Duggins v. United Brotherhood of Carpenters

102 N.E.2d 606, 90 Ohio App. 59, 60 Ohio Law. Abs. 499, 46 Ohio Op. 394, 1951 Ohio App. LEXIS 646
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 2, 1951
Docket7443
StatusPublished

This text of 102 N.E.2d 606 (Duggins v. United Brotherhood of Carpenters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duggins v. United Brotherhood of Carpenters, 102 N.E.2d 606, 90 Ohio App. 59, 60 Ohio Law. Abs. 499, 46 Ohio Op. 394, 1951 Ohio App. LEXIS 646 (Ohio Ct. App. 1951).

Opinion

OPINION

By HILDEBRANT, PJ.:

This appeal on questions of law is from a judgment of the Common Pleas Court, arrived at without the intervention of a jury, allowing recovery to plaintiff, a widow, of the death benefits provided for in the Constitution of the Brotherhood —defendant—following the death of her husband, a member of Local Union No. 1602, affiliated with the defendant Brotherhood, an unincorporated Association, international in scope.

In recognition of the principle declared by the courts, including this one, that the legal relationship between the membership and the Union is contractual in its nature, plaintiff claims to be entitled, ex contractu, under the death benefit provisions of the Brotherhood Constitution.

Pertinent provisions of that Constitution are:—

“Paragraph C, Section 44, Page 37:
*500 “Each beneficial Local Union shall pay to the General Secretary $5.00 on each new member admitted, excepting apprentices, also One ($1.00) Dollar per month for each member in good standing, Sixty-five (65c) Cents of which shall be used as a fund for the general management of the United Brotherhood and payment of all death and disability donations prescribed by the Constitution and Laws of the United Brotherhood, together with all legal demands made upon the United Brotherhood. The balance of Thirty-five (35c) together with monies received from new members, to be placed in a special fund for ‘home for pension purposes.’ ”
“Paragraph A, Section 45, Page 39:
“A member who owes the Local Union two months dues shall be notified by mail at the last known address by the Financial Secretary during the third month of said delinquency that if said arrearages are not paid before the last day of the third month he will be suspended from benefits of death and disability donation, the right to a pension or admittance to the Home until he squares up entirely all of his indebtedness (including dues for the month in which he squares up his arrearages) and furthermore that he will not be entitled to any benefits during the time of such arrearages or for a three month period from the date of squaring up same. A member in arrears must square up all arrearages in full within one year or stand suspended.”

Paragraph B. Section 45, Page 39:

“A member owing a Local Union a sum equal to six months’ dues shall have his name stricken from the list of membership without a vote of the Local Union, and shall be so notified at the last known address by the Financial Secretary of the Local Union during the sixth month of his delinquency

Paragraph A, Section 48, Page 42:

“On the death of a member in good standing, if married and living with his wife, the claim shall be paid to the widow; * *

Paragraph A, Section 49, Page 43:

“A beneficial member to be entitled to donations must be not less than seventeen and not over sixty years of age at the time of admission to membership, and, when he joined, must have been in sound health and not afflicted with any disease or subject to any complaint likely to endanger his health or cause permanent disability.”

Paragraph B, Section 49, page 43:

“A beneficial member will be entitled to the donations as prescribed in the Constitution and Laws of the United *501 Brotherhood; provided, he is over one year a contributing or financial member in good standing, and when three months in arrears he shall be debarred from all donations until three months after all arrearages are paid in full, including the current month.”

Paragraph C, Section 49, page 43:

“Donations for journeymen between the ages of twenty-one and fifty years shall be:
One years’ membership______________________$100.00
Two years’ membership______________________ 200.00
Three years’ membership_____________________ 300.00
Four years’ membership_____________________ 400.00
Five years’ membership_____________________ 600.00 ”

All of the evidence before the Court was adduced by and on behalf of the plaintiff, who is consequently bound thereby. It consists of the testimony of the plaintiff and the financial Secretary of Local 1602, together with certain exhibits, including the Constitution of the Brotherhood and the dues record of plaintiff’s decedent from November, 1945, the time of last joining the Union and the last entry of July, 1949, the month in which he died.

The financial Secretary testified in substance that on learning of the illness of plaintiff’s decedent, the local Union stepped in as they were wont to do in hardship cases and agreed to advance his dues payments necessary to prevent his being dropped from the Union, in order that he be not required to pay another initiation fee to join again, he to repay such advancements, after, on his anticipated recovery, he returned to work. He testified:

“A. I think this October 9, 1947, was our first payments.
“Q. Yes. When you did that were you paying him up so that he would be, his widow would be entitled to funeral benefits?
“A. No.
“Q. Will you explain that to the court why you say no?
“A. We called on Shevlin Duggins at the hospital and we agreed with Shevlin, inasmuch as he was on his back, to continue his dues payments to keep him a member of the Union, so it was our understanding at that time from the Doctor that was attending him that he would regain his health in a period of one year and be able to go back to work. We were making an effort to keep him a member of the Union so that when he went back to work he wouldn’t have to pay another initiation fee.
“Q. You were merely keeping him a member so that he wouldn’t be dropped from the membership roll, is that right?
*502 “A. That is right.
“Q. You were not keeping him a member so that he would be entitled to benefits, or his widow would be entitled to funeral donations? A. No.
“Q. And you understood it that way? A. Yes.
“Q. Did he understand it that way?
“A. We left him thinking he understood it that way, at least.”

The record shows that while the local advanced the dues sufficient to prevent plaintiff’s decedent from being dropped from membership in accordance with their agreement, the payments were not made in a manner to keep him eligible at all times for death benefits. The record further shows that he was kept informed of his status with reference to the payment of dues.

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Related

United Brotherhood of Carpenters v. Smith
129 P.2d 909 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1942)

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Bluebook (online)
102 N.E.2d 606, 90 Ohio App. 59, 60 Ohio Law. Abs. 499, 46 Ohio Op. 394, 1951 Ohio App. LEXIS 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duggins-v-united-brotherhood-of-carpenters-ohioctapp-1951.