American Legion of Honor v. Geisberg

42 S.W. 785, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 2, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 301
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 21, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 42 S.W. 785 (American Legion of Honor v. Geisberg) 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
American Legion of Honor v. Geisberg, 42 S.W. 785, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 2, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 301 (Tex. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Associate Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered for the defendants in error against the plaintiff in error in *3 a suit brought for the recovery of damages by the former for the alleged refusal of the latter to reinstate the plaintiff John G. Geisberg to membership in the order. The case is this:

The plaintiff John G.. Geisberg held a benefit certificate issued by the plaintiff in error, in which it was provided that the said plaintiff in error, the American Legion of Honor, would pay to Mary Geisberg, wife of John G. Geisberg, the sum of $5000, should he die while a member of the order in good standing. On the 1st of January, 1895, the said John G. Geisberg was suspended for nonpayment of dues and assessments accruing and payable during the month of December, 1894. The laws of the order provide that a member of the council suspended for nonpayment of moneys owing to the order shall be reinstated upon his paying to the collector of the'local council, in which he is suspended, the full amount of arrears for dues- and fines, and all assessments called on or before the date of reinstatement, within sixty days from date of suspension.

On the 1st day of March, about the hour of 7 o’clock p. m., Geisberg, desiring to have himself reinstated in The order, called on J. Burghum, the local collector, at his office in the city of Houston, and tendered him $20, in full payment of all moneys due from Geisberg to the order; and the money was refused b)r Burghum, on the ground, as he then stated to Geisberg, that the tender was too late, as the time within which he was allowed to reinstate himself had expired. This conversation was had just as the collector was leaving the office for his supper.

Geisberg did not undertake to show to Burghum that he was mistaken, by calling to his attention the fact that February of that year had only twenty-eight days. His excuse for not doing so is that Burghum declined to hold any further conversation with him, further than to remark “that he was sorry, but he was too late, and that he owed the order nothing;” and immediately retired from his presence to the back part of the drug store in which Burghum kept his office. Burghum denies that he refused to speak further upon the subject, but says he believed at the time that the sixty days in which Geisberg was allowed to make the payment for the purpose of securing reinstatement in the order had expired. Both parties lived in the city of Houston, the office of the collector being but a short distance from Geisberg’s residence.

On the next day, March 2d, Burghum, from conversation with members of the local council, was convinced that he had made a mistake, and had wrongfully refused to receive the money from Geisberg, and immediately set about to correct his error, and to allow Geisberg an opportunity to reinstate himself; and for this purpose, he advised the latter by letter that he would receive the money from him if tendered any time before midnight of that day. This letter was received by Geisberg about 7 o’clock p. m. of the same day, but he failed to make the tender or to acknowledge the'reeeipt of the letter. He was, at the time he received the letter, with a sick child whom he could not leave, and he had no one he could send to Burghum. He made no effort on the next day to pay the money to Burghum.

*4 Burghum would have received the money on the evening of the 1st of March, had he not been laboring under a- mistake as to the number of days for which Geisberg had been suspended. This, we think, is established beyond cavil by the evidence disclosed by the record. Geisberg had been a member of the order for several years, and was an ex-collector of the council. He was familiar with the rules and customs of the order. He made no complaint to the local commander, or to any officer or member of the local council, of Burghum’s action, but on the 4th of March, three days after Burghum refused to accept the payment tendered him, Geisberg addressed a letter to the supreme commander of the order, in which letter he said he was familiar with the constitution and laws of the order, and knew when he made the tender to Burghum that he was entitled to reinstatement: and he informed the supreme commander that, unless he was paid the full amount of his policy, he would consider himself defrauded, and in default of payment to him of that sum by the order, he would institute judicial proceedings and prosecute his claim to the furthest limits oh the law.

His demand not being complied with, Geisberg again called upon Burghum about the 1st of May, and requested the latter to inform him what was due from him, and he would pay the amount, as he wished to be reinstated in the order; and he was informed by Burghum that after such a lapse of time he did not feel authorized to receive the money, and he was advised to refer the matter to the grand secretary of the order.

Hpon the trial there was an issue made as to whether the amount tendered by the plaintiff to the local collector was sufficient to entitle him to reinstatement. The court instructed the jury on the issue, and the verdict sustained the affirmative of the issue as propounded by the plaintiff. The evidence makes it manifest that, at the time, the amount tendered was believed by both Geisberg and Burghum to be sufficient to cover all sums due the order; and while Burghum testified that he discovered he was mistaken a short time after he wrote to Geisberg telling him the amount due was less than $20, the sum tendered by Geisberg, Geisberg testified that the amount due from him at the time the tender was made was $19.90, the sum stated by Burghum in his letter to be due.

In addition to the facts above stated, it was shown by Geisberg’s testimony that he joined the order in 1881, and that he paid all his dues and all assessments made against him from the time he became a member until he was suspended, and that these payments aggregated the sum of $711. He also testified that, by reason of his increased age, the cost of assurance on his life for the amount for which he was-assured in the defendant company would be double in other similar companies what it would have cost him had he been reinstated to membership in the order.

There are many assignments of error upon the rejection of evidence offered by defendant, and upon the refusal of requested instructions, but we shall not discuss either the assignments or the counter-assignments, further than we may incidentally do in what we shall say in disposing of the appeal. We are of the opinion that, upon the facts we have recited, *5 .and which constitute all the material facts proved upon the trial, the plaintiffs have no standing in court, and that the judgment rendered for them is erroneous.

Since the payment by the plaintiff John G. Geisberg on the 1st of March, 1895, would have worked his immediate restoration to full membership in the order, it is, we think, beyond question that his offer to do this within the time prescribed by the laws of the order prevented a forfeiture of any of his rights, and placed him in a position, if the officers of the defendant had refused to reinstate him upon his payment of all sums due from him, to compel them to do so through appropriate judicial proceedings instituted against the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.W. 785, 17 Tex. Civ. App. 2, 1897 Tex. App. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-legion-of-honor-v-geisberg-texapp-1897.