Sherry v. Cedarbrook Country Club

31 Pa. D. & C.2d 57, 1962 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 42
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedDecember 10, 1962
DocketNo. 2; no. 2015
StatusPublished

This text of 31 Pa. D. & C.2d 57 (Sherry v. Cedarbrook Country Club) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sherry v. Cedarbrook Country Club, 31 Pa. D. & C.2d 57, 1962 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 42 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1962).

Opinion

Alessandroni, P. J., and Reimel, J.,

While the proceedings in equity have been finally resolved and our adjudication has been filed, the master, as well as counsel for plaintiffs, counsel for the active members of the club, and counsel for nonmember certificate holders, have filed petitions for allowance of counsel fees and costs.

A hearing was held before President Judge Eugene V. Alessandroni and Judge Theodore L. Reimel (Judge Leo Weinrott did not participate) at which testimony was offered by plaintiffs’ counsel in support of their petition. Following the hearing, the court heard arguments submitted by the other petitioners and counsel for the Cedarbrook Country Club.

It is necessary to consider the history of this protracted and difficult litigation in order to indicate the [58]*58roles played by the various parties now petitioning for the payment of their counsel fees and costs.

Cedarbrook Country Club is a nonprofit corporation organized and existing under the laws of Pennsylvania for the purpose of the “maintenance of a club for the encouragement of golf and other athletic sports”, and to exist perpetually. Its charter was granted by the Court of Common Pleas Number 3 on February 23, 1915, and the club has at all times been maintained for its chartered purposes. The club was limited to 425 members, of whom, at the commencement of the original suit, 103 were proprietary members and 193 active members. There were, in addition, a number of women and junior members who had no voting rights.

In 1958, the club accepted a substantial offer to sell the golf course and club house, and the officers of the club, pursuant to authority given them by its Board of Governors, entered into an option agreement for the purchase of land in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania. Acquisition of this option was authorized by a meeting of the proprietary members held September 3,1958. Authority to complete the purchase was sought from the proprietary members at a meeting held July 13, 1959. There were various contentions about what happened at this meeting. The result was that two days later, on July 15, 1959, the original suit in equity was commenced.

The action in equity was instituted by five proprietary members who were later joined by approximately 32 additional proprietary members, all represented by petitioners in the instant suit, James F. Masterson, G. Fred DiBona and Thomas A. Masterson, Esquires. The complaint alleged that resolution adopted at the special meeting of the defendant club on September 3, 1958 to sell the club property and to relocate was adopted as a result of misrepresentations of fact and [59]*59misrepresentations of law; that the resolution to exercise an option to purchase ground for relocation adopted at the meeting held July 13, 1959 was illegal; and that the officers and directors of the defendant club sold proprietary membership certificates to persons who favored adopting the resolution to exercise the option.

Plaintiffs requested an injunction against defendants prohibiting offering, transferring, issuing, selling or reissuing proprietary membership certificates pending determination of the legal questions involved; prohibiting exercising the option to purchase land for relocation; and prohibiting holding any further meetings or taking any further action in regard to relocation. If all the relief sought were granted, it would have enabled the members, with full knowledge of their rights and with full knowledge of the law affecting these rights, to determine fairly, impartially, and wisely whether to sell or not to sell, to relocate or not to relocate, to dissolve or continue. The club was about to commit its entire resources, over $2,000,000, on a resolution which had been passed under circumstances which would render the club subject to many legal dangers. As a result of the diligent prosecution of the action by plaintiffs, through their counsel, the action was brought to a conclusion beneficial to the club, and to all its members.

Five persons who were active members of the club filed a petition to intervene as a committee representing active members in order to prevent a dissolution of the club. They were represented by petitioners, Thomas J. McCormack and Michael Shekmar, Esquire. The intervention was permitted by the court.

During the course of this action, an order was entered requiring all owners of proprietary certificates of the club who were no longer active members to present formally their objections to a plan developed by [60]*60plaintiffs and defendants for the settlement of the litigation between them. This order resulted in the joinder of the nonmember certificate holders as respondent parties. Two of these nonmember certificate holders are represented by petitioners, Dechert, Price and Rhoads, Esquires.

In addition to respondents, there were approximately 197 other owners of proprietary certificates who were not current members of Cedarbrook Country Club. It was apparent that the seemingly prohibitive expense of litigation for any individual under the circumstances kept all but a very few of these nonmember owners from appearing by counsel to express their views in regard to the plan of settlement, and, the petitioners in effect protected their interests in representing the respondents.

In view of the necessity of an early determination of the issues in this case, and necessarily by agreement of the parties since masters are no longer appointed by the chancellor, the court appointed Samuel Weinrott, Esquire, as special master, for the purposes of conducting immediate hearings, taking testimony, holding informal meetings with dissident groups and reporting promptly to the court thereon. The master could be appointed only as a result of the agreement and cooperation of all the counsel involved. In fact, after preliminary negotiations, all the counsel, the master, and the court were in agreement that the purpose of the negotiations should be to preserve the club and remove all of the problems and conditions that had plagued the club for so many years.

After much diligent labor on the part of the master and all the counsel, and as a direct result of the wholehearted efforts of these counsel to cooperate with the master and the court to achieve a satisfactory solution to the many problems, a plan of settlement was agreed upon. The plan provided that the club would pay to [61]*61nonmember certificate holders the face value of their respective certificates, $1,000, less any indebtedness of the registered holder to the club, and further provided that proprietary members would be entitled to receive $3,000 each for the surrender of their certificates and rights thereunder, less their respective unpaid indebtedness to the club, and subject to certain other deductions in some cases and to certain differences in time of payment. Thus the proprietary members were eliminated as a class of ownership, and the ownership of the property and the entire operation of the club was vested in one class of members, all obligated to pay dues and hence to maintain an interest in the club.

The threat of future litigation involving the legality of the resolutions of September 3, 1958, and July 13, 1959, was removed, and the club was thereby allowed tp expend the fruits of the sale in the acquisition of new facilities without fear of further litigation.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Pa. D. & C.2d 57, 1962 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherry-v-cedarbrook-country-club-pactcomplphilad-1962.