Dillon v. National Council of the Knights & Ladies of Security

148 Ill. App. 121, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 245
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 20, 1909
DocketGen. No. 14,491
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 148 Ill. App. 121 (Dillon v. National Council of the Knights & Ladies of Security) 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
Dillon v. National Council of the Knights & Ladies of Security, 148 Ill. App. 121, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 245 (Ill. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinions

Mr. Presiding Justice Smith

delivered the opinion of the court.

The first question to be considered is whether Hanora McCaffery, who under the by-laws of appellant and her certificate of membership, stood suspended at the time of her death for failure to pay an assessment when due, could be reinstated after her death by a payment of the delinquent assessment to appellant’s collecting officer by the 'beneficiary in the membership certificate, and the acceptance of such payment by such officer, with knowledge of her death.

By the terms of the beneficiary certificate Mrs. Mc-Caffery agreed to comply with the rules, laws and requirements of the order and should be a member in good standing at her death.

It appears from the record that the assessments made by the National Council upon the members of the society were not levied at such intervals as the officers might deem necessary and direct, or as the mortality experience of the society from time to time might require; but the laws of the society, which were made a part of the contract, provided that there should he an assessment each month, which became due on the first day of the month, and payable on or before the last day of the month, without notice. The substance of the by-laws and their legal effect are stated in National Council v. Dillon, 212 Ill. 320, this case being before that court on an appeal from the first trial.

There is some conflict in the evidence as to whether Cornelius Eyan, financial secretary, remitted to appellant the $3.80 which was paid to him by appellee the day after the death of Hanora McCaffery. His testimony on the first trial, as appears from the opinion of the Supreme Court at page 325, was to the effect that he did not know whether he sent the money to appellant or not. For some reason not explained in the record his memory was much better on this point on the trial now before us. He states positively in this record that he sent the money to headquarters. It appears, however, from his testimony, we think, that he was testifying more to a general conclusion than to a definite fact which he distinctly remembered. His testimony and his reports to the National Council show that he kept his records in such shape that neither he nor the . officers of the National Council knew what particular payments he remitted. In his report for December, 1899, he remitted for two members carrying $1,000 at the rate of $1.65, but the report does not inform the officers of appellant for whom this remittance was made. In the next Janu-‘ ary, 1900, report Eyan remitted for five members holding $1,000 certificates at the rate of $1.65 (Hanora McCaffery’s rate), hut he does not give on the hack of his report in the proper places the names of the members for whom the remittance was made. In his reports for February and March, 1900, he reports for five members at that rate in each report, but the officers of the society could not tell from these reports for whom he was remitting. His attention was called to the matter in a letter dated at Topeka, Kansas, February 8, 1900, and a request made to accompany his February remittance “with a list of the members you pay for”. In this condition of Ryan’s reports the National Council or its officers could not know whether Ryan had received the February and March assessments from or on account of Hanora McCaffery, or whether he had remitted the amount thereof to the National Council. The evidence shows that Ryan informed Bair, a deputy for the National Council, that Ryan’s daughter had received the February and March assessments after Mrs. McCaffery’s death, and that Bair notified the National Secretary of that fact. But we do not think that the evidence shows that Ryan remitted these assessments to the National Council, or if he did make such remittance the National Council or its officers had notice or knowledge of it.

Whether, however, the fact of the receipt of the money by Ryan, and his remittance of it to the National Council, as contended by appellee, is material to be considered, depends upon the view taken as to the legal effect of such receipt of the money upon the rights of the parties. In our opinion the receipt of the money by Ryan after the death of Mrs. McCaffery was not within his authority as financial secretary or collector under the contract and the rules of the order, and such receipt of the money did not affect the rights of the parties. In considering the contention of the plaintiff that the condition of the certificate was waived by the defendant, appellant, by receiving and retaining the money, the Supreme Court in National Council v. Dillon, supra, said at page 325: “When this payment was made to the financial secretary of the local council he knew that Hanora McCaffery was dead, but it is conceded that the rights of the parties could not be affected by the payment to him. It is admitted that he had no right to set aside the rules of the order, and if, from ignorance or any other reason, he received the money, it would not operate to reinstate the member or waive the conditions of the certificate. Under the laws a suspended member could only be reinstated if living, and upon conditions therein specified and upon a majority vote of the local council. There was not even any action of the local council in the matter”. See also National Council etc. v. Burch, 126 Ill. App. 15; Miller v. Union Central Life Ins. Co., 110 Ill. 102; Bagley v. Grand Lodge etc., 31 Ill. App. 618; Brown v. Grand Council etc., 81 Iowa 400; Borgraefe v. Knights of Honor, 22 Mo. App. 127.

In Lyon v. Royal Society of Good Fellows, 153 Mass. 83, there was involved the liability of the society on a certificate conditioned that payment should be made at death, provided the member was in good standing when he died. The member stood suspended for nonpayment of dues, and thereafter, November 1, 1888, an assessment was levied of which he had notice but did not pay within thirty days. On December 3, following, the member paid the assessment to the proper officer, but before it was forwarded to the treasurer he was notified that a medical examination was necessary to his reinstatement. On January 1, another assessment was duly levied, which on January 17, the day before he died, was paid by his wife, the beneficiary named in the certificate, together with the dues, to the financial secretary of the assembly. These payments were relied on to establish a waiver, and also an estoppel in favor of the plaintiff. The court said: “The trouble with the plaintiff’s case is, that none of the acts relied on were acts of the corporation, but they were all done by officers who had no authority to waive the express provisions of the laws”.

In Lantz v. Insurance Co., 139 Pa. St. R. 546, it appeared that the premiums falling due in May, August and November 1887, were not paid at maturity, but were paid after maturity, and accepted by the company; that the premium due on February 19, 1888, was not paid at maturity; that on March 2, 1888, a brother of the insured, who was also a policy-holder, called oh the general agent of the company in Philadelphia, and informed the latter that Simeon P Lantz, the insured, would be down on March 6th tv pay his premium, and was told that he, the agent, did not make out his monthly report until the tenth of the month, and that if the premium was paid, by the ninth it would be all right. Simeon B. Lantz was in good health on March 2nd, but was taken ill the next day and died on March 6th. The court say, at page 560: “The consequence of a default in the payment of the premium is defined in the policy itself.

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Bluebook (online)
148 Ill. App. 121, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillon-v-national-council-of-the-knights-ladies-of-security-illappct-1909.