Colbert v. District Grand Lodge No. 21, Grand United Order of Odd Fellows

176 So. 633
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 6, 1937
DocketNo. 1753.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 176 So. 633 (Colbert v. District Grand Lodge No. 21, Grand United Order of Odd Fellows) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colbert v. District Grand Lodge No. 21, Grand United Order of Odd Fellows, 176 So. 633 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

DORE, Judge.

This is a suit on a membership certificate issued by the bureau of endowment of defendant fraternal order to Isaiah Colbert, wherein plaintiff was named bene-, ficiary, to the amount of $500. The insured died oil April 5, 1936.

On May 1, 1936, the plaintiff was paid the sum of $100 in part settlement of her claim as beneficiary, and' for the balance signed an “Agreement and Loan Certificate,” the principal part of which reads as follows:

“Whereas, the Endowment Bureau of District Grand, Lodge No. 21, Grand United Order of Odd Fellows, of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, hereinafter styled the Order, is indebted to the undersigned beneficiary in the sum of $500.00 upon its policy of life insurance insuring the life of Isaiah Colbert, now deceased, formerly a member of Lettsworth Lodge No. 10302 of said Order, located at Lettsworth, Louisiana.
“And Whereas, the said Order, faced with a financial crisis, is unable to pay its death claims in full at present, Therefore, in consideration of the payment to me as beneficiary aforesaid, of the sum of One Hundred Dollars, receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, I do consider my claim under said policy as paid in full and for which sum I grant to the said Order full acquittance and discharge of any and all my claims under said policy as paid in full and for which sum I grant to the said Order full acquittance and discharge of any and all sums due me as beneficiary of Isaiah Colbert under said Policy No. ; and that the remaining balance on the said policy is to be in effect a loan by me to the said Order, which it has obligated itself to pay as hereinafter set out, all of which is acceptable to me.
“The Order hereby promises to repay the said loan of Four Hundred dollars with interest at the rate of 3% per annum from date under the following conditions:
“(a) The principal to be paid only in the event that after such repayment the Order shall be left possessed of sufficient assets to meet all its liabilities and to maintain a fund for payment of all death claims arising after this date (May 1, 1936), and such agreement, accepted by me, provides that the Order shall have the option to make such repayment whenever it shall be able to do so in accordance with the aforesaid conditions. v
“(b) The interest to be paid semi-annually on June 1st and December 1st.
, “This certificate is one of a series of Five Hundred (500) of like tenor, amounting in the aggregate to Seventy Thousand Eight Hundred Forty-five Dollars ($70,-845.00) and numbered from one (1) to Five hundred (500), both inclusive.”

Plaintiff was paid and accepted a check for $1 on June 1, 1936, to cover interest to that date on this loan agreement, but she refused a check for $6 tendered her on December 1, 1936, for the interest to that date. She filed this suit on March 18th following, and asked for judgment in the sum of $400, with legal interest, being the amount due under the original certificate, less the $100 payment. She made no reference in her petition to the loan agreement nor to the purported settlement of her claim.

The defendant Order filed an exception of prematurity based on a provision in the by-laws of the Order to the effect that no suit at law could be brought on the claim until after three years from the filing of the claim in the office of the secretary of endowment; and on the further ground that plaintiff had signed said loan agreement and no further payments were then due under this agreement, and this agreement was specially pleaded in bar of the suit and was annexed to and made part of the exception.

Plaintiff then filed a supplemental petition in which she admitted signing said loan agreement, and admitted the receipt of the $100 therein mentioned, but she denied that said loan agreement is binding on her for the following reasons: First, that she signed said agreement and received said payment under the belief, due to the representatives of the Order, that the $100 was only a payment on her claim and she was only signing a receipt therefor; second, that she was induced to accept said payment on the representations of the officers of said order that her claim was only one of 500 other like claims amounting to a total of $70,845 due to other persons at that time; and, third,.that. *635 said loan agreement was signed by plaintiff without any consideration therefor.

Defendant then filed an exception of no cause of action which was first sustained by the court and the suit dismissed, but later a rehearing was granted, and the exception was referred to the merits. As no further action seems to have been taken on either of the exceptions, .they require no further consideration and are considered as abandoned.

Defendant answered denying that it owed plaintiff anything other than the $400 due under the terms of the loan agreement as a novation of' the original claim, and set up and urged the validity of the novated loan agreement. The case went to trial and resulted in a judgment of dismissal of plaintiff’s suit. From this judgment she has appealed.

The trial judge found that the evidence did not show that plaintiff was misled in signing the agreement under the belief that she was signing a receipt only. The trial judge reviewed the facts on this point, and a reading of the evidence does not show that his conclusions on this point are manifestly erroneous. In fact, his conclusions on this point are not seriously questioned here by appellant as she admits that the proof of fraud on this point is mostly inferential.

In support of her allegations of fraud, plaintiff contends that the agent who made the settlement with her led her to believe that the agreement which she signed was merely an extension of time to the Order to enable it to pay its claims; that all of the other beneficiaries were signing similar agreements of extension; that she was helping the Order and the other beneficiaries as well as herself in granting this extension.

A reading of the testimony of the adjuster fails to show such misrepresentations on his part. On the contrary, his testimony shows that he explained to plaintiff fully the condition of the Order and the reason for the loan agreement. On being asked how he explained the agreement to her, he testifies:

“A. I told her we were going to see the different beneficiaries, asking them to sign the adjustment plan to assist the Odd Fellows since they were so far behind with their claims.
“Q. Did you tell her all other beneficiaries were signing? A. No, not all at the same time.
“Q. Did you tell her they had signed at different periods? A. I told her others had signed from time to time.
“Q. You also told her she could get the five hundred dollars? A. I told her she could get her money if the Odd Fellows were ever in a position to pay her.”

. While there is some conflict in the testimony as to just what the adjuster did tell plaintiff when she signed the loan agreement, yet the preponderance of the evidence supports his version of the transaction. Plaintiff accepted an interest payment on the agreement a month after she had signed it.

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Related

Colbert v. District Grand Lodge No. 21
178 So. 694 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
176 So. 633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colbert-v-district-grand-lodge-no-21-grand-united-order-of-odd-fellows-lactapp-1937.