Bartlomiejczak v. Sovereign Camp of Woodmen of the World

218 A.D. 228, 218 N.Y.S. 157, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5900
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 9, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 218 A.D. 228 (Bartlomiejczak v. Sovereign Camp of Woodmen of the World) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bartlomiejczak v. Sovereign Camp of Woodmen of the World, 218 A.D. 228, 218 N.Y.S. 157, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5900 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

Sears, J.

The plaintiff has recovered a judgment against the defendant as the beneficiary under a certificate issued by the defendant to the plaintiff’s husband, Idze Bartlomiejczak, while a member of the defendant. The defendant is an incorporated fraternal benefit association, organized under the laws of the State of Nebraska. The principal office of the defendant is in the city of Omaha, in the State of Nebraska. There has been for many years a local branch of this association in the city of Buffalo known as Local Camp, No. 92.

Plaintiff’s husband first became a member of the defendant association through membership in Local Camp, No. 92, on September 25, 1911, when he received a benefit certificate. On June 5, 1920, he surrendered this original certificate and obtained the one upon which this action is brought. This certificate provided in substance that the defendant in consideration of the warranties contained in the application and in further consideration of the payment to it of $2.44 on or before the last day of each month thereafter, and for the remainder of the certificate year in which death occurs, undertook to pay to the plaintiff as beneficiary the sum of $1,000 upon satisfactory proof of the death of the member in good standing. Idze Bartlomiejczak died on the 24th day of May, 1925, and the controversy relates to his standing as a member of the association at the time of his death.

[230]*230The certificate expressly provided that the articles of incorporation and the constitution and laws of the society and all amendments to each thereof which might be thereafter made, and the application for- membership and medical examination, and the certificate itself should constitute the agreement between the society and the member. (See Insurance Law, § 232, as added by Laws of 1911, chap. 198.) The certificate also contained the following provision: “Any changes, additions or amendments to the articles of incorporation or the constitution and laws "made subsequent to the issuance of this certificate shall bind the member named herein and his ¡ beneficiaries and shall govern and control the agreement in all ¡ respects the. same as though such changes, additions or amend- i ments were in force at the time of the application for membership, and were written herein.”

In July, 1923, certain previously existing laws of the society were amended and the amended laws became effective on the 1st day of September, 1923, and were in full force at the time of the member’s death, and binding upon him and the plaintiff. (Everett v. Supreme Council, C. B. L., 236 N. Y. 62.) Certain provisions of the laws of the society as so amended read as follows:

“ Sec. 63. (A) Every member of this Society shall pay to the Clerk of his Camp one annual assessment or one monthly installment of assessment as required by these laws or by the provisions of this certificate, which shall be credited to and known as the Sovereign Camp fund and he shall also pay such Camp dues as may be required by the by-laws of his Camp. He shall pay any additional Camp fund and Camp dues or either which may be legally called.

“ (B) If he fails to make any such payments on or before the ■last day of the month, he shall thereby become suspended. His beneficiary certificate shall be void. The contract between such person and the Society shall thereby completely terminate and all moneys paid on account of such membership shall be retained by the Society as his liquidated proportionate part of the costs of doing business and the cost of the protection furnished on-the life of the said member from the delivery of his certificate to the date of his suspension.

“ Such person, if in good health, may thereafter make a new contract with the Society upon the same terms and conditions by complying strictly with the provisions of these laws contained in sections 65, 66 and 67.”

“ Sec. 65. Any member who becomes suspended because of the nonpayment of any installment or assessment, if in good health, may within ninety days from the date of his suspension, again become a member of the Society by the payment of the current [231]*231installment of assessment and "all assessments which should have been paid to maintain him as a member. Whenever assessments are paid by or for a person who has become suspended for the purpose of again making him a member, such payments shah be held to warrant that he is at the time of making such payment in good health and to warrant that he will remain in good health for thirty days after such attempt to again become a member, and to contract that such assessments when so paid after he has become suspended for nonpayment of assessments shall be received and retained without waiving any of the provisions of this section or of these laws until such time as the Sovereign Clerk shall have received actual, not constructive or imputed knowledge, that the person was not in fact in good health when he attempted to again become a member, provided that the receipt and retention of payment of such assessments in case such person is not in good health shall not make such person a member or entitle him or his beneficiary or beneficiaries to any rights whatever.”

Sec. 66. (A) The retention by the Society of any installment of assessment paid by him for any person after he has become suspended in order to again make him a member shall not constitute a waiver of any of the provisions of this constitution, laws and by-laws nor an estoppel upon the Society.

(B) Any attempt by a suspended member to again become a member shall not be effective for that purpose unless such person be in fact in good health at the time and continue in good health for thirty days thereafter, and the payment of any assessment shall be a warranty that such person is at the time in good health and that if thee warranty is not true, the certificate shall be null and void.”

The deceased failed to pay the installment of two dollars and forty-four cents in April, 1925, during that month. On the 21st day of May, 1925, however, his daughter Clara paid to the treasurer of Local Camp, No. 92, both the April and May installments. The deceased was at that time suffering from pneumonia, was very ill, and had been ill for nine days previous. The disease from which he was then suffering resulted in his death three days later.

Under the terms of the amended laws of the society in force at the time of his death, the membership of the deceased in the association was automatically suspended on the 1st day of May, 1925, for failure to pay the April installment. Under the laws of the society quoted above, the deceased during a period of ninety days was entitled to make payment of the installment in arrears and again become a member in good standing only if he was in good health at such time, and such payment implied a warranty that he would [232]*232remain in good health for thirty days thereafter. In this case at the time of the payment on May 21, 1925, the deceased was not in good health, and he died three days later. Under the laws of the society, therefore, he was not in good standing at the time of his death, and he is not entitled to recover unless it can be said that the provisions of this law of the society were waived by the defendant.

When the certificate was issue'd in June, 1920, the laws of the society in relation to reinstatement were somewhat different. Certain provisions of the by-laws as they then existed were indorsed upon the benefit certificate itself, among others the following:

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Related

Smith v. Sovereign Camp Woodmen of the World
187 A. 290 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1936)
Usinski v. Sovereign Camp
242 A.D. 808 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
218 A.D. 228, 218 N.Y.S. 157, 1926 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5900, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bartlomiejczak-v-sovereign-camp-of-woodmen-of-the-world-nyappdiv-1926.