Evans v. Junior Order United American Mechanics

111 S.E. 526, 183 N.C. 358, 1922 N.C. LEXIS 273
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedApril 19, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 111 S.E. 526 (Evans v. Junior Order United American Mechanics) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evans v. Junior Order United American Mechanics, 111 S.E. 526, 183 N.C. 358, 1922 N.C. LEXIS 273 (N.C. 1922).

Opinion

Clark, C. J.

Article VII, section 15, of the constitution of the defendant enumerates the powers reserved to the National Council, and *360 subchapter 26 thereof reads as follows: “To establish, maintain, control, and regulate a department for the payment of funeral benefits to the members of the order.”

This is the only section in the constitution of the defendant referring to a funeral benefit department, and is the only section granting to the defendant the right to establish such department. It appears, therefore, that this department was established for the purpose of j>aying funeral benefits to members of the order, and not for the purpose of reinsuring the subordinate councils. Any by-law attempting to make the defendant a reinsurer only is contrary to this provision of the constitution, and can have no force or effect as against the plaintiff.

Since the funeral benefit department is formed for the express purpose of paying funeral benefits to the members of the order, and as the defendant chooses to do the funeral benefit business through the local councils, it thereby makes the local or subordinate council its agent for the purpose.

In Bragaw v. Supreme Lodge, 128 N. C., 360, the Court cited with approval the case of Schunck v. Geigenseitiger Wittwen und Waisen Fond, 44 Wis., 375, as follows: “The subordinate lodge acts for and represents the defendant in making the contract with the member, unless we adopt as correct the idea that the member, by some one-sided arrangement, makes a contract with himself through his agent.”

Whenever a subordinate council makes application for enrollment in the funeral benefit department, it is required, under Division Till, section 6, paragraph 3, of the laws of the defendant, to make a pledge as follows: “We have adopted, or hereby agree to adopt upon enrollment of this council in the funeral benefit department, a by-law providing for the payment to the legal dependent of a deceased brother, irrespective of the time of membership of the said brother in this council, the full amount received by his council from the funeral benefit department, less the cost of preparing the claim, and all other charges legally due the council at the time of death.”

The foregoing law of the defendant requires the local council to pledge itself that it will act as the agent of the defendant to distribute funeral benefits to members of the order.

Under Division VIII, section 12, of the laws of the defendant, it is attempted to make enrollment of councils in the funeral benefit department optional, but instead of being optional, it is made obligatory upon every council within the State of North Carolina to become enrolled in said department or not to be enrolled in any funeral benefit association at all.

The section reads as follows: “It shall be optional with any council of the Junior Order United American Mechanics to be enrolled in the *361 funeral benefit department as provided herein, but no council of the •order shall hereafter be permitted to become members of or connected with any so-called funeral benefit association or organization whose business may be to pay funeral or death benefits, and which is not connected with and controlled by the National Council, Junior Order United American Mechanics of the United States of North America: Provided, that the foregoing shall in no wise affect any state death benefit association now in existence whose activities and jurisdiction is now and shall continue to be exclusively confined to such states and limited in its membership to members of the Junior Order United American Mechanics.”

To show further that the subordinate council is a part and parcel of the National Council, and that its acts are the acts of the National Council even the property of the local council is held in trust for the National Council, as appears from Division V, chapter 13, section 6, of the laws of the defendant, which reads as follows: “All funds, moneys, and property of whatsoever kind or description accumulated or held by any council of the order, state or subordinate, shall be accumulated and held solely in trust for and as provided by the National Council, and upon the severance of either of said councils from its relations with the National Council by disbanding, withdrawal, expulsion, dissolution, or revocation of its charter, or by its ceasing to exist as a council of the order in any manner, all of said funds, moneys, and property shall immediately thereafter revert to the National or State council as the case may be, to be held by it for the uses and purposes of the order.”

The foregoing shows that the local council has absolutely no independence of its own, and must act, if at all, as agent for the National Council, the defendant in this action.

In Division VIII, section 13, of the laws of the National Council, the recording secretary of the local council is expressly made the agent of the defendant for the purpose of sending in the names of members of the local council to be enrolled in the funeral benefit department, and also for the purpose of sending in assessments for funeral benefits to said department. The section reads as follows: “Immediately after the initiation, reinstatement, or admission by card of a member in any council that has already been admitted to the funeral benefit department, if such member possesses the qualifications prescribed in section 8 of these laws, the recording secretary of such council shall forward to the secretary, oil blanks provided for that purpose, the name of such member in full, his number upon the roll, his age at last birthday, and his occupation and address, and the recording secretary shall certify that such member is in sound bodily health and free from any disease, together with 35 cents if in Class A, or YO cents if in Class B, which shall be *362 fox the enrollment fee and the assessment of such member for the month in which his name is enrolled in the funeral benefit department, and the secretary shall'immediately upon receipt thereof enroll the name of such member on the roll of his council in the funeral benefit department, and beginning with the date of such enrollment and thereafter his council shall be entitled to all benefits thereof.”

Relative to the duty of the recording secretary of the subordinate council as to forwarding assessments for members of the funeral benefit department, Division Till, section 14, of the laws of the defendant reads as follows: Paragraph 1. “On or before the tenth day of each month there shall be paid by each council for each member on its roll in the funeral benefit department ,on the first day of the current month, a regular monthly assessment as provided by law. It shall be the duty of the recording secretary of each council enrolled in the funeral benefit department to forward such monthly assessment to the secretary on or before the tenth day of each month, using blanks furnished by the secretary for that purpose, and should such payment not reach the office of the secretary by the last day of the month, such council shall thereby, ipso facto, be suspended and not entitled to benefits until such suspension shall have been removed.”

In Bragaw v. Supreme Lodge,

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Bluebook (online)
111 S.E. 526, 183 N.C. 358, 1922 N.C. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evans-v-junior-order-united-american-mechanics-nc-1922.