Briggs v. Highlanders

122 N.W. 69, 84 Neb. 834, 1909 Neb. LEXIS 296
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 1909
DocketNo. 15,758
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 122 N.W. 69 (Briggs v. Highlanders) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Briggs v. Highlanders, 122 N.W. 69, 84 Neb. 834, 1909 Neb. LEXIS 296 (Neb. 1909).

Opinion

Fawcett, J.

On June 5, 1897, Robert N. Briggs, whom we will hereinafter designate as the assured, became a member of a local castle of defendant society, and under that date received from defendant a benefit certificate upon his life in the sum of $3,000, payable at his death to his wife (plaintiff) and son. In April, 1905, the assured, for the sole purpose of changing his beneficiary, surrendered his certificate of June 5, 1897, and received from defendant, as a substitute therefor, the benefit certificate in suit. Defendant wrote on the face of such later certificate the words: “The date of certificate No. 1,741 (the former certificate) shall be the date on which the settlement of this certificate shall be based.” In its answer defendant admits that the later certificate “was issued in lieu of said first-named certificate.”

The defense pleaded is suicide. It is conceded that, at the time the assured became a member of defendant society and obtained his original certificate, there was noth[836]*836ing in the edicts and laws of the society making suicide a defense, hut defendant alleges that in June, 1901, its edicts and by-laws were amended by inserting the following provision: “The benefit certificate issued to a member shall become void and all benefits thereunder shall be forfeited in case the member shall die from suicide, felonious or otherwise, sane or insane”; and that in September, 1905, they were again amended so as to provide: “In case of the suicide of a member, either sane or insane, the amount of all contributions of a member to the fidelity fund of the fraternity only shall be paid to the beneficiary named in the certificate,” and that the amount contributed by assured during his lifetime to the fidelity fund is the sum of $106.27, which amount it tendered plaintiff and which plaintiff refused, and that it has kept the tender good by depositing the same in court for the use and benefit of the plaintiff. The reply admits that the assured committed suicide, and alleges that the acts of defendant in attempting to amend its edicts and by-laws in June, 1901, and in September, 1905, are void, for the reason that defendant did not, at either of said times, have a representative form of government; that the body designated “Executive Castle,” which is the governing body of defendant, is not a representative body; that it is not elected by the members of said defendant nor by delegates chosen thereby, and that the same is an arbitrary self-perpetuating body, not representative in form and not authorized or empowered by defendant to enact by-laws, rules or edicts for the government of the members of defendant, or to revise or amend the same. There was a trial to the court without the intervention of a jury, and judgment for the plaintiff for the full amount of her certificate, with interest; from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

The motion for a new trial in the court below is as follows: “(1) That the findings of the court are not sustained by the evidence in the case, but are contrary to the manifest weight thereof. (2) The findings and judgment of the court are contrary to the law of the case. [837]*837(3) That the finding and judgment of the court should have been for the said defendant instead of for the said plaintiff.” This motion raises but the one question: Is the judgment of the district court sustained by the evidence? If we give any consideration whatever to the second paragraph of the motion, then the question would simply be: Can a judgment, based upon the evidence actually received, be sustained?

Some point is made by defendant that the amendment of its edicts and laws in 1901 was prior tt> the issuance of the certificate in' suit, and that the issuance and acceptance of such certificate was subject to the edicts as so amended. This contention is without merit. The mere substitution of the certificate in suit for the one first issued, for the sole purpose of changing the beneficiary, did not constitute such certificate a new and independent contract. We think it is clear that the certificate in suit must be considered, so far as its date and the rights and liabilities of the respective parties are concerned, as if it had been issued upon’the date of the issue of said first certificate, viz., the date of assured’s admission into the society.

That the alleged change in tbe edicts and laws of defendant by its convention of June, 1901, was ineffectual and void has already been determined by this court, in Lange v. Royal Highlanders (this same defendant), 75 Neb. 188. The opinion in that case so fully and fairly sets out the history of defendant from its organization down to and including its convention of June, 1901, and its attempted amendment of its edicts and by-laws at that convention, that it need not be restated here. The defense in that case, as in this, was suicide. We there held that defendant down to and including its convention of June, 1901, had not adopted a representative form of government and that its attempted change of the by-laws at that convention was therefore null and void. Down to that time, therefore, the rights of the parties in this case must be considered as having been determined by our decision in that case.

[838]*838This leaves for our consideration the sole question as to whether or not the action of defendant in September, 1905, was of such a character as to relieve it of liability-in this action. The convention of September, 1905, was composed of 25 delegates elected from 25 districts, the number and boundaries of which districts were determined by an executive committee, which had been selected by the unrepresentative body of 1901, together with 13 officers, also elected by that body, and 10 committeemen appointed by the president elected at that convention. Did this constitute a representative government? It is claimed by defendant that, when the by-laws were voted upon at the convention of September, 1905, the 10 committeemen, by request of the president, refrained from voting, and that the change in the edicts at that convention was voted for by all of the delegates. The fact remains, however, as admitted by the secretary of defendant upon the witness-stand, that these 10 committeemen had a legal right to vote: “Q. Noav, this statement of the president, requesting the members of the committee, who were not delegates, not to vote upon the adoption of these edicts, was a mere voluntary request, was it not? A. Well, I should say it Avas. At least they did not ask him to make any such provision. Q. But under the edicts under which that executive castle had convened, these members of the committees were entitled to vote thereon? A. They were, but he Avould not have appointed them committeemen had they insisted upon voting.” The president does not confirm the assertion made in the latter clause of this ansAver. Moreover, the voluminous journal of the proceedings of that convention, introduced in evidence, does not show that the president ever made such a request or imposed any such restriction upon the committeemen. The journal does show, however, that none of the members of that convention voted on any change of the by-laws. The chairman of the committee on edicts made a lengthy report to the convention, recommending a number of changes of certain specific sections in the edicts and by-hnvs [839]

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Bluebook (online)
122 N.W. 69, 84 Neb. 834, 1909 Neb. LEXIS 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/briggs-v-highlanders-neb-1909.