Strempel v. Rubing

21 N.Y. St. Rep. 483
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJanuary 10, 1889
StatusPublished

This text of 21 N.Y. St. Rep. 483 (Strempel v. Rubing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strempel v. Rubing, 21 N.Y. St. Rep. 483 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1889).

Opinion

O’Gorman, J.

The contention in this case is the result of a quarrel between members of an unincorporated society, having more than seven members, and organized for social, charitable and benevolent purposes.

The society was known as The United Order of Carpenters and Joiners, Lodge Ho. 4.”

This lodge Ho. 4, held its meetings in the city of Hew York, and was a branch of a parent society comprising numerous lodges known as “ The American Order of Carpenters and Joiners,’ and this latter society claimed and exer[484]*484cised a supervisory authority over its branches or lodges, including lodge No. 4, through its “ district committee,” and its “grand executive council.”

This action was begun on November 11, 1887. The plaintiff, Strempel claims that he was then the president of this1, lodge No. é, and entitled as president, to have possession of certain savings bank books, showing the deposit of moneys then standing to the credit of the lodge.

The defendant Rubing maintains that he was then the president of the lodge, and denies that Strempel had, under the constitution, by-laws or ritual of the lodge, any right to have or claim that office or the said bank books.

In the case of internal controversies between members of unincorporated societies, it is the policy and the rule of courts of equity to leave the contending parties to the government of the constitution and by-laws of the society, as being the voluntary agreement to which all the members have assented, and the law which they have freely enacted for themselves; and the court will refrain from considering the merits of the controversy, provided the constitution and by-laws of the society have been strictly complied with, and no principle of. law has been violated, and no manifest wrong has been committed. Loubat v. Le Roy, 15 Abb. N. C., 3-44, at seq.; Ebbinghousen v. Worth Club, 4 Abb. N. C., 300.

Where an association has power to suppress and punish the misconduct of its own members, one complaining of such misconduct must resort to and must exhaust the remedies provided by the association itself, through its constitution and by-laws, before applying to a court of equity for relief. Lafond v. Deems, 8 Abb. N. C., 344-349. In the proper application of these rules of law to the facts in this case must be found the solution to the question at issue.

The testimony taken on the trial is contradictory, and in some respects confused, because of the imperfect knowledge of the English language which some of the witnesses displayed. It sufficiently appeared, however, that the material facts were as follows:

The defendant Rubing was duly elected president of this lodge No. 4 in June, 1887, for a term of six months. The plaintiff Strempel was, at the same time, elected as vice-president. On October 5, 1887, at a meeting of lodge No. 4,. the plaintiff Strempel being in the chair as presiding officer, a resolution was passed purporting to remove Rubing from the office of president and electing Strempel in his stead.

This resolution, as appears from the written minutes of the meeting, was as follows: “As several of the officers, among others President Rubing, although requested to appear did not make an appearance, gnd as there are several charges against the president, to replace the officers by other officers, and to declare them removed from office, [485]*485therefore proceeded to elect officers, and elected as president, Strempel; vice-president, Behnke.”

Rubing was not present at that meeting. There is not sufficient proof that he received timely written notice to attend that meeting, or that charges against him would be then and there presented.

There is not sufficient proof that specific charges against him had been formulated, or that due written notice had been given to Rubing of such specific charges. There is no evidence that any examination, investigation or trial of such charges, or of any specific charges against him, was made or had at that meeting, or that any proof or evidence was offered in support of any such charges against him at that meeting.

The cardinal question is whether, under this state of facts, that resolution, giving to it the meaning most favorable1 to the carrying out of its apparent intent, was sufficient, under the constitution or by-laws, or established rules of this lodge No. 4, to oust Rubing from his office of president of the lodge and to substitute Strempel in his stead.

It is only on the sufficiency of that resolution to oust Rubing that Strempel can rest his claim to have been president of the lodge, for if Rubing was not then, and by virtue of that resolution, removed, he was, both de jure and de facto, president until the commencement of this action.

In my opinion, that resolution was not sufficient to work that result, because it and the proceedings on which it was founded failed to comply with the essential requirements of the constitution and by-laws of the lodge.

It is provided in section 1, article 8 of the constitution that all charges against members must be made in writing, specifying the article of the constitution or by-laws violated, and signed by the members making the charge.

By the second section of that article it is provided that the charge be referred to the board of trustees; that the accused shall have the right of challenge; that the accuser, the accused and the witnesses shall be summoned to attend, so that a fair trial of the charge shall be had.

When the board of trustees shall have come to a decision, the chairman of the board shall, at the next regular meeting, present the same to the. lodge. If the charge be sustained, and if there be no penalty in the by-laws, the board of trustees may recommend a penalty, etc.

There is no evidence that these salutary provisions, tending to check hasty and inconsiderate action, were in this case complied with.

The members of the board of trustees were not present at the meeting, and the submission of the matter to the meet[486]*486ing of the members of the lodge directly was a violation of ■ the letter and the spirit of the constitution.

The evidence tends to show that the action of the meeting in passing the resolution deposing the president, Rubing,- was the result of hasty and passionate counsels, an evil which strict compliance with the constitution would have avoided. This disregard of the requirements of the constitution, in this case, was not technical only, but a material violation of its spirit as well as its expressed command;

In fact, Rubing was convicted and punished without lawful trial, and sentenced without lawful authority to a penalty which the members of the lodge, in meeting, had no authority to impose.

If, from any peculiar circumstances in this case, the opponents of Rubing were unable to effect this deposition by means consistent with the requirements of the constitution, their remedy was not in disorderly and violent disregard of its provisions, but in appeal to the district committee, from which relief could be legitimately obtained.

But, even if these fatal irregularities in the proceedings against Rubing did not exist, the absence of Rubing himself from the meeting imposed a responsibility on the lodge which seems to have been wholly overlooked.

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Related

Lafond v. . Deems
81 N.Y. 507 (New York Court of Appeals, 1880)
Ebbinghousen v. Worth Club
4 Abb. N. Cas. 300 (New York Court of Common Pleas, 1878)
Loubat v. Le Roy
15 Abb. N. Cas. 1 (New York Supreme Court, 1884)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 N.Y. St. Rep. 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strempel-v-rubing-nysuperctnyc-1889.