Supreme Lodge Knights & Ladies of Honor v. Owens
Supreme Lodge Knights & Ladies of Honor v. Owens
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion op the court
The Supreme Lodge Knights and Ladies of Honoi is an institution organized to promote benevolence and mutual protection and assistance. Besides the Supreme Lodge, it has a number of subordinate lodges. On the night of the 27th of March, 1890, the city of Louisville was visited by a ierrible cyclone, which killed and injured a great many persons, and destroyed and damaged a great deal of property. .One
“The sad but important duty of laying before you briefly the facts of, one of the most unfortunate calamities that has ever befallen our order imposes itself upon me. On the evening of the 27th of March, 1890, a cyclone visited the city of Louisville, Kentucky, passing from a south-eastern portion in a north-west ern direction, a distance of about two miles, in width, about four squares, destroying every thing in its path, Neither tongue nor pen can convey a correct idea (if the devastation and suffering that has followed its-track.
“It is not my purpose to enter into details, as that which concerns you and the members directly, is the misfortune that befell the visitors ancl membership of Jewell Lodge No. 2, Knights and Ladies of Honor, which, at the time, was in session at the. hall between Eleventh and Twelfth streets on Market street, known as Palls City Hall, a large three-story building, which is utterly demolished, and nearly every thing and everybody in it were victims,,of the*330 calamity. Jewell lodge room was situated in the third' story of the building. It was an occasion on which one hundred and' twenty-five to one hundred and thirty members were present. There were present for initiation eighteen candidates. The lodge had just gotten fairly to work when it went down in a heap of ruin. All is yet confusion. A corps of laborers has - been engaged ever since the accident, -excavating and removing the debris, and removing dead 'bodies. I can safely say, with the committee whom I appointed, composed of Supreme Trustees •{naming them), that no less than forty members have been killed, and nearly as many injured, leaving many families and- members in sore distress, which can be materially comforted and relieved by prompt assistance. • I, therefore, place before you briefly the foregoing facts, without attempting to give the details, as it would require more time and space than the circumstances in this shape would permit, and I call upon you for aid and assistance to relieve the suffering of our brethren, their families and dependants. This matter is one that is addressed to your sympathy and fraternal love. Prompt and immediate notion is absolutely necessary. And I feel called upon to say no more on the subject. The committee before • referred to will be continued. The <xrand Protectors of the several jurisdictions will please report this call to 'their subordinate lodges. Send all remittances to the Supreme Secretary, C. W. Harvey, Indianapolis, Ind., who will acknowledge receipt of same in the next number of the Intelligencer, and upon proper order the same will be*331 turned over to the proper committee for disbursement .among the members and their families in distress.” It turned out that instead of forty persons being-killed, only twenty-two were killed, and thirty-six or more were more or less injured, and several of the injured persons afterwards died of their injuries.
Four thousand nine hundred and fifty-six dollars were sent in in response to this call. The secretary kept back about two thousand eight hundred and thirteen dollars, and instead of sending it to the committee covered it into the treasury of the Supreme Lodge. And the committee returned to the secretary twenty-two dollars of the sum confided to them for distribution among the members and their families, and dependants mentioned in the distress call, making two thousand eight hundred and forty-one dollars covered into the treasury of the Supreme Lodge. The committee distributed said sum among fifty-eight persons, filling the description of the. object of the bounty named in the distress call. The committee made said distribution and disbanded before the middle of May. The amount received under the distress call was not published or made known to. the committee until it appeared in the Intelligencer for July. The said sufferers feeling that they were entitled to all of the fund contributed, sought by negotiation to obtain the sum ■ covered into the Supreme Lodge, and failing to obtain it, they bring this suit to compel its surrender to the court and its distribution among them.
The lodge contends that the relief asked was for the purpose of relieving the necessities of the class
After describing the accident and its effect, the' call is made for contributions for the relief of the sufferers and their families. The call also states that the remittances will be turned over to the proper “committee for disbursement among the sufferers and their families in distress.” Now, there was a particular class of persons described as having been killed or injured, and contribution was asked for the relief of them and their families, not to the common
The general rule is, that in case of contributions for a specific purpose, the contributors may recover back the surplus. (See Niblack supra, section 150.) But in a case like this the contributions are made to relieve the necessities of sufferers, and the sum necessary for that purpose is to be estimated by the
Now, if A entrusts B with a sum to be distributed between C and D according to their necessities, B can not withhold a part of it upon the ground that the sum was more than their necessities required, because the nature of B’s trust did not authorize him to make the inquiry ; his only trust duty was to distribute the fund according to the necessities of C and D. The donor was -the judge of the amount that he would give for that purpose. But it is said that the appellant can withhold such part of the fund for the benefit of the contributors, as it may deem the necessities of the donees do nob require, and if they do not call for it, the appellant may keep it and use it for the benefit of the next cyclone sufferers or some other sufferers. Well, if the appellant can withhold a parb of it, why not all of it, if it concludes that the condition of the donees does not require if. And if the donees complain, the appellant can say that, upon due deliberation, it concludes that they are entitled to no parr, of the fund, or that upon a close and careful calculation they are entitled to just three dollars and sixty-two and one-half cents, and the balance will be covered in the treasury for the benefit of the contributors, who are scattered all over the country, and
The judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.