Dubcich v. Grand Lodge Ancient Order of United Workmen

74 P. 832, 33 Wash. 651, 1903 Wash. LEXIS 567
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 29, 1903
DocketNo. 4776
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 74 P. 832 (Dubcich v. Grand Lodge Ancient Order of United Workmen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dubcich v. Grand Lodge Ancient Order of United Workmen, 74 P. 832, 33 Wash. 651, 1903 Wash. LEXIS 567 (Wash. 1903).

Opinion

Hadley, J.

Appellant is the Grand Lodge in the state of Washington of the fraternal beneficiary society known as, “Ancient Order of United Workmen.” On the 6th day of April, 1900, the authorized officials of appellant issued a beneficiary certificate wherein it is recited that Stephen Dubcich is a member of Columbia Lodge Ho. 2, of said order, located at Seattle, Washington, and is entitled to all the rights and privileges of membership, and to designate the beneficiary to whom the' sum of $2,000 of the beneficiary fund of the order shall, at his death, be paid. It is also recited that said Stephen Dubcich has designated, as such beneficiary, Augusta Dubcich, bearing to him the relation of wife. The respondent here is the beneficiary named in said certificate. In January, 1902, said Stephen Dubcich died. The respondent, as said beneficiary, demanded payment under said certificate, which was refused, and this action was brought to recover the amount named therein.

The defense is that the deceased made false representations to appellant at the time he made application for membership, on account of which he was expelled from the order, and that respondent is therefore not entitled to share [654]*654in the beneficiary fund. The defense, as urged here, is presented upon two theories: (1) that hy reason of the alleged false representations the contract with deceased was void ab inito, and (2) that hy reason of his expulsion the contract was terminated. The alleged ground of expulsion, however, is based upon the same facts which are urged as making the contract void from the beginning. Those alleged facts are that the deceased stated in his written application for membership, in answer to questions, that he had never been afflicted with frequent headaches or syphilis, and that he had never before applied for life insurance and been rejected; whereas, it is alleged that he had formerly applied for membership in Seattle Lodge 3STo. 60 of the same order, and had answered said questions as to afflictions in the affirmative. The cause was tried before a jury, and a verdict was returned in favor of respondent for $2,000, with accrued interest. Judgment- was entered upon the verdict, and this appeal is from the judgment.

Respondent moves to dismiss the appeal on the ground that, as no motion for new trial was made, the judgment cannot, for that reason, he reviewed here. The errors specifically assigned, however, all involve rulings made hy the trial court during the progress of the trial. The office of the motion for new trial, in its necessary relation to the appeal, is to give the trial court opportunity to pass upon questions not before submitted for its ruling, such as misconduct of the jury, newly discovered evidence, excessive damages, error in the assessment of the amount of recovery, and similar questions. The motion seems to serve no necessary purpose, as far as concerns the review on appeal of questions once submitted to, and decided hy, the trial court-. It is true, if such questions are raised a second time, under the motion for new trial, the trial court [655]*655may consider them, and may review its own rulings made at the trial to the extent of correcting them by granting a new trial. But such review by the trial court is not necessary in order that questions once actually decided by it in the cause may be considered on appeal. This court in effect so held in Johnson v. Maxwell, 2 Wash. 482, 27 Pac. 1071, and Kennedy v. Derrickson, 5 Wash. 289, 31 Pac. 766. In the last named case the court said:

“The only effect which the failure to make such motion can have upon the proceedings in this court is to limit the questions which may be properly presented here.”

It is contended that those decisions were based upon § 450 of the Code of 1881, which provides that “the supreme court may review and reverse on appeal or writ of error any judgment or order of the district court, although no motion for a new trial was made in such courtand it is urged that no such provision now exists in our statutes. Our attention has, however, not been called to any existing statute which affirmatively provides that the motion is necessary as a preliminary to the review on appeal of questions passed upon during the progress of the trial. We think, in the absence of such a statute, that the provisions of § 6520, Bal. Code, ai’e broad enougli to authorize the review of such questions here without a motion for new trial. We refer particularly to the following in said section:

“Upon an appeal from a judgment, the supreme court may review any intermediate order or determination of the court below which involves the merits and materially affects the judgment appearing upon the record sent up from the superior court.”

The motion to dismiss the appeal is denied.

It is assigned that the court erred in excluding the testimony of a physician as to the physical condition of the [656]*656deceased at the time he was treated by the witness. Objection was made to the questions on the ground that they necessarily called for the disclosure of privileged communication between physician and patient. We think the objection was properly sustained on that ground. The court, in its rulings upon that subject, discriminated between information acquired when the relation of physican and patient existed, and that which was otherwise acquired. The exclusion extended only to the disclosure of information acquired while the professional relation existed. We think the court did not err in that particular.

It is next assigned that the court erred in overruling appellant’s challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence. As before intimated, the theory of the appellant, as urged on appeal, is twofold; viz., that the contract was void ah initio for fraud, and, if not void, that it was terminated by the expulsion of the deceased from the order. The burden of appellant’s brief is, however, devoted to the theory that the expulsion of the deceased is the thing which determines against respondent’s recovery. The brief contains the following statement: “Under the pleadings in this case it is admitted that Dubcich was a member in good standing up to January, 1902.” Again, it is stated in the brief as follows:

“The penalties of an old line company run against the policy in the hands of innocent women and children, while all the penalties in the A. O. U. W. run against the member. For instance, in this case, the claim of the defendant is that the membership on which this claim is founded was fraudulently obtained. The penalty for that offense is not, as in an old liner, that the certificate shall be void, but that the member so offending shall be expelled.”

It is thus conceded in appellant’s, brief that the deceased was an actual member in good standing until, [657]*657it is claimed, he was expelled; and further, that the certificate was not void from the beginning, but was extinguished by the subsequent act of expulsion. In view of these concessions in the brief, the mere suggestion, at its close, that the certificate was void ab initio is out of harmony with the argument in the great body of the brief. The latter proposition is merely suggested, and is not discussed to any extent, or supported by the citation of authorities. We shall, however, discuss both propositions in their relation to the case at bar.

Assuming for the sake of the argument, but not deciding, that a certificate wtould be rendered void ab initio

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Bluebook (online)
74 P. 832, 33 Wash. 651, 1903 Wash. LEXIS 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dubcich-v-grand-lodge-ancient-order-of-united-workmen-wash-1903.