Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen v. Walker

147 So. 655, 165 Miss. 698, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 306
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1933
DocketNo. 30598.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 147 So. 655 (Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen v. Walker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen v. Walker, 147 So. 655, 165 Miss. 698, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 306 (Mich. 1933).

Opinion

*703 Ethridge, P, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Suit was filed by Mrs. J. M. Walker, appellee, against the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, appellant, to recover a pension of thirty-five dollars per month alleged to be due to her as the widow of her husband, J. M. Walker, under a pension certificate held by him in said brotherhood. The case was submitted to a jury largely on conflicting evidence, and the jury returned a verdict for the appellee, Mrs. J. M.-Walker, plaintiff in the court below, and, if the evidence made by the plaintiff in the case is sufficient to sustain the jury’s verdict, it must be affirmed, unless there are errors in the admission of evidence and the giving of instructions.

The brotherhood issues to its members a beneficiary certificate, or insurance policy, with certain provisions for total disability, and such member must be a policyholder in order to secure a pension certificate, but the pension department and the beneficiary department are entirely separate departments,- and the holders of policies must look to the particular department funds for payment of their claims.

In 1923 the deceased, J. M. Walker, had taken out a pension certificate in the brotherhood for which he paid the monthly premium of one dollar and fifty cents, and which he continued to pay up to the date of his death. After he died, the beneficiary certificate, not connected *704 with the pension certificate, was paid. The provisions for the pension department are contained in section 85, and its subsections, of the constitution and general rules of the brotherhood. Under subsection 1 of section 85 it is provided that:

“A department to be known as the Pension Department of the Brotherhood of Bailroad Trainmen shall be maintained by the Grand Lodge. This department shall be self sustaining, shall be entirely separate from all others and shall, in no way, create a financial liability for any other department.” •

The object of the department is stated in subsection 2 as follows: ‘ ‘ This department shall be to provide a monthly income for its members who, on account of advanced age, or any physical or mental infirmities, become totally and permanently disabled as hereinafter provided. ’ ’

In subsection 7-a it is provided that: “Members of this department shall be confined exclusively to the members of the Brotherhood of Bailroad Trainmen, who are in good standing at the time of making application, or who are eligible as provided for in laws governing this department. The Pension) Board shall be the judge as to whether or not an application for membership in this department shall be rejected because of the rejection of said applicant’s application for beneficiary certificate. ”

It is further provided that membership in this department shall be continued only during the time the member keeps himself in good standing in the brotherhood.

Under the total disability clause, subsection 15-a, it. is stated that: “A member of this department who has been a member for two years, but who, from physical or mental causes, is totally and permanently disqualified or who has been retired by the Pension Board on account of old age, shall receive from the funds of this department a monthly pension as hereinafter provided. *705 In the event of the death of a member who is on the pension roll, the monthly pension will be extended to his widow, so long as she remains unmarried, and if no widow to dependent mother, provided the dues of the deceased are paid.”

In subsection 17 it is provided that: “No member of this department shall receive a pension unless he had been disabled for a period of one year, except when the nature of his disability is such that no question or doubt as to its permanency can exist, in which case the applicant upon favorable consideration of his claim by the Pension Board shall be placed upon the pension roll as hereinafter provided. In no case, however, will a pension be allowed until a member has paid assessments for a period of two years as outlined in section 16.”

Subsection 18 provides that an “application for pension must be made by the member claiming the pension, his guardian or legal representative (if unable to make it himself) said application to be made on a form prepared and furnished by the officers of this department. No member is to receive a pension, and his name will not be placed on the pension roll until application has been approved by the Pension Board.”

The scheme by which the pension applications were furnished to parties desiring them was for the party to apply to the secretary-treasurer of the local lodge of Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, who transmitted the request for a pension application to the national secretary-treasurer, who would furnish a printed application to the secretary-treasurer of the local lodge, not sending it direct to the applicant for the pension, and said secretary-treasurer of the local lodge would see that the application was filled out, and, after that was done, would transmit it to the national secretary and treasurer to be passed upon by the Brand Lodge.

While J. M. Walker, deceased, held the pension certificate, and while all his dues were paid and were con *706 tinued to Tbe paid until Ms death, he became ill and totally disabled, and was waited upon by a physician. What passed between J. M. Walker and his physician was objected to and was excluded, but it is apparent' that Walker became aware of the necessity of having himself placed upon the pension roll of the pension department. The plaintiff’s evidence showed that on June 11th a letter was written by J. M. Walker, or by his wife, to the secretary-treasurer of the local lodge to which he belonged, situated in Hattiesburg, although he lived in Jackson, requesting an application form for a pension.

Of course, there is conflict upon much of the evidence, which we will now discuss.

The local secretary denied much of what was said, but, as the jury found for the plaintiff, we will have to consider the case as made by the evidence for the plaintiff, and determine the legal questions involved in the 'light thereof.

Other letters were written, according to this evidence, between that date and July 1st, and there were also certain oral messages sent to the secretary-treasurer of the local lodge at Hattiesburg by other members of the brotherhood; but there was no answer to all these communications up to July 1st, when Mrs. Walker put in a long-distance call for said secretary-treasurer at Hattiesburg, but did not get in touch with him until July 2nd. She testified that she had a conversation with him and told him that they had written to him a number of times, and had some messages sent to him, and had not heard a word from him, and that she requested him, at once, to send the pension papers and also a receipt for the dues for the current month, and that he promised to do so immediately. On the same day, the secretary-treasurer wrote a short note to J. M. Walker as follows: “Dear Jim: Sorry that I did not mail this out sooner, but just waiting on your pension application. Ton need not worry about your dues as I will take care of these

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Related

Golden v. Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen
96 P.2d 428 (Montana Supreme Court, 1939)
Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen v. Agnew
155 So. 205 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
147 So. 655, 165 Miss. 698, 1933 Miss. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brotherhood-of-railroad-trainmen-v-walker-miss-1933.