Bixby v. Grand Lodge of The Ancient Order of United Workmen

70 N.W. 737, 101 Iowa 505
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 9, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 70 N.W. 737 (Bixby v. Grand Lodge of The Ancient Order of United Workmen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bixby v. Grand Lodge of The Ancient Order of United Workmen, 70 N.W. 737, 101 Iowa 505 (iowa 1897).

Opinion

Given, J.

-I. The pleadings are quité lengthy, and need not be set out. It is sufficient to say of the petition that it asks to recover upon a certifícate of membership, in the usual form, issued by defendant to Jesse C. Bixby, for two thousand dollars, payable to plaintiff at his death, and avers his death, proof thereof, and defendant’s refusal to pay. It is also sufficient to say of the answer that it alleges that said deceased was suspended from membership, and said certificate rendered void, by reason of his failure to pay certain assessments made thereon, There is no question but that, were it not for the maters set up in plaintiff's reply, said certificate would be void and of no effect because of-deceased’s failure to pay assessments due and payable before his death.* Plaintiff’s reply is in five divisions, and, as the contentions rest largely upon the allegationstherein, we will set out the substance of so much thereof as is necessary to an understanding of the questions discussed.' The first, for want of information, denies certain matters alleged in the answer as to assessments- and notices thereof. There is no real dispute as to these, and they need not be further stated. In the second, plaintiff alleges that, when Mr. Bixby joined the local lodge, he entered into a verbal agreement with the officers thereof that he should do,the printing andi furnishing supplies for the lodge,/%t certain prices,, in [507]*507consideration of which “all of his assessments for dues and death benefits which might be called from time to time on account of the deaths of members, and with which to pay death losses, should' be kept out of amount due the said Bixby for printing and supplies;” that, if Bixby should become indebted to the lodge on account of dues or death losses, he should not be suspended or marked in arrears until a settlement was had, and, if he was then found to be indebted, he should pay it, but that he should not be called upon or required to pay until notified, and a statement had of his claim against the lodge; that, in pursuance of said agreement, he did printing and furnished supplies for said lodge up to his death; that the lodge was continuously indebted to said Bixby therefor, and was so indebted.to him at the time of his death, over and above all dues and assessments. The third division is as follows: That after the death of Jesse C. Bixby, which occurred on the thirteenth day of February, 1893, and on or about the twentieth day of March, 1893, J. M. Booth, a member of the local lodge and of the committee appointed by the lodge of which the deceased was a member, made a full report in writing to L. T. Hanks, grand master workman of the supreme lodge; and that, after receiving said report from the local lodge, through. J. M. Booth, the grand master, L. T. Hanks, referred the statement and report so 'made to A. St. Clair Smith, one of the officers of the grand lodge, for investigation, and that said A. St. Clair Smith, after, a full investigation of all the facts connected with, the contract hereinbefore alleged, as existing between the said Bixby and the local lodge, reported the facts to the grand lodge, to the executive committee, at a meeting held at Waterloo, Iowa, on or about April 28,1893. After making his report, said A. St. Clair Smith, as an officer of the grand lodge, and acting under instructions from the lodge, [508]*508instructed the local lodge, of which the deceased was a member, to make out proof of death and remit to the grand lodge the amount of indebtedness due to the grand lodge on account of Bixby’s membership, all of which was done May 5, 1893; and said local lodge remitted to the grand lodge the money in its hands which was thus called for, to the amount of twenty-six dollars, and said sum of twenty-six dollars so remitted, was taken and received by the grand lodge; and thereby said grand lodge adopted, ratified, and approved the acts of the local lodge in the premises, and accepted’ of the money which was in the defendant’s hands, and which it is claimed said lodge failed to remit at the time to the grand lodge. The fourth alleges that, because of its course of dealing and of said verbal contract with said Bixby, the defendant waived any right to suspend him for non-payments within the time fixed. In the fifth it is alleged that the defendant is estopped from avoiding liability on account of noncompliance with the rules by Bixby, because of said agreement, and because the officers of said lodge, from the time Bixby became a member until his death, applied the funds in their hands due to Bixby to the payment of his dues and assessments, and fiad in its hands at all times funds sufficient to pay all dues and assessments against him.

1 II. The court, at the request of the plaintiff, gave the following instructions: “(1) It is not claimed by the plaintiff that Jesse C. Bixby paid his assessments within the time fixed by the notice, and provided in the constitution and by-laws of the defendant; but it is claimed that there was a verbal contract between the deceased, Jesse C. Bixby, and the officers of Libra Lodge, No. 19, of which deceased was a member, whereby they received assessments from him more than thirty days after the time limited in said notice, and by allowing [509]*509and applying his account against Libra Lodge for printing and supplies, which it is claimed he furnished said lodge from time to time, to the payment of his said assessments and lodge dues. Upon this subject you are instructed that if you find from the evidence that the officers of Libra Lodge made such arrangements with the deceased, Jesse C. Bixby, and that he did printing, and furnished supplies for the lodge from time to time, and that his assessments were paid after the expiration of the thirty days provided in the notice of assessment, by-allowing and applying upon said assessments and lodge dues the accounts of the deceased, Jesse C. Bixby, for said supplies and printing; and you further find from the evidence that on the - twenty-eigthth day of April, 1892,-the deceased, Jesse C. Bixby, had in the hands of the officers of said lodge, due to him for printing and supplies furnished, sufficient funds, which, they had been in the habit of applying under the arrangements aforesaid, to have paid all his assessment and dues at said date, — then you are warranted in .finding that the officers of Libra Lodge have waived the right to forfeit the membership of Jesse C. Bixby, because of his failure to pay the assessments called for in March and April, 1892, within the time fixed by the notice and the constitution and by-laws of said defendant, and that his suspension at said time for non-payment of assessments was illegal and void.”

Appellant’s first complaint of this instruction is, that there was no evidence that a verbal contract was •entered into. The undisputed course of dealing between the lodge, through its officers, and Mr. Bixby, and the testimony of Mrs. Bixby, certainly tend to show some such agreement as that alleged. It is argued that these acts are as consistent with the idea that there was no agreement as that there was. True, it is possible that all that was done could have been [510]*510done without an agreement, but it would have been unusual. We think the course of dealing quite strongly indicates an agreement, and that the question was properly submitted to the jury.

2 The next complaint is that, if an agreement is proven, it is not shown to have been a continuing one, but simply with the officer who made it, and therefore not binding upon his successor, who had no notice of it, and who entered the. suspension against Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
70 N.W. 737, 101 Iowa 505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bixby-v-grand-lodge-of-the-ancient-order-of-united-workmen-iowa-1897.