Clow v. Western Life Indemnity Co.

182 Ill. App. 251, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 421
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 13, 1913
DocketGen. No. 17,821
StatusPublished

This text of 182 Ill. App. 251 (Clow v. Western Life Indemnity Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clow v. Western Life Indemnity Co., 182 Ill. App. 251, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 421 (Ill. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Mr.. Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of nil capiat and for costs against the plaintiffs. The judgment was rendered on a verdict in favor of the defendant directed by the court. The plaintiffs were the children (together with the executrix of a deceased child) of James B. Clow. They were the beneficiaries, if the policy was in force, in a policy of the defendant, the Western Life Indemnity Company, a mutual insurance company organized under the Act of June 18, 1883, and reincorporated under the Act of June 22, 1893.

The pleadings and the documentary and other evidence offered are somewhat voluminous, but the facts and the questions involved in the case are simple, rendered especially so by the concession made by the appellee as to a proposition which it would otherwise be of primary importance to consider.

The policy in question was issued to James B. Clow on May 27, 1884. The Company was then named Knights Templars & Masons Life Indemnity Company. It afterwards changed its name to Western.Life Indemnity Company. Under both the Act of 1883 and that of 1893 and by the provisions of the policy the funds for the payments to the beneficiaries of deceased members were to be secured from assessments made upon the surviving members. Among the stipulations of the policy as issued was one providing for the notice to be sent to the surviving members of an assessment, and providing further as follows: “Should any one fail to forward as indicated in the notice the amount thus due, for a period of ten days after the date of said notice, he shall forfeit his membership and all benefits arising therefrom. Any one having thus forfeited his membership may be reinstated, he being alive, within thirty days after the date of said notice, by payment of all arrearages, and may be reinstated to membership subsequent to the thirty days upon such terms as the Board of Directors may fix.”

Another provision of the policy was: “There shall be an annual due of one dollar per one thousand dollars on the face of the policy payable on or within ten days after each anniversary of the policy, and a failure to pay said due shall work a forfeiture of the policy the same as an unpaid assessment.”

April 1,1899, the Company mailed to James B. Clow, to his proper last recorded post office address, as provided by the conditions of the policy, a notice of assessment. Clow failed to pay it within the ten days and he was noted upon the books of the Company as suspended for nonpayment of the assessment. He failed to apply for reinstatement within thirty days, but after the expiration of thirty days he did apply to the directors of the Association, and tendered the amount of the assessment and demanded to be reinstated, asserting that he had not received notice of the assessment. The directors refused to reinstate him, on the ground that a change in the by-laws made in 1896 (by which Clow was bound), took away from them the power to do so after the thirty day period had elapsed, and that the prescribed notice having been given in the prescribed manner, it was immaterial, if true, that he had not received the same.

The by-laws of the Association provided for the issuance to the members of bonds drawing three per cent, interest if any surplus should arise out of the contributions made by the members for the general expenses of the Association, and a bond was issued to James B. Clow for $68.63 on May 24, 1894, which he held when he was noted as suspended in March, 1899. This bond contained this provision: “This bond with accrued interest may be used at par by the said member at any time during his life in payment of assessments or dues on said policy, * * * but in order to use this bond in payment of assessments or dues on said policy the bond must first be surrendered to and in the possession of said company for cancellation before the same or any part thereof can be so applied in payment of said assessments or dues.”

This bond was not mentioned by either party when Clow sought to be reinstated, but in the case of Vail v. Knights Templars Indemnity Company, brought in the Superior Court of Cook county at some time after these transactions, this identical form of bond, in connection with the constitution and by-laws of the Association and a policy similar to the one here in question, was under discussion and the Superior Court, affirmed afterward by the Appellate Court and the Supreme Court, held that the Company was bound, before it could legally suspend for nonpayment of assessments a member who held one of these bonds, to apply the amount of the bond on the assessments, whether requested to do so or not and without the surrender of the bond, and that until the amount of the bond was thus exhausted an attempted suspension was invalid.

The opinion of the Supreme Court affirming this proposition is to be found in 206 Ill. 404, and was filed December 16, 1903. The decision of the Appellate Court was December 30, 1902 (105 Ill. App. 331).

While the appeal to the Appellate Court was pending in April, 1902, William II. Cray, the manager of the Company, and Clow, who were friends, found themselves fishing together at Palm Beach, Florida. At that time Mr. Clow was still maintaining that because he had not received the mailed notice of the assessment on March 1, 1899, the Company should have accepted the assessment and reinstated him in April, 1899, and the Company was insisting that the suspension was valid. No question of the application of the bond had been mooted between them. One day at Palm Beach, however, Mr. Clow brought up with Mr. Cray the differences between himself and the Company, said he would like to get the matter straightened up and asked why it could not be arranged.

Cray expressed himself desirous of settling the matter. He testifies in this case that Clow and he came to an agreement. Clow on his part promised to pay up the amount he would have been obliged to pay had he stayed in the Company, and Cray, for the Company, after explaining that a change in the law of Hlinois in 1893 had altered the form and character of the policies issued by the Company, promised to issue to Clow, on the payment of said amount by Clow and the surrender of the old policy and bond, a new policy for a specific or guaranteed sum of five thousand dollars. The difference between the two forms of the policy mentioned, that prior to 1893 and that subsequent, was that the former guarantied no specific sum to be paid, but made the sum dependent on the amount collected on the assessment of members, limiting it, however, to a maximum amount.

This was the effect of the policy held by Clow which is here sued on. The face of the policy promises to pay “Five Thousand Dollars and all the money paid on the policy in assessment, subject to the limitation as to the amount of such payment as is provided in Section One (1) of Article Seven (7) of the Constitution on the back of this policy of membership.”

The section in question reads: “Upon due notice the Board of Directors shall pay the amount set forth in the deceased member’s policy of membership. Provided that a policy of membership for Five Thousand Dollars shall be good for all the money in the death fund arising from one assessment provided it shall not exceed Five Thousand Dollars and all the money paid on the policy in assessments: * * .

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Related

Mutual Life Insurance v. Phinney
178 U.S. 327 (Supreme Court, 1900)
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74 P. 689 (Washington Supreme Court, 1903)
Knights Templars & Masons Life Indemnity Co. v. Vail
68 N.E. 1103 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1903)
Railway Passenger & Freight Conductors' Mutual Aid & Benefit Ass'n v. Leonard
82 Ill. App. 214 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1899)
Knights Templars & Masons Life Indemnity Co. v. Vail
105 Ill. App. 331 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1902)
Pfingston v. Grand Lodge
83 N.E. 254 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1908)
Lavin v. Grand Lodge of the Ancient Order of United Workmen
86 S.W. 600 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1905)

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Bluebook (online)
182 Ill. App. 251, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clow-v-western-life-indemnity-co-illappct-1913.