Valley Camp, W. O. W. v. Bethany Lodge, F. & A. M.

190 So. 833, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 342
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 28, 1939
DocketNo. 5993.
StatusPublished

This text of 190 So. 833 (Valley Camp, W. O. W. v. Bethany Lodge, F. & A. M.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valley Camp, W. O. W. v. Bethany Lodge, F. & A. M., 190 So. 833, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 342 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

The sole issue tendered by this suit is, as between the parties thereto, who has and is entitled to the possession of the ground floor of a two story building situated in the *834 village of Campti, Louisiana, which, is owned by the defendant?

Plaintiff owned the building and lot whereon it is located, but sold same to defendant on August 18, 1920, for ■& cash price. The act of sale evidencing the transfer of title contains no stipulation whatever relative to plaintiff’s right to use, occupy or possess the lower floor of the building; nor does the copy of the resolution, attached to and recorded with the deed, make reference thereto.

Plaintiff alleges that in addition to the cash consideration for which the property was conveyed by it, “that it was mutually agreed and understood by it and the said Bethany Lodge No. 360, Free & Accepted Masons, * * * that petitioner was granted a perpetual usufruct and use of that portion of the above described Lodge House known as the downstairs hall.” .This part of the building will hereinafter be referred to as the hall.

It is further alleged that since said sale, plaintiff has continuously and without any interference or objection on part of defendant, used and occupied, for the purposes of its meetings, the said hall, until the commission of the acts of violence and opposition neces'sitating this suit.

Plaintiff also alleges that defendant, acting through a committee of its selection, nailed up with boards the main entrance to the said hall and otherwise endeavored to prevent it from exercising its right of possession thereof; that defendant’s action, in these respects is, in reality, an unlawful attempt to evict petitioner from its rightful possession of said hall, in total disregard of the agreement which vouchsafed to it such possession.

To protect it in its alleged legal possession of the hall, plaintiff procured the issuance of a temporary restraining order and a rule nisi on defendant to show cause why a preliminary injunction should not issue to prohibit defendant from interfering with its right of possession. It is prayed that after trial, the injunction be perpetuated; that the “validity of its perpetual usufruct” of the hall be recognized and decreed.

Defendant excepted to the petition as not disclosing a cause nor a right of action and attached thereto and made a part thereof, the deed whereby it acquired the building and lot from plaintiff. The exception was not passed on. Subsequent to its filing, plaintiff, over defendant’s objection, filed an amended petition, the burden of which is that should the court not “sustain the plea for a perpetual usufruct on the premises herein described”, that since it has been in peaceable, continuous and uninterrupted possession thereof for eighteen years, such possession should be recognized by the court and, inferentially, that plaintiff should be allowed, without limit or term, to continue the exercise thereof without interference by defendant.

The record does not clearly disclose that the rule nisi was tried; but we assume that there was a trial thereof and that a preliminary injunction issued as bond therefor was given.

The essential allegations made by plaintiff, upon which its hopes for success herein are based, are denied by defendant. Defendant avers that the measures taken by it to prevent plaintiff from illegally using and possessing the hall in question were lawful in their nature and were but the exercise of the rights and prerogatives incident to and following .from perfect ownership.

In reconvention, defendant alleges that it has been damaged and injured as a direct result of the issuance of the injunctive process provoked by plaintiff in this, to-wit:

1. Attorney’s fee of $50 for services in securing a dissolution of the injunction and the restoration of possession to it of the property; and

2. Loss of revenue or rent from the hall at $6 per month, because of its inability to lease same.

Judgment for these amounts is prayed for with rejection of plaintiff’s demands.

After trial on the merits there was judgment for the plaintiff “maintaining and perpetuating the injunction herein issued.” Defendant appealed.

Plaintiff introduced in evidence, over defendant’s objection, its minute entries of July 1, 1920, which contain the following:

“Committee reports that the masons offer Seven Hundred Fifty ($750.00) Dollars and agree to repair the lower part and rent to the W. O. W. at 50⅜ per month indefinitely. Moved that the offer be rejected; no second, the move was withdrawn. Moved by J. P. Seabough, seconded by R. S. Taylor, that the offer'be accepted. Carried. Moved and carried that the proceeds of the sale be appropriated to members in good standing.” There is a slight intimation that these minutes may not accurately reflect the Camp’s true action.

*835 The resolution of the defendant lodge, anent the purchase of the property, un-equivocably authorizes its purchase for the cash price of $750. As above stated, the resolution of plaintiff,. authorizing sale of property to defendant, certified to by its then clerk, who also held that office at the time of trial, is as equally clear and specific as that of defendant’s. Neither mention the subject of possession.

The record shows that after the sale to defendant, plaintiff continued to hold its regular monthly meetings in the hall for nearly two years. Its membership was largely made up of persons connected with or employed by a local lumber company, which about that time ceased operations. The membership then began to shrink.

There is no record of a regular or called meeting of plaintiff’s members after January 1, 1922, until in the early part of the year 1938. We are convinced that between these dates no meetings were held in the hall, except possibly one or two of a general nature which were addressed by persons representing the parent order, interested in reviving and reorganizing the local Camp.

About the time plaintiff ceased to use the hall, or shortly thereafter, defendant leased it to the local organization of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, which occupied it for its own purposes for several years; in fact, until the virtual suppression of its activities by law after the election of Governor Fuqua in 1924. The Klan made some changes in the hall by partitioning, etc., to meet its needs.

After the Ku Klux Klan ceased to use the hall, it remained unlocked. Its front door was continuously open. One witness refers to its then status as being a “catchall”. Anyone who desired to do so had free access thereto. Only a portion of plaintiff’s equipment remained therein. Its regalia was removed.

It may be said, in passing, that from January 1922 to January, 1938, plaintiff’s charter was not forfeited. It maintained a semblance of organization. Dues were paid by the greatly reduced membership to the clerk and remittance by him made to the parent order of the portion due it.

In the latter part of the year 1937, a move was instituted by some of the Camp’s members to revive and reorganize it. This succeeded measurably, and in the early part of 1938 meetings were held in the hall. A lock was put on the door.

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190 So. 833, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valley-camp-w-o-w-v-bethany-lodge-f-a-m-lactapp-1939.