Behnke v. Modern Brotherhood of America

208 N.W. 542, 167 Minn. 104, 1926 Minn. LEXIS 1265
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 16, 1926
DocketNo. 25,133.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 208 N.W. 542 (Behnke v. Modern Brotherhood of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Behnke v. Modern Brotherhood of America, 208 N.W. 542, 167 Minn. 104, 1926 Minn. LEXIS 1265 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

Lees, C.

This is an action to recover on a benefit certificate issued to John A. Behnke, in April, 1923, by defendant, a fraternal benefit society with headquarters at Mason City, Iowa.

Behnke died on June 28, 1924. Proper proofs of death were furnished, but defendant refused to pay the claim. It sought to justify *106 its refusal by pleading and proving provisions in the application, tbe certificate and the by-laws, requiring monthly payments of membership dues, the penalty for a failure to pay within the month being automatic suspension from membership and a forfeiture of the insurance, payment within 60 days reinstating the member if he was in good health, and by alleging that Behnke failed to pay his dues for May, 1924, was suspended on June 1, and was never reinstated.

The reply admitted that the application, certificate and by-laws contained the provisions set out in the answer; alleged that Behnke and many other members of defendant’s local lodge at West Duluth were employes of the Minnesota Steel Company and were not required to pay their dues at the time specified in the by-laws, but were permitted to pay themi after their employer’s regular pay days; that June 24, 1924, was such a pay day, and on the following day Behnke’s dues for May were paid. The evidence showed that Behnke was not then in good health, and at the close of the case defendant moved for a directed verdict. The motion was denied. The jury returned a verdict in plaintiff’s favor, and defendant appealed from an order denying its alternative motion for judgment or a new trial.

There was ample evidence to warrant the jury in finding that the officers of the local lodge constantly allowed members to pay their dues- after the time fixed in the by-laws, and that the practice was so general that it must have been known to all the members of the lodge.

• The contention that defendant was not charged with notice of the practice cannot be sustained. The local secretary, who collected the dues, was the agent of the lodge, and the law imputes her knowledge to the lodge. The holding of this court is that a local lodge is the agent of the supreme lodge for the collection of assessments and dues. Leland v. Modern Samaritans, 111 Minn. 207, 126 N. W. 728; Hendrickson v. Grand Lodge, 120 Minn. 36, 139 N. W. 946. In the case last cited, it was said that

“The local lodge, to the knowledge of defendant, acts through its officers, so that such lodge, and through it defendant, may be bound *107 by the knowledge and conduct of such officers acting in the discharge of their duties. * • * * Knowledge obtained in the discharge of these duties is the knowledge of the local lodge and defendant.”

It is also held that, if a local lodge, by a long-continued course of conduct, has created a belief on the part of its members that payment of dues need not be made in strict compliance with the by-laws, such payment is waived. Mueller v. Grand Grove, 69 Minn. 236, 72 N. W. 48; Hendrickson v. Grand Lodge, supra; Sauerwein v. Grand Lodge, 121 Minn. 229, 141 N. W. 174; Dougherty v. Supreme Court I. O. O. F. 125 Minn. 142, 145 N. W. 813; Suits v. Order C. T. 139 Minn. 246, 166 N. W. 222, Ann. Cas. 1918E, 508; Kozlak v. Polish Nat. Alliance, 145 Minn. 247, 176 N. W. 911.

In the Sauerwein case the court said:

“The dealings with the individual members are entrusted entirely to the subordinate lodge. * * * The rule that the grand lodge may be bound by the waiver of the subordinate lodge is applied and settled in this state by the decisions.”

In the Dougherty case the court said:

“When * * a subordinate body is the sole agency by which the society transacts the business for which it was organized, if the conduct of the subordinate body is such as to operate as a waiver of timely payment, such waiver is binding upon the superior body of the order itself, even though the superior body has no knowledge of the course of conduct of the subordinate body on which the waiver is based.”

In the Kozlak case the court said:

“The subordinate group is the sole agency by which defendant transacts its business with its members. If the conduct of the subordinate group is such as to operate as a waiver of timely payments, such waiver is binding on defendant.”

In the case at bar the local lodge was the sole agency by which defendant transacted business with members, and the cases cited are controlling on this point.

*108 Plaintiff was not obliged to show that defendant had actual notice of the practice. Defendant was chargeable with constructive notice upon the broad general principles of agency. In the eye of the law, the acts of the local lodge were the acts of the defendant, and the knowledge of the local lodge, acquired while transacting defendant’s business, is imputed to defendant. Klein v. Supreme Council, 98 Misc. 218, 163 N. Y. Supp. 5.

Neither Elder v. Grand Lodge, 79 Minn. 468, 82 N. W. 987, nor Graves v. Modern Woodmen, 85 Minn. 396, 89 N. W. 6, sustains the contention that the acts of the secretary of the local lodge cannot be made the basis of a claim of waiver on the part of the supreme lodge. In those cases the local lodge had no notice, actual or constructive, of the practice of its collector to accept payment of dues after they had become delinquent. In the case at bar the local lodge certainly had constructive if not actual notice of the practice.

The contention that the requirement of the by-laws fixing the time for the payment of dues could not be waived cannot be sustained. Any by-law defendant might adopt could not absolutely prevent it from thereafter altering its contractual relations with its members or avert the possibility of a waiver or estoppel resulting from its subsequent dealings with them. Leland v. Modern Samaritans, supra.

Whether Behnke was suspended, or the secretary of the local lodge notified him that he stood suspended for nonpayment of the May' dues, were questions of fact for the jury, which it might properly answer in the negative.

It is conceded that on or about June 16 defendant wrote to Behnke, saying that he stood suspended and requested him to pay his dues and be reinstated to membership. The letter was received a few days before June 24. On that day Behnke’s pay check came and on the next day his wife paid the dues to the secretary of the local lodge.

Undoubtedly it was within defendant’s power to put a stop to the practice of accepting payment of dues at irregular intervals. The members of a fraternal society cannot insist that once a custom con *109 cerning the payment of dues has been established it can never be changed. But a practice of long standing cannot be abolished summarily to the prejudice of a member who has relied on it, and in order to change it members must be notified that henceforth payment must be made at the time prescribed in the by-laws and that no future indulgences will be granted, Bost v. Supreme Council, 87 Minn. 417, 92 N. W.

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Bluebook (online)
208 N.W. 542, 167 Minn. 104, 1926 Minn. LEXIS 1265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/behnke-v-modern-brotherhood-of-america-minn-1926.