Elder v. Grand Lodge of Ancient Order of United Workmen

82 N.W. 987, 79 Minn. 468, 1900 Minn. LEXIS 828
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 22, 1900
DocketNos. 12,117-(127)
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 82 N.W. 987 (Elder v. Grand Lodge of Ancient Order of United Workmen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elder v. Grand Lodge of Ancient Order of United Workmen, 82 N.W. 987, 79 Minn. 468, 1900 Minn. LEXIS 828 (Mich. 1900).

Opinion

BROWN, J.

This is an action to recover upon a certificate of insurance issued by defendant on the life of plaintiff’s brother, plaintiff being the beneficiary named therein. The cause was tried below before the court without a jury, and judgment was awarded to plaintiff, from which defendant appeals. - ,

The facts in the case are as follows: The Ancient Order of United Workmen is a benevolent, charitable, and fraternal insurance association. It is composed and made up of three different, though not wholly independent, organizations: (1) A supreme lodge, having a general supervision and jurisdiction over the whole order; (2) a state grand lodge, deriving authority from the higher order; and (3) a subordinate lodge or lodges chartered and constituted by the grand lodge, and located at different points in the state. The grand lodge, defendant in this case, is the general contracting and responsible- body of the order. No contract of insurance is valid unless approved by its officers. All certificates of membership are issued by it, all assessments upon the members are made by it, and it is alone responsible for the payment of all death losses.. The subordinate lodges have primary authority to admit applicants to membership, subject to regulations imposed by and to the approval of the grand lodge. They have a general charge and supervision of the matter of collecting and receiving assessments duly levied upon the members, making due report thereof to the grand lodge. They have also authority, under certain conditions and restrictions, to restore and reinstate suspended members.

The deceased, J. R. Elder, duly became a member of a subordinate lodge of such order, and received a certificate of such member[470]*470ship in due form, which certificate contained, among other things, the following condition, namely:

“This certificate is issued upon the express condition that said J. R. Elder shall in every particular comply with all the laws, rules, and requirements of said order.”

Similar certificates are issued to all members. Payment of such certificates in case of the death of the insured, is made from a “beneficiary fund” controlled and maintained by the grand lodge. This fund is made up of assessments of one dollar upon each certificate holder of the association for every death of a member. All such assessments are made on the first of the month, and are payable on or before the 28th of the month in which so made. A failure to pay any such assessment wuthin such time operates to suspend the member so in default, without any act or declaration on the part of the subordinate lodge. Deceased became a member of such society in 1892, and continued such until the time of his death on November 24,1896, unless such membership ceased and ended upon his default and failure to pay an assessment made against him on August 1 preceding. An assessment was then duly made, but was never paid by deceased, or by any one for him.

The contention on the part of the defendant is — and this embodies its whole defense to the action — that by his failure to pay such assessment Elder became suspended by force and operation of the by-laws of the order, and all rights under the certificate were thereby forfeited. The by-law on this subject, which is a part of the contract of insurance, and which deceased, by the condition of his certificate aforesaid, agreed to comply with, is as follows:

“Any member who fails to pay all such assessments on or before the 28th day of the month in which the assessment is made, shall, by such nonpayment alone, stand suspended, without any action by the lodge, or any officer thereof; and the beneficiary of any such member under his certificate shall thereafter have no claim whatever upon the beneficiary funds of the order, unless such member be reinstated as the laws of the order require.”

Plaintiff concedes that the assessment of August 1 was duly and properly made, and that it was never paid, but contends that the conduct of defendant and the subordinate lodge of which deceased [471]*471was a member, with reference to the receipt and acceptance of assessments after they were past due, and its conduct in restoring and reinstating suspended members upon such payment being made, was such as to constitute a waiver of prompt payment, and to estop it from insisting upon the default. At the opening of the trial in the court below the parties‘entered into the following stipulation, viz.:

“If the conduct and dealing of the defendant prior to September 1, 1896, has been such as to waive prompt payment of assessments on the part of its members, and to authorize a delay upon their part, such as existed in this case, the defendant is liable; if there has not been such conduct and dealing on the part of the defendant with its members as to waive such prompt payment and authorize the delay which existed in this case in making payment of assessment number twelve, the defendant is hot liable.”

So we have for consideration the questions whether the conduct of the subordinate lodge, or its collecting or receiving officer, in the matter of receiving payment of past-due assessments in disregard of the by-laws, or the conduct and custom of such lodge in restoring and reinstating suspended members to all rights in the order upon payment of all assessments in arrear was such as to amount, in law, to a waiver of prompt and timely payment, and to estop it from insisting on a forfeiture. The court below found such waiver, and ordered judgment against defendant. There is no dispute as to the fact, and the question whether a waiver is shown is one of law, to be determined from all the evidence.

We find nothing in the evidence with reference to the conduct of the subordinate lodge, or its collecting officer, in receiving overdue assessments from deceased in disregard of the by-laws, to constitute or create such a waiver. It is the duty of the officer who receives payment of dues and assessments from members to report at the lodge meeting following 'the 28th of the month in which ■they are made all who are delinquent and in arrears, and the most that’the evidence shows in this connection is that deceased was permitted by such officer to pay past-due assessments on several different occasions between the 28th of the month and the next following lodge meeting. But there is no evidence from which it can be found that the lodge, as a body, had any notice that the [472]*472by-laws were being thus disregarded, or any evidence that the conduct oí such officer was in any way authorized, sanctioned, or ratified. In all instances of such payments deceased was duly reported by such officer as having paid his assessments in due time, and in no instance was he reported as being in default. The evidence does not show that the conduct of the officer ever came to the notice of his lodge, and it cannot be presumed that he had authority to disregard or waive the by-laws, and defendant is not bound by his acts in this regard. Bryan v. National, 21 R. I. 149, 42 Atl. 513; Supreme Lodge v. Oeters, 95 Va. 610, 29 S. E. 322. He had no other or greater authority under the by-laws than to receive payment of assessments, and to make report to the lodge of members who failed to pay. On three different occasions deceased was reported as suspended for the nonpayment of assessments, but was subsequently reinstated by the lodge upon payment being made.

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Bluebook (online)
82 N.W. 987, 79 Minn. 468, 1900 Minn. LEXIS 828, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elder-v-grand-lodge-of-ancient-order-of-united-workmen-minn-1900.