Conkling v. Knights & Ladies of Security

183 Iowa 665
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 15, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 183 Iowa 665 (Conkling v. Knights & Ladies of Security) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Conkling v. Knights & Ladies of Security, 183 Iowa 665 (iowa 1918).

Opinion

Gaynor, J.

1. Insurance : waiver of automatic forfeiture. I. Plaintiff is the beneficiary named in a certain benefit certificate issued by the Knights & Ladies of Security to her husband, Charles R. Colliding. The certificate was issued on the 3d day of March, 1905. Charles R. Conkling died on the 7th day of August, 1914. This action is brought by the plaintiff, as beneficiary, to recover the amount provided in the certificate to be paid to her on the death of her husband.

[667]*6671't appears that all dues had-been paid up to the 1st of July, 1914. The society defends on the ground that, at the time of the death of Conkling, all rights under the certificate had been forfeited, because of his failure to pay the July dues within the. month of July.

Plaintiff replies that it Avas the general custom of the defendant to receive dues after the month in Avhich the same became due and payable; that the assured relied on this custom and course of business, and was led to assume and belieA'e that no forfeiture would occur from a failure to pay promptly and within the time specified in the contract; that plaintiff had been delinquent frequently before this time, and defendant had accepted payment, as for the preceding month, at a later date than that required by the contract; that the defendant had adopted a course of business with the plaintiff by which he Avas permitted to pay his monthly dues several days after the month in Avhich the same became due, and Avas still treated as a member in good standing in the order; that decedent assumed aud believed that the defendant would never require á literal and .strict compliance Avith the contract in this particular; that the defendant, in accepting and receipting for said dues after the month in which the same became due, waived a strict compliance Avith the contract, and is iioav estopped from asserting that the contract Avas forfeited for failure to pay the dues in July for the month of July, as required by the contract; that the dues for July Avere sent to the defendant and received by the defendant on the 6th day of August, 1914; that the same were not only received, but receipted for.

The real question, then, for us to determine is Avhether or not, by a course of conduct such as this record disclosed, defendant waived a strict compliance Avith the terms of the contract, to Avhich reference is hereinafter made, and is now estopped to assert that the contract was forfeited by the [668]*668failure to pay the July, 1914, dues'during the month of July, as required by the contract.

The defendant is a mutual benefit association. The bylaws upon which defendant relies are as follows:

“Section 112. Members Suspended by Their Own Act. All assessments for every month shall become due and payable on the first day of the month. The certificate of each member who has not paid such assessment or assessments and dues on or before the last day of the month shall, by the fact of such nonpayment, stand suspended without notice, and no act on the part of the Council or any officer thereof, or of the National Council, shall be required as essential to such suspension, and all rights under said certificate shall be forfeited. No right under such certificate shall be restored until it has been duly reinstated by the member complying with the laws of the order,- with reference to reinstatement.
“Section 113. How Reinstated. Each member who has been suspended for nonpayment of dues or nonpayment of an assessment or assessments shall only be reinstated in accordance with the constitution and laws of the order.
“Section 114. How a Member may be Reinstated Within Sixty Days. Any beneficiary member suspended by reason of nonpayment of an assessment or assessments, or dues, may, within sixty days from the date of such suspension, be reinstated upon the following conditions, and none other, viz.: Tf not engaged in any of the prohibited occupations mentioned in Section 107 of these laws, he may be reinstated by payment, within sixty days from the date of suspension, of all arrearages of every kind, including assessments and dues, for which he would have been liable had he remained in good standing; provided, however, that he be in good health at the time of making payment to the Financier, with a view to ^reinstatement. The payment of any such assessments and dues for reinstatement shall be a war[669]*669ranty by such member that he is in good health at the time of such payment. Provided, further, that the receipt and retention of such assessments and dues, in case the suspended member is not in good health, or is engaged in a prohibited occupation, shall not have the effect of reinstating said member or of entitling him or his beneficiaries to any rights under his benefit certificates.
“Section 120. National Council not Bound by an Illegal Receipt. The National Council shall not be bound by the acceptance of arrears of assessments and dues from suspended members who are not entitled to reinstatement in accordance with the laws of the order. The receiving of such arrears and receipting therefor by any officer of a subordinate council, the National Secretary, or by any other person, or the payment by or on behalf of any suspended member of arrears of assessment and dues with a view of reinstatement, except as provided for in the laws of the order, shall not be binding on the National Council. The failure of any financier to report to the National Council as suspended any suspended member of his Council shall not operate in any case as a waiver of the forfeiture occurring on account of the suspension. The retention by the Financier or by the order of assessments and dues paid by members or for them with a view to .reinstatement other than is provided in the laws of the order, either before or after death, shall not constitute a waiver of any provisions of these laws, until a demand has been duly made for their return by such member or his beneficiary or legal representative.
“Section 120. (a) National Council not Bound by Knowledge of or Notice to Officers or Members of Local Councils. No officer of this society nor any local council officer, or member thereof is authorized or permitted to waive any provisions of the by-laws of this society which relate to the contract between the member and the society, whether [670]*670the same be now in force or hereafter enacted. Neither shall any knowledge or information obtained by, nor notice to any subordinate council or officer or member thereof, or by or to any other person, be held or construed to be the knowledge or notice to the National Council or the officers thereof, until after said information or notice be given in writing to the National Secretary of the order.
“Section 157. Duties of the Financier. The Financier shall not knowingly collect or receive assessments and dues from a member who has Become suspended for nonpayment of the same, or who has been expelled from the order for any cause, if, at the time of tender, the member is not in good health, or knowingly collect or receive assessments and dues on account of a suspended member who is dead at time payment is tendered.

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Bluebook (online)
183 Iowa 665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/conkling-v-knights-ladies-of-security-iowa-1918.