Fraternal Aid Union v. Whitehead

87 So. 453, 125 Miss. 153
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1921
DocketNo. 21472
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 87 So. 453 (Fraternal Aid Union v. Whitehead) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fraternal Aid Union v. Whitehead, 87 So. 453, 125 Miss. 153 (Mich. 1921).

Opinion

Ethridge, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee filed a suit against the appellant on a certificate of fraternal insurance issued upon the life of Hubert T. Whitehead, who came to his death by jumping or falling from a railway mail car on the Gulf & Ship Island Railroad Company.

The application for a certificate by Whitehead contained, among other things, the following stipulations:

“I hereby agree, in consideration of the issuance to me of a benefit certificate, that the contract between the Fraternal Aid Union and myself shall be this application, and the accompanying medical examination, and the benefit certificate to me and the constitution and laws of the said Fraternal Aid Union, noAV in force or hereafter adopted, including all amendments hereafter made.”
“For myself and my beneficiary or beneficiaries, I agree further that all interests, rights and benefits which may or shall have accrued by reason of my membérship in said order shall, in case of my expulsion from, or the voluntary severance of my connection with, said order, or in the event of my failure to comply with or violation by me of the constitution or laAvs of said the Fraternal Aid Union [165]*165now in force or hereafter' adopted, including all amendments hereafter made, be absolutely forfeited and determined.”
“I hereby agree for myself and my beneficiary or beneficiaries that any physician or surgeon who may have attended me for any illness or injury is hereby directed and authorized to impart to, and any duly authorized representative of said society shall be entitled to receive from, any such physician and surgeon a full statement of any matters which may have come to his knowledge in his professional capacity while so attending me, and I further agree that, notwithstanding the law, or laws, of any state or territory rendering incompetent or privileged the testimony of any physician or surgeon as to matters coming to his knowledge in his professional capacity, in case of suit brought to recover on any benefit certificate issued to me by said the Fraternal Aid Union, the testimony of such physician or surgeon with regard to such matters shall be admissible in evidence.’
“I hereby agree and declare that all statements and answers made by me herein to be warranties and in all respects full, true, and complete, that such statements and answers were written by my direction and read over by me before the signing of this application, and that said statements and answers have been in no way or manner affected or induced by any agent, officer, or representative of the Fraternal Aid Union, and I hereby agre'e for my: self and for my beneficiary or beneficiaries, if any one or more of such answers or statements are false, untrue, or fraudulent, the benefit certificate which may be issued to me shall be null and void and of no effect.”
“Have you in the past five years been treated by or consulted any physician in regard to personal ailment? A. None.”
“What illness, disease, or injuries have you had since childhood? A. None.”

The policy issued on this certificate contained the following, among other things:

[166]*166“This certificate is based upon the application of tbe member to whom the same is issued and the medical examination accompanying the same, and said application-with said medical examination, the articles of incorporation, the constitution and laws of the association now and hereafter adopted, and this certificate constitute the agreement between the Fraternal Aid Union and said member.”
Section 20, chapter 206, Laws of Mississippi of 1916 (section 5192, Hemingway’s Code), reads as follows:
“The constitution and laws of the society may provide that no subordinate body, nor any of its subordinate officers or members shall have the power or authority to waive any of the provisions of the laws and constitution of the society, and the same shall be binding on the society and each and every member thereof and on all beneficiary members.”

Section 106 of the constitution and laws of appellant reads as follows:

“No officer or member of the supreme lodge, except the supreme president by dispensation, nor any local or subordinate lodge or any officers or member thereof or any organizer, deputy or agent, shall have authority to change, alter, modify or waive any of the provisions of this Constitution.”

Section 53 of the constitution and laws of appellant reads as follows:

, “If any member shall die or suffer- injury in any way on account of any act on his part which is a violation of any law of the state in which he or she is, or of the United States, while engaged in the commission of a crime • or while escaping from an officer of the law or in flight from arrest, he shall thereby forfeit all rights of membership and all moneys paid, and all rights under his certificate.”

Section 62 of the constitution and'laws of the appellant reads as follows:

“(d) If death of any person who now is or shall hereafter become a member shall be due to suicide, whether sane or insane, voluntary or involuntary, conscious or un[167]*167conscious, tbe full liability of the association shall he the amount actually paid by the member to the benefit fund.
“(f) That each and every promise, waiver, guarantee or other matter set forth in the application and signed by the member is a part of the contract between the member and the association as fully as though fully set forth in the certificate issued to the member, the same as though they were a part of the Constitution of the association.”

The appellant in defense pleaded the general issue and special pleas setting up the several sections of its constitution and the above provisions from the application for insurance and the quotation from the policy in defense of the action, and also filed notice under the general issue setting forth in substance the provisions and averring breaches thereof by the deceased, and alleging that the deceased came to his death either by suicide by- willfully jumping from, the train, or that he was attempting to flee arrest and came to his death by reason of trying to escape arrest.

The replication of the appellee to these several pleas set up waiver and estoppel on the part of the appellant by reason of the fact that the agent of the appellant, the state manager, made out the application for the deceased,' and that the deceased disclosed to the agent the real facts, and that the agent interpreted the questions in the application for the certificate by the deceased by stating that the questions referred to illnesses of a serious nature, and especially to those coming within a period of five years next preceding the time of the application for the certificate, and that the agent of appellant taking the application had full knowledge of the real facts as disclosed by the evidence, and by reason thereof the appellant had waived the provisions and was estopped by the conduct of its agent from relying upon the said defenses, and that the knowledge of the agent was the knowledge of the appellant. .

[168]

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Bluebook (online)
87 So. 453, 125 Miss. 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fraternal-aid-union-v-whitehead-miss-1921.