Strickland v. Prichard

37 Vt. 324
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedNovember 15, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 37 Vt. 324 (Strickland v. Prichard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Strickland v. Prichard, 37 Vt. 324 (Vt. 1864).

Opinion

Poland, Ch. J.

The orators are the members of and constitute the ■“ Mouut Lebanon Royal Arch Chapter number thirteen,” a masonic body or fraternity located at Bradford. They seek to recover by this suit a fund of between four and five hundred dollars from the trustees of the Bradford Academy.

From 1815 to 1836 there was an association or society of Freemasons located at Bradford, called the “ Mount Lebanon Royal Arch Chapter number seven,” composed of persons living in Bradford and vicinity.

On the 23d of February, 1836, this chapter voted to dispose of the real and personal property belonging to it, being their Masonic hall and the furniture and equipment of the order. On the 14th day of June, 1836, the chapter voted “that $150. of the avails of the funds of the lodge and said property be jdaced in the hands of the trustees of Thetford Academy, the interest of which to be appropriated by them for the benefit of said Academy, and the principal to be returned by said trustees when called for by this institution, and the remainder [325]*325to be placed in the hands of the trustees of Bradford Academy in like manner. Under this vote the sum before mentioned went into the hands of the trustees of Bradford Academy, the interest of which has been appropriated by them to the use of their institution, and the principal they have refused to pay over on the call of the orators. After the meeting of June 14th, 1836, at which said vote was passed, no meetings were held by said chapter, and no action had as an association or society, until the year 1859. At the annual session of the State Royal Arch Chapter in August, 1859, a petition was presented from certain persons who were members of said Mount Lebanon Chapter, praying for a renewal of their charter. This petition was referred to a committee who reported in favor of granting a renewal of said charter, upon payment of the regular fees for a new charter, and the report of the committee was adopted. Subsequently however at the same meeting this vote was rescinded, as it appeared to conflict with a general regulation adopted in 1850.

It is a matter of general history, as well as of proof in this case, that there was a general suspension of the exercise of their usual functions by all Masonic bodies in this state for many years succeeding the political excitement upon that subject, and the legislation adverse to masonry, which grew out of it. The State Royal Arch Chapter held no meetings from 1834 to 1849. In 1849 the State Royal Arch Chapter was reorganized, but it seems to have been doubted whether it really possessed legal vitality in itself, and it appears to have been done under a dispensation obtained from the Grand Royal Arch Chapter of the United States. In 1850 a set of general regulations' were adopted applicable to the state of things existing after this long Masonic interregnum. One of these general regulations provided that subordinate chapters, theretofore chartered, should be entitled to have the same renewed on petition, by making application therefor at any time prior to the annual meeting in 1853. The Mount Lebanon Chapter had failed to comply within the time and for six years after. To avoid this difficulty it was proposed to amend the general rule so as to admit the granting a renewal to Mount Lebanon Chapter, but for no other purpose, and it was done.

[326]*326The avowed purpose in the petition for renewal and in the proceedings had upon it, was to keep up such a legal suecessorship as would enable the revived institution to recall the money parted with under said vote. Under this vote a new charter was issued to the Mount Lebanon Royal Arch Chapter number thirteen, and upon its face is wholly a new and original charter. Upon it however is endorsed a certificate by the Grand Secretary, that the charter is issued as a renewal of their original charter which is lost. The first meeting of the Mount Lebanon Chapter under this new or renewed charter was in 1860, and since that time several new members have been added to the chapter, who are also orators in this bill. The defendants resist a decree in favor of .the orators for the repayment of this money, upon two grounds. First, that the institution of Freemasonry, (of which order or fraternity, the orators are an associated body in their Masonic characler,) and its objects, practices and organizations are repugnant to, and contrary to the public policy and legislation of this state, and that therefore the court should not lend their aid to enable them to recover a sum of money to be applied to the uses and purposes of the organization.

Secondly, that the orators are not the same association or chapter who were the original owners of this money and parted with it to the defendants ; that the original association was by its own acts, and the long cessation of any action required by its own laws and rules, actually dissolved and destroyed, and that the existing chapter though composed in part of the same members, and bearing the same name, is in reality a new organization, and has no legal title to succeed to, or claim the rights belonging to the first.

We do not find it necessary to decide the question raised by this first named ground of defence. It is a matter of public history that there was a period of some years, in this state, when among its citizens there was a very general distrust of, and hostility to the institution of Freemasonry, and this sentiment-became the leading element of the dominant political party in the state. During the ascendency of this party, all the Masonic charters which had ever been granted by the legislature of this state were repealed, and a law was passed prohibiting the administration of extra judicial oaths. It was supposed by the party then in political power in the state, that they had [327]*327effectually destroyed the institution in this state, and for many years it ceased to have any apparent vitality. Whether the institution deserved all or any of the censure and unpopularity which it then suffered, we have now hut insufficient means of knowing, and perhaps it would hardly be just to accept the legislative indications of those few years as establishing a general legal policy upon the subject.

The second objection we consider fatal to the right of the orators to the relief sought.

, The orators claim to recover as an association or society, and not in their individual and personal rights. Many of the orators have but recently become members of the chapter, but they claim to be equally entitled with the others, because the right is that of the association. The orators not being a chartered corporation are obliged to sue in their own names instead of their corporate or charter name, but in substance they claim to act and have rights, in their associated character ; that they are themselves, and their rights are of a quasi corporate character.

This brings us to the precise point in dispute; has the original Mount Lebanon Chapter been in continual existence to the present time ; or was it in fact dissolved, and did it cease to have legal existence as an association or society? If it really ceased to exist,and became dissolved, it is not claimed that any new association, composed in part, or even of all the same members, and formed for the accomplishment of the same general purpose, can legally succeed to their rights or property. The rules and laws of the society provided for constant action by itself; it was required to make annual elections of its officers, and to hold meetings once in two months.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hendrickson v. Bloom
80 P.2d 868 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 Vt. 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strickland-v-prichard-vt-1864.