Stroh v. Odom

225 S.W.2d 626, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1850
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 2, 1949
DocketNo. 9817
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 225 S.W.2d 626 (Stroh v. Odom) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stroh v. Odom, 225 S.W.2d 626, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1850 (Tex. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

GRAY, Justice.

This suit was brought by fifteen individual and six corporate members of Delta Kappa Gamma Society against three defendants, naming them as follows: Dr. M. Margaret Stroh, the national executive secretary of the society, Berneta Minkwitz, its national treasurer, and Delta Kappa Gamma Society, a corporation which has its principal place of business in and resides in the City of Austin, in Travis County, Texas, praying for injunctive relief restraining the defendants from: '

Removing the national office of the Society from Austin, Texas; establishing a branch office of the national society headquarters at Washington, D. C:; from performing substantially the employment of National Executive Secretary and National Treasurer at any place other than the national headquarters of the society at Austin, Texas; from converting the national office at Austin, Texas, into , a nominal, skeleton and fictional office; from holding any referendum other than as authorized by the convention of the society or its national executive board on the above questions, or from declaring the result, or putting into effect, any such referendum, and from expending «any funds of the society in carrying out any of the above acts.

■ At the trial, all defendants answered by plea in abatement, and further, denied any intent to move the principal office of the society from the 'City of Austin, alleged that the management' of the internal affairs of the society is vested in a board of trustees (naming the members of such board), and alleged that the society is a Texas corporation with its principal office and place of business in Austin, Travis [628]*628County, Texas, and that Miss Birdella Ross of Minneapolis, Minnesota, is its national president.

Upon a non-jury trial, the court awarded the injunctive relief prayed for, and filed finding's of fact and conclusions of law.

Delta Kappa Gamma Society was incorporated in Texas in 1929 under Sec. 2 of Art. 1302, Revised Civil Statutes of Texas. The provisions of the charter relevant here are:

Article II. “This" corporation is formed for educational arid benevolent purposes, particularly for extending aid to women teachers and students by means of founding scholarships for study, for developing loyalty and high ideals in the teaching profession, and for conferring distinction upon women members of the teaching profession.

Article III. “The place of business of the central organization of the corporation is Austin, Texas.”

Article VI. “The organization has no capital stock, is not for profit, and has no assets.”

Article VII. “The work of this organization is to be carried on in the State of Texas, and in the other states of the Union.

“The central or national organization will issue sub-charters, or certificates of memberships, to the several chapters and state organizations and membership certificates to individual members.”

Article V provides that “the number of directors, trustees or founders • shall be twelve,” and names twelve to serve for the first year. This charter does not appear to have been amended.

The evidence shows that the society now has members in the forty-eight states and the District of Columbia, and that in each of the states (unless perhaps Connecticut) state charters have been issued. The record contains only the Texas charter. There is not brought forward any of the constitutions or by-laws of any ‘of the states. A constitution adopted by the national convention in 1945 and in force at the date of the trial provides:

Article V. The unit of organization in the society shall be the local chapter; each state organization shall consist of all chapter organizations within the state and all state and chapter members residing within the state, and the national organization shall consist of all chapter and state organizations within the nation and of all members residing within the nation. That the twelve original founders of the society shall be known as national founders.

Article VI. The officers of the national organization shall be a president, a vice-president, four -regional directors and a parliamentarian who shall be elected by the national convention in even numbered years. And, also, a treasurer and an executive secretary to be selected by the national executive board and who shall be employed members of the staff at national headquarters.

Article VII. The national executive board shall include all national officers, the national founders, and past national presidents, the regional directors, the state presidents and the state executive secretaries. The executive board shall have authority to act in matters requiring immediate decision and action. Provides for named committees to be appointed by the president of the national organization or elected by the executive board. (No provision is found for a board of directors or trustees. The national planning committee is more nearly such board.)

Article X. A convention of the national organization shall be held biennially in even numbered years at a time and place determined by the national executive board. (Prior to the 1945 constitution the convention was held annually.) At the national convention á state organization may cast one vote for each five members, or major fraction thereof, residing within the state.

Article XII. Suggested constitutional amendments must be approved by a majority vote of the national planning committee in conjunction with the national parliamentarian before being submitted for vote of the membership of the society, and a two-thirds vote of those voting is required for adoption of any such amendment.

[629]*629At the national convention held in San Francisco in 1946 it was decided to submit the question of the removal of the national headquarters from Austin to some other place in the United States. A majority of the votes cast favored retaining the office at Austin, and this result of the vote was declared by the national convention held in New York City in 1947. At the next national convention held in Milwaukee, the reopening of the question was refused by the convention. However, twelve trustees were named or elected. A vote "of these twelve trustees was taken, by letter, on the question of the advisability of opening an office in Washington, D. C. Seven of the twelve were favorable and five were opposed. A referendum of the membership of the national society was submitted by appending ballots to the January 1949 issue of the News (a publication of the national society). It was this action on the part of the said trustees that prompted this litigation.

It appears undisputed that the Austin office has always been and is now considered to be the national headquarters of the society.

We are not furnished with the minutes of the Milwaukee meeting electing the board of twelve trustees, and can not, except by inference, say whether they were elected as trustees for the national association or for the Texas corporation.

As here presented, this appeal has to do with the status of the society as a national organization and its management as such. Also, the status of the organization as a Texas corporation and its management as such.

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Bluebook (online)
225 S.W.2d 626, 1949 Tex. App. LEXIS 1850, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stroh-v-odom-texapp-1949.