State Ex Rel. Barrick v. Davison

93 So. 870, 208 Ala. 157, 1922 Ala. LEXIS 423
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 30, 1922
Docket8 Div. 464.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 93 So. 870 (State Ex Rel. Barrick v. Davison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Barrick v. Davison, 93 So. 870, 208 Ala. 157, 1922 Ala. LEXIS 423 (Ala. 1922).

Opinion

*158 GARDNER, J.

The private corporation known as Heralds of Liberty was duly organized and incorporated as a benevolent society under the provisions of the statutes of this state, and an important feature of the business of said corporation was the issuance of life insurance certificates to its members. The by-laws of the order provided for the election of trustees who composed what is known as the supreme council. There were also provisions for the office of past •supreme commander, commander, treasurer, recorder, chaplain, sentinel, and supreme medical director.

A meeting of the supreme officers, elected delegates of the grand lodges, and standing committee, is known as the regular conclave, which occurs quadrennially on the first Monday in October, by which conclave the supreme officers of the order are elected, with the exception of supreme recorder and medical director who are chosen by the supreme council at each regular conclave. The home office of the organization was in the city of Huntsville, where the regular conclave was liroperly held, but its general business is conducted in the city of Philadelphia.

Appellants, Emanuel Barriek and W. T. Sherman Culp, claiming to be officers in the Heralds of Liberty, instituted this statutory quo warranto proceeding against the appellees, insisting the respondent Davison was unlawfully usurping the office of supreme commander, and respondent Samford usurping the office of supreme recorder; and the ■other respondents are charged with unlawfully usurping the office of trustees. The petition discloses that Emanuel Barriek is claiming the office of supreme recorder and Culp that of supreme chaplain, and that one Pratt is in fact entitled to the office of supreme commander, and it is also averred that petitioners are trustees of the order. The petition seeks, not only to oust respondents from their respective positions, but to have petitioner and others installed in their stead*

In the fifth paragraph it appears that differences arose between the insurance commissioner of this state and the officers of the Heralds of Liberty as to the management of said business in the year 1920; that various meetings were held in the city of Montgomery with said insurance commissioner, resulting in a demand made by him for the following officers of said order to resign their iespective positions under a penalty of canceling the license of the Heralds of Liberty to continue its insurance business, to wit: Tracy W. Pratt, supreme commander, Charles R. Adams, past supreme commander, Alfred Adams, supreme treasurer, Morton Adams, supreme sentinel, and Emanuel Barriek, supreme recorder—and that in order to avoid a receivership and cancellation of the license the said officers tendered their resignation, effective the first Monday in October, 1921. It was agreed that the insurance commissioner should delegate a representative to superintend or overlook the general affairs of the order pending a meeting of the next conclave of the Heralds of Liberty, which was to be held the first Monday in October thereafter, that thereupon the insurance commissioner named respondent Davison to represent him at its place of business in Philadelphia, and that said Davison assumed charge of the affairs of said order.

The regular conclave of the order was held in Huntsville at the time as provided by law, and the legality of this conclave is attacked upon the ground that said Davison opened the same as representative of the insurance commissioner instead of supreme commander, although the petition discloses the officers acquiesced therein; and the legality of the conclave is further attacked upon the ground of irregularity in the issuance of notices. It clearly appears, however, that notice was in fact given to the grand lodges of the conclave, afid thq,t delegates appeared and transacted business in answer thereto, and that the regular conclave was in fact held at the proper time and place. The supreme officers understood that the regular conclave was to be held at Huntsville on the first Monday in October, the date upon which their resignation became effective, and had acquiesced in the representative of the insurance commissioner taking charge of the affairs of the order; and a failure to have formal notice issued to them could at most be but an irregularity, and without material bearing upon the result here.

Relator Barriek tendered his resignation as supreme recorder, which, as previously stated, has been accepted. Relator Gulp’s term of office as supreme chaplain expired on the first Monday in October, 1921, and his successor was chosen at the regular conclave.

The information shows that these respondents now occupy the several positions as a result of the regular conclave, and that there *159 fore these petitioners and the other officers whose terms had expired were not re-elected. The regular conclave being held at the proper time and place, as provided by the by-laws and constituted of delegates representing the grand lodges in answer to the notice given, whatever irregularities may be disclosed by the information was not an absolutely void proceeding. It therefore appears from the original information that the relators failed to show they were entitled to hold any of these offices in the Heralds of Liberty, and this defect of the petition was pointed out by appropriate grounds of demurrer, which were sustained.

In answer to this ruling of the court, the information was amended by the averment, in substance, that in February, 1922, the said supreme council convened in the office of supreme recorder, and duly elected relator Culp as supreme recorder, and two other persons as treasurer and medical director; but this amendment added nothing by way of answer to the demurrer, as it presupposes authority on the part of the council, as alleged, to have existed in relators to meet at that time and place and elect these officers without disclosing by what authority this was done, or showing the legality thereof. Appropriate grounds of demurrer were again interposed to the information as amended, and sustained. The relators declining to plead further, their petition was dismissed, and from this judgment they have prosecuted this appeal.

Counsel for appellant insists tliat under our statutes, sections 5453 and 5454, Code 1907, it is unnecessary that the relators show a right of title in themselves to .the offices from which they seek to oust respondents, and have themselves installed therein. We have previously noted the fact that the Heralds of Liberty is a private corporation, and that these relators seek, not only to oust the respondents from their office, but to have themselves restored thereto. This insistence, however, is contrary to the general rule as recognized by the authorities. A proceeding of this nature affects merely private rights, in which the public is Without interest, and, speaking of the distinction between these two classes of cases, Mr. High in his work on Extraordinary Legal Remedies (3d Ed.) § 652, says:

“As regards the title necessary to be shown by the prosecutor in order to support the information, a distinction is taken between cases affecting merely private rights, where the proceedings are instituted in behalf of a private citizen, and cases affecting public interests, where the people are the real as well as nominal prosecutors.

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Related

State Ex Rel. Griswold v. Lea
99 So. 170 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1923)

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Bluebook (online)
93 So. 870, 208 Ala. 157, 1922 Ala. LEXIS 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-barrick-v-davison-ala-1922.