Apitz v. Supreme Lodge Knights & Ladies of Honor

196 Ill. App. 278, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 129
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 20, 1915
DocketGen. No. 6,007
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 196 Ill. App. 278 (Apitz v. Supreme Lodge Knights & Ladies of Honor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Apitz v. Supreme Lodge Knights & Ladies of Honor, 196 Ill. App. 278, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 129 (Ill. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Carnes

delivered the opinion of the court.

Lizzie Apitz, the appellee, was the wife of August F. Apitz and the beneficiary named in a benefit certificate issued to him December 29,1894, by the appellant, Supreme Lodge Knights and Ladies of Honor, a fraternal benefit association. August F. Apitz disappeared from his home November 7,1905, and this suit in assumpsit was brought on said certificate September 23,1913, and a declaration filed charging, in one count, his death on the date of his disappearance, in another count, at the end of seven years from that date, and in another count, that he had been unaccountably absent for more than seven years and therefore was presumed to be dead, and that the date of his death was within one year from November 7,1905. The defendant filed the general issue with notice of special defense under by-laws of the company limiting the time within which suit should be brought, and providing for suspension of a member who should disappear. A jury trial resulted in a general verdict for plaintiff for $1,480, and a special verdict finding that Apitz died within one year from November 7, 1905, the date of his disappearance. The court overruled a motion for judgment for defendant on the special verdict, and the defendant’s motion for a new trial, and after requiring plaintiff to remit excessive interest, rendered judgment for $1,045, from which this appeal is prosecuted.

The by-laws upon which the defense is grounded were as follows:

“Sec. 3. No suit shall be commenced, and no claim against this Order, based upon a Belief Fund Certificate issued to a member thereof, or upon membership, or alleged membership therein shall be paid after the expiration of one (1) year from the date of the death of such member, except in settlement of a judgment of a court in an action, or a suit commenced within one (1) year after the right of the claimant or beneficiary named in such Relief Fund Certificate, or who may be a beneficiary under the laws of this Order, shall accrue. All Relief Fund Certificates shall have printed or stamped on the face thereof, notice of the foregoing limitations. As to Relief Fund Certificates now in force, the publication and promulgation of this law shall be sufficient notice of said limitation.”
“Sec. 9. It shall be the duty of a Relief Fund member of the Order to notify the Secretary of his Lodge of any permanent change of residence, and, as far as practicable, to keep the Secretary advised of his post-office address. If any such member shall so fail, and shall change his residence or-usual place of abode, or shall disappear from the place or neighborhood in which he shall have usually resided, and his residence shall not be known to his family or to the Secretary of his Lodge, and cannot be ascertained after reasonably diligent inquiry and such disappearance shall be continued for one year, such member shall stand suspended as in case of suspension for the nonpayment of assessments, or dues, and the Financial Secretary of his Lodge shall not receive the assessment or dues from any person. If such member shall reappear and shall make known his place of abode, and shall desire to become reinstated, he may avail himself of the privilege of the reinstatement law of the Order by complying with the requirements of the same within the time required, as in case of the reinstatement of members suspended for nonpayment, of assessments or dues.”

There was a by-law in force providing if a member did not pay his assessments during the month for which it was made he should stand suspended, and if he died before being reinstated no moneys should be paid on the benefit certificate. There is no conflict of evidence. It appears that Apitz was of German birth and forty-one years of age when he disappeared; that he kept a small grocery store in Chicago; was in good health, mentally and physically, possessed of all his faculties. He had a wife and four children and appeared to be much attached to them. He had no business troubles so far as known and no reason is known, or even suggested, for his disappearance. He paid his November assessment four days before he disappeared, and on the day of his disappearance he went to the secretary of the lodge again and paid his assessments in advance for December and January, and on the same day visited other parties from whom he bought goods and paid them what he owed them. He was domestic in his habits; his wife and family lived in the building where he kept his little store and he was seldom away from them. He left home about noon and was never seen or heard from by his family after-wards. The last known of him was two or three hours after he left home, when he called on some one with whom he had dealings. Relatives of the family lived in Chicago and the vicinity and no friend or relative whom he would have been likely to visit lived elsewhere. The only indication that he intended to go away from home at all is furnished by the fact that he was settling with his creditors, and paying his benefit assessments in advance; but he was not dressed as he presumably would have been if he had intended an absence of a few days, and he probably had no considerable amount of money with him. There were many people interested in him and in his family, and intelligent, diligent search and inquiry seems to have been promptly and persistently made without producing any clue whatever, or disclosing any material facts, other than those above stated, to show where he was or why he left home. Appellee paid the benefit assessments for one year, or until and including November, 1906, when she was notified that they would not longer be received. The assessment for each month was payable on or before the last day of the month, therefore this assessment was payable November 1st, within a year of the date of the disappearance, but might have been deferred until November 30th, which was. a year and twenty-three days from that date. Under section 9 of the by-laws above quoted, Apitz could not be suspended before November 7th, and it is not claimed that the November assessment was paid after that date.

The first inquiry is, when did Apitz die? And we are of# the opinion that the special finding of the jury that he died within a year from the date of his disappearance cannot be sustained by the admitted facts. A similar question was before this court in Dickinson v. Donovan, 160 Ill. App. 195; and we affirmed a decree which rested on a finding that a person who had disappeared died before the expiration of the seven-year period. There was quite as much reason to suppose that he died during the first part of that period in the admitted facts of-that case as there is in this case. The Supreme Court reversed the judgment of this court and the decree of the Circuit Court, and remanded the cause to the Circuit Court with directions to proceed-on the presumption of death at the end of the seven-year period. (Donovan v. Major, 253 Ill. 179.) The court said: “The presumption of fact which will justify the conclusion of death before the lapse of the time required for the legal presumption must arise from evidence of circumstances tending to show death.

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Bluebook (online)
196 Ill. App. 278, 1915 Ill. App. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/apitz-v-supreme-lodge-knights-ladies-of-honor-illappct-1915.