Burke v. Grand Lodge A. O. U. W.

118 S.W. 493, 136 Mo. App. 450, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 74
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 29, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 118 S.W. 493 (Burke v. Grand Lodge A. O. U. W.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burke v. Grand Lodge A. O. U. W., 118 S.W. 493, 136 Mo. App. 450, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 74 (Mo. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.

Plaintiff, tbe widow of William F. Burke, deceased, brought this suit on a benefit certificate issued by defendant, a fraternal beneficiary society incorporated in this State. In 1897 Burke became a member of Summit Lodge No. 272 of said order at Kansas City and defendant issued to him tbe benefit certificate in suit, by the terms of which tbe grand lodge promised to pay plaintiff, tbe beneficiary, two thousand dollars on tbe death of tbe member, on condition “that said William F. Burke shall in every particular, while a member of said order, comply with all tbe rules, laws and requirements thereof now existing or hereafter enacted.” Burke died December 28, 1905. Plaintiff contends that be was a member in .good standing at tbe time of bis death, while defendant claims, in its answer, that on account of failure to pay an assessment duly made and payable on November 28, 1905, Burke was suspended and forfeited tbe benefit certificate. Further, it is claimed by defendant that after said suspension and forfeiture, Burke voluntarily abandoned bis membership in the order. Tbe reply of plaintiff is a general denial. At the close of tbe evidence introduced by plaintiff, tbe court gave tbe jury a peremptory instruction to return a verdict for defendant. Plaintiff took a nonsuit with leave and, in due time, filed a motion to set it aside. One of tbe grounds of tbe motion was newly-discovered evidence. This ground was supported by affidavits. The court sustained tbe motion on this ground alone and defendant appealed.

[453]*453It is argued by counsel for defendant that with the facts stated in these affidavits added to those adduced at the trial, plaintiff still has failed to show a right to recover on the certificate. In our statement, we shall treat the facts appearing for the first time in the affidavits as though they were supported by evidence introduced at the trial. We do this because no point is made, nor does it appear, that the plaintiff was not diligent in the discovery of the new evidence, or that it was merely cumulative.

The bill of exceptions recites that plaintiff “made out a prima-facie case by the admission of the benefit certificate, the death on December 29, 1905, of William Francis Burke” and that defendant then assumed the burden of proof. After defendant offered evidence in> support of the affirmative defenses interposed by its answer, plaintiff introduced her evidence on the issues thus raised, after which the court instructed a verdict for defendant. In the application for membership, dated April 19, 1897, Burke agreed “that compliance, on my part with ail the laws, regulations and requirements which are, or may be hereafter enacted by said order, is the express condition upon which I am entitled to participate' in the beneficiary fund and have and-enjoy all the other benefits and privileges of said order.”

It is admitted Burke was born November 17, 1857, and, therefore, was in his fortieth year when he became a member and received his certificate. The laws of the order required him to pay regular monthly assessments which, in 1905, were $3.50 each. Of this sum, fifty cents went to the local lodge for its expenses and $3 to the grand lodge on account of the “Guarantee Fund” out of which death benefits were paid. These fixed assessments were as regular as clockwork and were due and payable by the member on the 28th day of each month. They were payable to the financier of the local lodge who was charged with the duty of forwarding, at stated times, the portions due the grand lodge. Law [454]*454197 of the order provided: “A failure or neglect of any member to pay any assessment on or before the 28th day of the month in which the same is payable to the financier of his subordinate lodge, or to the Grand Recorder, as provided by law, shall work ipso facto a suspension and forfeiture of all rights under any beneficiary certificate issued to him to whomsoever the same may be payable, and no action on the part of the lodge or any officer thereof shall be required as essential to such suspension and forfeitures. Any member suspended or expelled from the order for any cause whatever, •forfeits all claim to the beneficiary fund during suspension or expulsion.”

It is admitted that Burke failed to pay the assessment due November 28, 1905, a month before his death, and that he was reported as suspended at the meeting of the local lodge on the night of December 7th, but plaintiff endeavors to avoid the forfeiture by showing that the right to claim it under the provisions of Law 197 was waived by defendant by reason of the practice of the local lodge, known to and acquiesced in by the managing officers of the grand lodge, of accepting payments of assessments long after they became due. The financier of Summit Lodge testified that Burke’s assessments for March and April, 1905, were paid May 28th, those for July, August and September of that year were paid September 20th. Burke was not suspended for these delinquencies for the reason given by the witness that a member in good standing “stood up for him.” In such cases, it was the practice of the local lodge to pay the assessments due the grand lodge out of its own funds and the member was not reported to the grand lodge as delinquent. We quote from the financier’s testimony:

“We made a practice of carrying delinquent members without suspending them if a brother got up and stood good for them. The account of Mr. George Weissinger, page 11, shows that the dues for January, Feb[455]*455ruary and March, 1905, were paid August 28th. I do not know who stood good for him. There should have been somebody, I never carried anybody unless there was. I have no record as to who did it. On page 11 it shows that the dues of Mr. J. M. Wallace for March were paid April 5th. He was not suspended for March because he wras carried. Brother Reed was up there and stood good for him. I wms right there. The same party stood good for him for other months. It was not always some one who stood good, sometimes one and sometimes another. I never carried men unless someone stood good for them, they were suspended if no one would volunteer. . By standing good, I mean they would pay for him and stood up for him, and not say that he was all right. I do not remember that Mr. Reed paid for these various delinquents. I did not suppose he stood good for all of them. I do not recollect all of them. Sometimes they may have said that they would pay the account. On page 110, C. D. Updegraff, shows the June assessment was paid July 19th. I can tell exactly who stood up for him, it was B. L. Gould who paid for him. I expect he paid for all these delinquents in that list. It was very probable he was delinquent in June, August, November ¡and December, 1905, because Brother Gould paid for him a great many times. He paid the assessments as they came due. I presume the total amounts to something like $15. It was a common practice to carry these delinquents if there was anybody who stood good for it. . . . One of our duties is to keep the lodge alive, and we carried delinquents as far as we could. I cannot tell in the particular instances who stood for the delinquents. They did not say they were all right, said they would stand good for them, and we credited them. . . . One man was carried from January to August. It was done a great many times.”

It appears from the testimony that the practice of granting these indulgences was very common. Further, [456]

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Bluebook (online)
118 S.W. 493, 136 Mo. App. 450, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burke-v-grand-lodge-a-o-u-w-moctapp-1909.