Crohn v. Order of United Commercial Travelers of America

156 S.W. 472, 170 Mo. App. 273, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 328
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 7, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 156 S.W. 472 (Crohn v. Order of United Commercial Travelers of America) 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
Crohn v. Order of United Commercial Travelers of America, 156 S.W. 472, 170 Mo. App. 273, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 328 (Mo. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J. —

This is an action on a contract of life insurance issued by defendant to Ruby S. Crohn in July, 1892. Crohn died June 1, 1910, from the effects of a gunshot wound and plaintiff, his widow and beneficiary, brought this suit to recover the amount of the [276]*276policy. A jury was waived and tlie cause was submitted to the court on the pleadings and an agreed statement of facts. The court rendered judgment for plaintiff and defendant appealed. .

Defendant is a fraternal beneficiary association incorporated in Ohio: At the time Crohn became a member and received the policy or certificate in suit he was a citizen of this State, residing in Kansas City and we infer from the statements of counsel that defendant at that time was authorized to do business as a fraternal association in Kansas but not in this State. Subsequently, and before the death of Crohn, defendant complied with the laws of this State relating to such societies and became authorized to do business therein. The contract of insurance, by its terms, exempted defendant from liability should Crohn commit suicide and for the purposes of this case plaintiff concedes the truth of the fact alleged in the answer as the principal defense, that such was the cause of his death and further admits that if the policy should be classed as a Kansas contract, she has no cause of action, or rather, that the defense of suicide would afford defendant complete exemption from liability. Plaintiff insists, however, that the policy is a Missouri contract and defendant concedes that if it is, the defense of suicide cannot be interposed, since defendant was not authorized to do business in this State as a fraternal society at the time the policy was issued. [Schmidt v. Foresters, 228 Mo. 675.]

Counsel agree that the controlling question in the case is whether the policy should be treated as a contract made in Missouri or in Kansas and the agreed statement of facts presents that question as one difficult of solution. The membership of the defendant society is composed of commercial travelers and one of the subordinate lodges is known as Council No. 34 at Hutchinson, Kansas. The constitution provides that “any white male person of good moral character [277]*277not under twenty-one and not over sixty years of age, who has engaged for a term of not less than one year immediately preceding the date of Ms application, as a commercial traveler . . . and who has not lost a hand, an arm, a foot, a leg or the sight of one or both eyes, or is not deaf, or subject to fits, or is not mentally or physically infirm, or who has no wound, injury or disease which will render him specially liable to accidents . . . may become a member (if found acceptable) upon application made in due form to a subordinate council within whose jurisdiction he may reside and the payment of ten dollars, one-half of which shall accompany his application and the remainder of which shall be paid prior to his initiation. . . . Any subordinate council may require any applicant for membership to pass a satisfactory examination as. to his physical condition before acting on his application. . . . The supreme executive committee may impose a fine of ten dollars on any subordinate council which admits to membership a person whose application, as determined by such committee, shows that he is not eligible thereto . . . such committee may also reject the application of any ineligible or undesirable person and may refuse to issue him a certificate of membership, but if such applicant shall have been initiated he may if he so elects, be placed on the list of social members, in which event his payment of two dollars to the assessment fund shall be returned to him. . . . The right of an initiate to indemnity under the provisions of section 6, article 17 is conditioned on the issuance to him of a certificate of membership by the supreme executive committee.5 ’

The section just referred to provides: “If any member of the order (other than a social member) who has paid, when due, all fees, fines, costs, dues and as-séssments charged or levied against him shall sustain, during the continuance of his membership and while in good standing, bodily injury effected through exter[278]*278nal, violent and accidental means, which alone shall occasion death . . . the order . . . shall pay to the person entitled thereto a sum not exceeding $5000,” etc.

It appears from these and other provisions of the constitution and laws that the order was composed of two classes of members, i. e., social members who were entitled to all of the social privileges of the order but because of their undesirability as insurance risks were not entitled to participate in pecuniary benefits and beneficiary members who were entitled to participate in all of the privileges and benefits of the order. Further it appears that applicants were to be initiated before the question of their right to participate in pecuniary benefits should be determined; that the final decision of that question was vested in the supreme executive committee at Columbus, Ohio, and that no applicant should become a beneficiary member until “the issuance to him of a certificate of membership by the supreme executive committee.”

Crohn made application to the local council at Hutchinson for membership in the order, paid all dues and assessments required of him and was duly initiated. ITis application followed the usual course and was acted upon by the supreme executive committee which decided to issue a membership certificate to him. The method of delivering certificates executed by the committee was prescribed by the laws as will appear in the following excerpt. ‘ ‘ The applications of all candidates shall be forwarded to the supreme secretary within ten days after each candidate has been initiated . . . and the secretary of the supreme council shall issue a certificate of membership and forward the same to the subordinate council to which said applicant may be attached, with instructions for its delivery to said member unless the forwarding of such certificate be ordered withheld by the supreme executive committee,”

[279]*279Pursuant to this rule Crohn’s certificate was forwarded by the supreme secretary to the secretary of the subordinate council at Hutchinson with instructions to deliver it to Crohn. Defendant knew that Crohn lived in Kansas City and with that knowledge received him as a member of the ELutchinson council. The secretary of that council enclosed the certificate in a letter addressed to Crohn at Kansas City and mailed the letter. Crohn received it at Kansas City, kept the certificate and continued as a member of the order in good standing to the date of his death, paying all dues and assessments levied against him.

The use of the mails for the delivery of the policy into the hand of Crohn was the voluntary act of defendant and was not in obedience to any instructions or request from Crohn nor was it in response to any use by him of that agency of communication. Had it so elected defendant could have waited until Crohn came to Hutchinson to receive the certificate. It decided not to wait but to send the certificate to him at Kansas City and it had the choice of a number of different agencies for the transmission of the certificate such as the mails, express companies or messengers.

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Related

Meinsen v. Order of United Commercial Travelers
43 F. Supp. 756 (W.D. Missouri, 1942)
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Grant v. North America Benefit Corp.
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Johnson v. American Central Life Insurance
249 S.W. 115 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1922)
Pierce ex rel. Durfee v. New York Life Insurance
160 S.W. 40 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 S.W. 472, 170 Mo. App. 273, 1913 Mo. App. LEXIS 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crohn-v-order-of-united-commercial-travelers-of-america-moctapp-1913.