute detail, and assist in a comparison of their respective claims. Both have similar Masonic traditions, and use the same emblems and insignia of Masonry as they understand and practice it. Both claim to be York Masons, according to an old constitution adopted at York, in the Kingdom of England. Both claim to be of Prince Hall origin. Prince Hall was a colored man of Boston, Massachusetts, who, with several of his brethren, are said to have petitioned the Grand Lodge of England for a warrant to operate as a *20 just and lawful body of Masons. It is claimed that such authority was granted by such Grand Lodge in the year 1784,- and that colored Masons have worked as a just and lawful body of Masons in the United States since 1785. The claims of plaintiff and defendant may be summarized with the statement that while they both cherish the same Masonic traditions, ostensibly work in the same way, and with substantially the same emblems and insignia of Masonry, and under similar names, the two lodges part ways at this point. Each has its legal derivation under separate authority or charters, each is a wholly separate entity, and plaintiff claims the prior and exclusive right in Colorado to its name or a similar name, and such emblems and insignia.

The evidence shows that in October, 1926, defendant’s members paraded in Denver as Masons, by permission of the city officials, accorded to such members as Masons, on application of the latter. They also held public exercises as such. According to a printed program, some of the meetings were held in their so-called “Masonic Hall,” and some at a church. The folder announced, among other things, “The Grand Body will assemble at the Masonic Hall and parade to the church.” Defendant’s delegates wore Masonic badges, indicating their connection with defendant’s order. Other purported Masonic activities on the part of defendants appear of record, none of which are contradicted by the evidence.

We shall consider the two principal legal propositions separately. First, concerning the corporate name adopted by defendant, and second, as to its use of Masonic emblems and insignia.

1. As to the name: Section 2245, C. L. 1921, reads in part as follows: “ * * * No certificate shall be filed or received for any domestic corporation bearing a name identical with, or similar to or liable to be mistaken for the name of any other domestic corporation. * * * ”

Any one will be able, without much effort, to point out distinguishing features, largely of minor consequence, in *21 the names of plaintiff and defendant. But even a cursory glance at section 2245, C. L., above quoted, will show that precise identity of one name with that of the other is not the only evil forbidden by law. On the contrary, the statute also prohibits “a name identical with, or similar to or liable to be mistaken for the name of any other domestic corporation.” Indeed, faint or trifling semi-distinctions are often the chief subterfuges employed by those who would unlawfully make use of another’s corporate name. The adjudicated cases, some.of which we cite, are common illustrations. It is frequently done while they maintain a grasp on the key words and central idea of the name imitated, and thus promote confusion. Defendant employed these methods. When it comes to corporate names, the test is not necessarily actual deception, but the tendency to deceive, especially when the preventive relief sought is against continuance of such conduct. Driverless Car Co. v. Glessner-Thornberry Car Co., 83 Colo. 262, 265, 264 Pac. 653. .

2. In the names of plaintiff and defendant, the word “Masons” is of course the principal word. The full title, which, in substance, and almost literally, has been in common use in this country (with a variation only in the name of the state) for more than a century is “Most Worshipful Grand Lodge Free and Accepted Masons of Colorado.” Every word of it is found in order in the name of both these parties, and such other words as are found in either are common to both or are superfluous. The right of a just and regularly constituted lodge of Masons to the exclusive use of such name is one of its most valuable assets. We take judicial notice of the fact that they compose an immense fraternal order. We do this not only because it is a matter of general and common knowledge, but also because of our statutes. Our legislature has given express recognition in our insurance laws to “grand or subordinate lodges of Masons,” section 2629, C. L. 1921. The words “Mason” and “Masonic” have thus acquired a secondary meaning. These

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273 P. 648, 85 Colo. 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/most-worshipful-prince-hall-grand-lodge-v-most-worshipful-hiram-grand-colo-1928.