Adams v. Grand Lodge of Ancient Order of United Workmen of Nebraska

92 N.W. 588, 66 Neb. 389, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 436
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 19, 1902
DocketNo. 12,278
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 92 N.W. 588 (Adams v. Grand Lodge of Ancient Order of United Workmen of Nebraska) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Grand Lodge of Ancient Order of United Workmen of Nebraska, 92 N.W. 588, 66 Neb. 389, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 436 (Neb. 1902).

Opinion

Hastings, C.

This is a suit upon a benefit certificate issued by the defendant in error to one Obarles W. Adams, September 20, [390]*3901886. Mr. Adams was in good standing up to February 28,1899. Then, by reason of a failure to pay an assessment which became due February 1, he is alleged to have become suspended, under a provision of the by-laws of the order that such delinquency should of itself and without any action by the defendant or its officers, work a suspension. On March 6, 1899, his suspension was noted on the books of the subordinate lodge and reported to the grand lodge. Another assessment fell due March 1, and was not paid and became delinquent March 28, 1899. April 18, 1899, after he had been suspended more than thirty days, he procured an express money order at Lincoln, Nebraska, for $5 and sent it to John Oarnaby, the financier of his subordinate lodge, with the following letter:

“Lincoln, Nebr.,.189..
“To John Oarnaby, Omaha, Nebr.
“Friend John : I enclose $5 to apply on account. I don’t know how I stand with the lodge; have been knocked out for some weeks and just getting around again. Please address me care Lincoln Hotel, room 326, Lincoln, Nebr.
“Yours truly,
C. W. Adams.”

This letter was postmarked at Lincoln, April 18, 1899, and was received on April 19, 1899. Mr. Carnaby says that he received the letter, and replied, as nearly as he can remember, in the following terms:

“Brother Adams: I received your letter with the enclosed Pacific Express, order for $5. Enclosed you will find receipt for same. You will also find health certificate which you must properly sign and forward on to me as you can not be reinstated until I receive the same.”

He says that he included with this letter a blank certificate of health in the required form, which is as follows:

“To the Or mid Lodge of the Ancient Order of United Workmen:
“I, -to whom Beneficiary Certificate No. - was issued in Lodge No.of the Ancient Order of United Workmen, of the state of Nebraska, having been [391]*391suspended from all rights, benefits and privileges of the order, and having forfeited all my rights as a member of the order, by reason of non-payment of assessment No. which suspension and forfeiture occurred within a period of three months prior to the date of this certificate, and desiring to be reinstated in said order, as provided by the laws thereof, do hereby certify that I am, at this date, in sound bodily health, and that I agree that the reinstatement of myself as a member of the order, based upon the certificate, shall be valid and binding only upon the condition that the statement herein contained, relating to my bodily health, is true in every respect upon the day and date recorded on this certificate.
“Attest:.”

He wrote a receipt for the amount and inclosed the letter, health certificate and-receipt, in an envelope addressed to C. W. Adams, Lincoln, Nebraska, and deposited the envelope, with postage prepaid, in the post office at Omaha on the morning of April 21. No reply was ever received and no health certificate ever returned. The money order was held, pending a reply, and appears with the evidence in the case. On that day O. W. Adams died suddenly of apoplexy. The beneficiary named in his certificate was his wife. She, however, had died in 1898. Plaintiffs were his sons, and by the rules of the order were entitled to receive the benefit if he had been in good standing. Ezra O. Adams found the benefit certificate among his father’s papers, and was appointed guardian for his brother, and says he notified the subordinate lodge of his father’s death and never learned of any objections to the sufficiency of such notice. In 1897 Mr. Adams seems to have been suspended for more than three months, and was reinstated on an application and medical examination. In this second application he expressly agreed to comply with the regulations and requirements of the supreme lodge of the order as then existing. The laws of the order adopted in 1897, as testified to by the grand recorder, Barber, provided as follows:

[392]*392“Sec. 4. There' shall be due as a regular assessment, without notice, on the first day of each month, from each workmen degree member in good standing of this jurisdiction, the sum of one dollar, payable to the financier of his lodge, on or before the 28th day of the month, Provided, that if there is no assessment for that month, or if there be two or more assessment's for the month, notice thereof shall be published in the official organ of the order, or in such other manner as the grand lodge may prescribe.”

Section 5 of article 7 of defendant’s constitution provided that each member who had not paid his assessment on or before the 28th of the same month should, by the fact of such non-payment, stand suspended, and no action on the part of the lodge or its officers would be required to effect such suspension; and section 6 of the same article provided that after such suspension, a certificate might be renewed within three months by the payment of all assessments during the time of suspension, but after thirty days’ delinquency a certificate of good health must be furnished upon the blank required by the order; that the renewal should be reported to the lodge at its next meeting, and a vote taken, and if the majority was in favor of reinstatement, the member should be reinstated, and when all these conditions had been complied with, the certificate should be renewed in full force, and not before. It was further provided that a member should have no claim upon the beneficiary fund during suspension.

Ezra C. Adams testifies to receiving from the mail, on the day of his father’s death, a receipt for the $5, but does not know whether the letter or blank certificate accompanied it or not. Notice had been given to produce the letter and health certificate, and no objection is now made that the evidence as to them is incompetent. The plaintiffs tendered proof that it was Mr. Adams’s custom to pay his dues from time to time in the lump sum in the mariner in which they were transmitted at this time, but the evidence was rejected. There seems to have been both talk and correspondence between Ezra C. Adams, the older son, and the [393]*393officers of tbe subordinate lodge, and tbe latter seem to have promptly informed tbe parties of tbe suspension of tbe father, and to bave interested themselves somewhat to secure tbe payment of tbe benefit by tbe grand lodge officers. It appears by tbe minutes of tbe grand lodge proceedings that tbe facts in this case were laid before it, and' tbe whole matter referred to tbe master workman, grand' finance committee, and that on laws and supervision. Tbe grand lodge officers refused to furnish blanks for proof of death, on tbe ground that tbe assured bad been suspended; and this was reported to plaintiffs. Tbe subordinate lodge officers bad exerted themselves to ascertain tbe facts as to Mr. Adams’s death, and that of bis wife, and who were tbe surviving children, and made a report to tbe grand lodge officers on May 3; they seem to bave requested Ezra C. Adams to obtain for them some of these facts. Tbe action of the subordinate lodge seems to bave been taken principally at tbe request of Ezra C. Adams.

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Bluebook (online)
92 N.W. 588, 66 Neb. 389, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-grand-lodge-of-ancient-order-of-united-workmen-of-nebraska-neb-1902.