State Council v. Hotaling

184 A.D. 750, 172 N.Y.S. 501, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6638
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 13, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 184 A.D. 750 (State Council v. Hotaling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Council v. Hotaling, 184 A.D. 750, 172 N.Y.S. 501, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6638 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Cochrane, J.:

There is a national fraternal organization known as the United American Mechanics ” organized for benevolent and humanitarian purposes. It is subdivided into State councils for different States and each State council in turn is subdivided into subordinate or local councils. Plaintiff is the State council within this State and was duly incorporated by special act of the Legislature, being chapter 539 of the Laws of 1874. In the year 1890, by virtue of its act of incorporation as well as by the rules and constitutions of the National and State organizations, the plaintiff issued a charter to a Subordinate Council of the Order, to be known by the title of Ulster County Council, No. 40, of the State of New York, to be located at Rondout, State of New York.” This subordinate council continued in existence until the year 1913 when it voluntarily disbanded and surrendered its charter. But before doing so it divided among its members then existing the money which it had accumulated amounting to $1,326.35. This action is brought against the individual members of the subordinate council to recover of each one individually the distributive shares so received by them as aforesaid.

The act incorporating the plaintiff (Laws of 1874, chap. 539) empowers it (§ 3) to grant charters to subordinate councils “ according to the regulations, by-laws, rules and constitution adapted to govern the same.” Section 4 of the act provides that the constitution and by-laws of the plaintiff in force at the time of its enactment shall be good and valid until changed by plaintiff. The objects of the plaintiff are declared in. section 6 to be the same as set forth in its constitution as follows: “First. To assist each other in obtaining employment. Second. To encourage each other in business. Third. To establish a sick and funeral fund. Fourth. To establish a fund for the relief of widows ..and orphans of deceased members, Fifth. To aid members who, [752]*752through Providence, may have become incapacitated from following their usual avocations in obtaining situations suitable to their condition.” The constitution of the plaintiff provides for uniform constitutions to each of its subordinate councils (Art. XI of plaintiff’s constitution, § 1), and these latter instruments declare the objects of the subordinate councils to be the same as those specified in section 6 of the act incorporating the plaintiff. Hence by act of the Legislature, by the constitution of the plaintiff, and by the constitution of its subordinate councils, the purposes of the State and subordinate councils are identical.

The constitution of the plaintiff provides in section 3, article XII thereof: “ The funds and properties of a Subordinate Council are held only in trust for charitable purposes, and the donating or in any manner dividing them among the members individually, or the use of any part thereof for festivals or pleasure excursions are strictly prohibited.” In section 4 it is provided that on surrender or forfeiture of the charter of the subordinate council it shall be the duty of its officers and members to deliver its property and funds to the State council. Section 5 of article XII of the plaintiff’s constitution provides: “ All effects or funds received by the State Council from any Subordinate Council under the last section shall be kept separate and apart from the property or funds of the State Council,” and in case the subordinate council is not restored to membership within three years “ the funds of said Council shall be disposed of or used under the direction of the State Council in aiding or assisting any Subordinate Council needing assistance, or to such other charitable purpose as in their judgment may be deemed advisable.”

The charter of the subordinate' council issued to it by plaintiff by virtue of the aforesaid statute contains this provision: “ Should said Council, No. 40, be dissolved by forfeit of this charter, or otherwise, then all property, moneys, books and papers, the property of said Council, shall become the property of the State Council of New York.”

It is claimed by the defendants that the funds in question constituted a “ sick and funeral ” fund accumulated by contributions of the members of the subordinate council for a • particular purpose @n,d that the plaintiff has no corresponding.

[753]*753fund and that it would be inequitable for the plaintiff to take a fund thus raised for a particular purpose and appropriate it to its own purposes and this consideration seems to have influenced the decision herein. This statement, if accurate, does not obviate the point that the subordinate council in the charter which it received from the plaintiff by statutory authority contracted to do that very thing in the event of its dissolution. But the statement is incomplete and because of its incompleteness is inaccurate. The fund was not created distinctly as a sick and funeral benefit fund or for any other purpose, but is the accumulation of moneys received by the subordinate council from the initiation fees and dues of its members and from entertainments and other sources for twenty-three years, the period of the life of the subordinate council. After paying rents, salaries of local officers and other running expenses, the balance on hand constituted the fund in question. It is true that the by-laws of the subordinate council provided for sick and funeral benefits and that the principal disbursements were for those purposes. But the fund was subject to any legitimate purpose within the purview of the constitution and by-laws of the subordinate council. The one purpose above all others to which the fund could not be applied under the constitution of the plaintiff (Art. XII, § 3) and under the charter which the subordinate council received from the plaintiff was the application which was in fact made, namely, the distribution thereof among the members of the subordinate council. This distribution was likewise a defiance of the legislative purpose as expressed in section 6 of the act incorporating the plaintiff and declaring its objects. The objects of the subordinate council as stated in its constitution are precisely the same as the objects of the plaintiff as stated in its act of incorporation. The scheme of the organization is that the State council accomplishes its benevolent and humanitarian purpose through its various subordinate councils. The latter extend their pecuniary assistance to their particular members in proper cases and thus accomplish the aims and purposes of the parent council. But when as in this case a subordinate council becomes extinct then the parent council takes possession of its property and money and uses it under [754]*754its act of incorporation for precisely the same purposes as the subordinate council would use it under its charter from the State council and appropriates it either directly for such purposes or distributes it to other subordinate councils to be used for the same purposes. In any event the fund is to be devoted to purposes of charity within the purview of the constitutions of the subordinate councils, the. only difference of course being that the subordinate council which accumulated the fund would distribute it to different recipients than would the other councils. It is of no importance that the plaintiff had established no sick or funeral fund or other fund.

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Bluebook (online)
184 A.D. 750, 172 N.Y.S. 501, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 6638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-council-v-hotaling-nyappdiv-1918.