United Chinese Society ex rel. Yong Kwong Tat v. Yee Mun Wai

22 Haw. 604, 1915 Haw. LEXIS 44
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 22 Haw. 604 (United Chinese Society ex rel. Yong Kwong Tat v. Yee Mun Wai) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Chinese Society ex rel. Yong Kwong Tat v. Yee Mun Wai, 22 Haw. 604, 1915 Haw. LEXIS 44 (haw 1915).

Opinions

OPINION OP THE COURT BY

ROBERTSON, C. J.

(Circuit Judge Ashford dissenting.)

In a petition for a writ of quo warranto the petitioners alleged inter alia that the United Chinese Society is a corporation duly chartered under the laws of this Territory, being organized for the purpose of cultivating friendly feeling among the Chinese, and acts of benevolence towards the poor and needy Chinese and those of Chinese descent residing in this Territory; that the property of the corporation is held and.controlled by a board of trustees which consists of fifteen members elected for three years, five of such trustees being elected at each annual meeting of the corporation; that a membership fee of two dollars is required to be paid in advance by all persons who join the society; that assessments may be levied on the members by. the board of managers for the purpose of raising funds; that every member not in arrears in the payment of assessments is entitled to one vote in' the meetings of the society; that a regular annual meeting of the society was convened at its hall in Honolulu on the 29th day of November, 1913, at which more [606]*606than one hundred members attended; that there were also present at the meeting a number of persons who were not members but who insisted on the right to vote as members; that without proceeding to the election of trustees the meeting adjourned over-until the hour of noon on the 16th day of December following;that thereafter (on December 1) the board of trustees met and appointed a committee to examine the books and membership-rolls of the society to ascertain who were members in good standing and entitled to vote, notice thereof by publication having-been given. Those allegations were either admitted by respondents or proven by evidence in the case. It was also alleged in the-petition that at the hour of noon on said 16th day of December the society met, pursuant to the adjournment, and there being-many more than a quorum present, the petitioners O. K. Ai, Lam Tat Keung, Yee Yap, Loo Joe and Yong Kwong Tat were then and there regularly and duly elected trustees of the-corporation; and that the respondents Yee Mun Wai, Tong Kau, Wong How and Pang Lum Mow are not trustees of the corporation, have never been elected as such, and have no right or title to the said office of trustee, but that they, and each of them, have wrongfully usurped the office, have assumed to control the property of the society, and wrongfully and unlawfully claim title to the office of trustee in the corporation and dispute-the right and title of the said O. K. Ai, Lam Yat Keung, Yee Yap, Loo Joe and Yong Kwong Tat in and to the office of trustee in the corporation. No objection to the form of the petition was raised. The respondents, in their answer, in substance, alleged a conspiracy on the part of the petitioners and others who desired to control the affairs of the corporation to fraudulently control the election of trustees at the meeting of November 29, and for such purpose procured the adjournment of the meeting until December 16, and in the meantime, in furtherance of such purpose, -wrongfully and unlawfully registered and issued certificates of membership in the society to such members as were [607]*607in sympathy with them, and to none other; that in pursuance of such fraudulent design, on the morning of December 16, the petitioners, and their abettors, gathered in the hall of the society, took possession thereof, stationed themselves at the entrance thereto, and refused and prevented entrance to the hall and attendance at the meeting to such members as were not registered and who had not the certificates mentioned, and finally closed and locked the door at the entrance to the hall, and proceeded to hold the meeting and elect trustees; that the persons admitted to the meeting constituted but a small minority of the membership of the society; that admittance was denied to a larger number of members who were there present seeking admission and desirous of voting at the election for trustees of the corporation; that the members of the society who had been denied access to the hall, after waiting at the door and in the street outside, forced their way into the hall by breaking the lock of the door; that there then gathered three hundred and sixty members of the society, duly qualified to vote, who proceeded to hold a meeting at which the respondents Tee Mun Wai, Tong Naix, Wong Iiow, Pang Lum Mow and Chu Gem were duly elected trustees of the corporation; that the society comprises nearly all the adult male Chinese residents in the Territory in its membership; that it has been the custom, never previously departed from, to keep the hall of the society open 'and accessible to all members from morning till evening; and that the said C. K. Ai, Lam Tat Keung, Tee Tap, Loo Joe and Tong Kwong Tat are not trustees of said society, and that the pretended election under which they claim was illegal and void. The petitioners filed a replication in which the allegations of fraud and conspiracy were denied. The facts set up in the answer were proven at the hearing substantially as alleged, and we deem it immaterial whether the action taken by the petitioners was done pursuant to a conspiracy and with evil intent or whether it was merely arbitrarily done under the belief that it was not unauthorized.

[608]*608The circuit judge held in favor of the petitioners, and a decree which declared that the five petitioning claimants are each and all duly elected trustees of said corporation and that said Tee M.nn Wai, Tong Kau, Wong How and Pang Lum Mow have no right or title to said office, was entered. The respondents appealed.

Passing by some subordinate points which have been discussed in the briefs we will take up the question which involves the validity of the action taken by the board of trustees on December 1, 1913, and followed by the petitioners and their supporters at what may be designated as the first meeting of December 16 whereby the possession of a “certificate of election” was required as a condition precedent to the right to attend and vote at the meeting for the election of trustees. The society was incorporated by charter in 1884; in 1886 and again in 1900 the Chinese quarter of Honolulu was swept by fire whereby, or otherwise, many of the records of the society and the evidence of membership of many of the members were destroyed or lost; the matter of membership in the society seems to be in considerable confusion; in 1908 a new set of by-laws was adopted wherein it was provided (Art. Ill, Sec. 4) that “all members of this society who shall have subscribed to the by-laws and paid the initiation fee prescribed by the society before the date of the passing of these by-laws and who shall not have been expelled from the society, shall be considered members thereof without further application or the payment of a further fee; but such members shall be subject to these by-laws. Provided, however, that all persons now claiming to be members of this society shall satisfy the board of managers that they are such members.” There is some doubt as to whether these by-laws became effective as they were never approved by the minister of the interior in the then government as was required by a provision in the charter, but as that provision was subsequently eliminated and as the amended by-laws, as contended by coun[609]*609sel for the petitioners, seem to have been regarded as in force by the society, we assume that they had become effective. The board of managers consisted of the officers of the society and forty-five other members selected annually by the trustees.

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Related

Nakakuni v. Towse
34 Haw. 897 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1939)
United Chinese Society ex rel. Chu Gem v. Yee Yap
24 Haw. 377 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1918)

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Bluebook (online)
22 Haw. 604, 1915 Haw. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-chinese-society-ex-rel-yong-kwong-tat-v-yee-mun-wai-haw-1915.