Bracket v. Modern Brotherhood of America

157 S.W. 690, 154 Ky. 340, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 70
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 12, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 157 S.W. 690 (Bracket v. Modern Brotherhood of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bracket v. Modern Brotherhood of America, 157 S.W. 690, 154 Ky. 340, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 70 (Ky. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

[341]*341Opinion op the Court by

Chiep Justice Hobson—

Reversing.

Ora Bracket brought this suit against the Modern Brotherhood of America to recover $1,000, the amount of a certificate held by her husband in the Order. The Order by its answer pleaded in substance that the bylaws of the Order provide as follows:

“The certificate of any beneficial member of this Society, who is now engaged in the manufacture or sale of malt, spirituous or vinous liquors as a beverage, in the capacity of proprietor, stockholder, agent or employee, is hereby declared to be, and is hereby made absolutely null and void, and no payment made by such person of any dues, or assessments of any character, or for any purpose, to the secretary, or other officer of the subordinate lodge of which he or she is a member, or to, the Supreme Secretary, or any officer the Supreme Lodge, shall have the effect of waiving such forfeiture or reinstating such certificate holder to any rights, benefits or privileges as a member of this society.
‘ ‘ Should any person who is now or who shall hereafter become a member of this Society, engage in the manufacture, or sale, of malt, spirituous or vinous liquors as a beverage in the capacity of proprietor, stockholder, agent or employee, or be convicted of a felony after being adopted into this Society, he shall thereby, by reason of said facts, forfeit all rights as a member of this Society, and his certificate shall thereby become absolutely null and void, without any action on the part of his subordinate lodge, the Supreme Lodge, or by this Society, or any of the officers thereof; and the payment by such member of any dues or assessments thereafter, or the acceptance thereof by the officers of his subordinate lodge or of the Supreme Lodge or of this Society, shall not have the effect of waiving such forfeiture or reinstating such person to any rights,, benefits or privileges as a member of this Society.”

It is also alleged that the plaintiff’s husband, Isaac Bracket,-was not a farmer at the time of his application as stated by bim therein, but was then engaged in the manufacture of spirituous liquors as a beverage in the capacity of agent or employee, and that he continued in this occupation from that time until his death. The certificate was issued on September 21, 1909. Bracket died on July 23, 1911. The allegations of the answer as to Bracket’s occupation were denied by the reply. On the [342]*342trial of the case, J. W. West testified that Bracket commenced working in a bottling factory in the fall of 1905, and worked there constantly from that time until his death, except when they would lay off for a month or two. Bracket was the man that attended to emptying the whiskey out of the barrels into the tank, helped about bottling it. These duties he said were necessary for the sale of the whiskey. Henry Traylor owned the distillery and leased it to Paxton Brothers, who did business under the name of the Edgewood Distilling Company. He did not know whether Bracket was working for the bottling company on September 20, 1909, he might have laid off, if he was not there he was laid off. He did not know whether the bottling house was running on that date. Ora Bracket testified that on September 21,1909, her husband was a farmer working for Mr. Dorst; that he worked for Dorst for about two weeks, and when he ceased to work for Dorst he worked on the court house, and when he got through there went back to the bottling house; when he joined the Society he was stacking hay for Dorst. He had been working at the bottling house before he went to work® for Dorst; he worked there for about six years; he worked at the court house about two months then went back to the bottling house. E. H. Moeller testified that he was foreman at the bottling house, came there July 6, 1910; that Bracket worked for him from that time continuously up to his death; that he did all the work pertaining to the bottling of whiskey, and his work was mostly putting on labels, etc; this was necessary he said to put the liquor on the market. The work was done in a United States government warehouse operated under the supervision of the government and was a place where the sale of liquor was not tolerated or indulged in by the employees; everything in connection with the whiskey was under the supervision of the Federal government. Bracket did not handle the whiskey until four years after it was made, when it was put in bottles. On this evidence the circuit court instructed the jury peremptorily to- find for the defendant; and the plaintiff’s petition having been dismissed she appeals.

It will be observed that by the by-laws, the certificate of a member was void if he was ‘ ‘ engaged in the manufacture or sale of malt, spirituous or vinous liquors as a beverage in the capacity of proprietor, stockholder, agent or employee.” It is clear from the proof that the deceased was not engaged in the sale of malt, spirituous or vinous [343]*343liquors as a beverage. The only question to be determined is was he engaged in the manufacture of spirituous liquors as a beverage. He was employed at the bottling house; the work was done in a United States government warehouse operated under the supervision of the government. The whiskey was not bottled until four years after it was made, and it was then bottled under the supervision of the government. Bracket’s duties were to attend to emptying the whiskey out of the barrels into the tanks, he helped about bottling it, and his work was mostly putting on labels, etc.

It is a sound rule that the language of insurance contracts being selected by the insurer, shall be construed against him, and that a recovery on the contract will not be denied the insured unless required by the terms of the contract naturally construed. The United States government taxes the manufacture of whiskey at so much per gallon. "When the whiskey is made and put into barrels, it is placed in a government warehouse, and may remain there for a number of years. The tax on it is paid when it is taken out of the warehouse, or when the period for which it may remain in the bonded warehouse has expired. In the case at bar the whiskey had been manufactured and placed in the warehouse and four years after-wards, the owners, instead of selling it in barrels had the whiskey placed in bottles before selling it. Much whiskey is sold in barrels. The business of bottling whiskey in bond had much increased of late years from the fact that much rectified whiskey is on the market; and that whiskey that is bottled in bond and stamped by the government cannot be rectified whiskey. The bottling of whiskey however is not confined to the distiller who manufactures it; it may be bottled by others, and the fact that it is bottled by the distiller does not change the nature of the business. We do not think that the employees in this bottling house who were putting the whiskey in bottles four years after it was made, can fairly be said to have been engaged in the manufacture of spirituous liquors as a beverage; for the whiskey was a completed product when placed in the barrels and much of it is in fact sold in that way. Certainly the man who washed the bottles before the whiskey was put in them or who ran the machine by which the bottles were corked, would not be said to be engaged in the manufacture of spirituous liquors as_ a beverage, and we do not see that Bracket can be distinguished from either of these. He was simply helping to [344]*344put in bottles the whiskey which had been made four years before, and had been for four years lying in a warehouse.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 S.W. 690, 154 Ky. 340, 1913 Ky. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bracket-v-modern-brotherhood-of-america-kyctapp-1913.