Graff v. Sovereign Camp, Security Degree, Woodmen of the World

1 La. App. 119, 1924 La. App. LEXIS 53
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 3, 1924
DocketNo. 8712
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 La. App. 119 (Graff v. Sovereign Camp, Security Degree, Woodmen of the World) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graff v. Sovereign Camp, Security Degree, Woodmen of the World, 1 La. App. 119, 1924 La. App. LEXIS 53 (La. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

BELL, J.

Mrs. Anna M. Graff, plaintiff herein, widow of Emile Graff, and beneficiary under a certain policy, dated October 13, 1919, which also is described as “whole life Certificate (No. 103,406), issued by the Woodmen of the World, _ Universal Camp, Security Degree, Omaha, Nebraska”, sues the insurer, defendant herein, for the. sum of $500.00, as “death benefit”, claimed to be due the named beneficiary.

The defendant organization or society admits the issuance of the policy to the deceased, Emile Graff, and that he died on May 16, 1920, and that the above certificate calls for a cash payment to plaintiff of $500.00 upon the death of her husband. It is further admitted that the defendant was advised of the insured’s death, and that plaintiff made demand for settlement, which was refused, and that the insured paid all of his dues up to May 30, 1920.

The sole defense is that Graff, after paying his first monthly dues or assessment of eighty cents on the day the policy was delivered, to-wit: October 13, 1919, failed to pay like amounts on the first day of the following consecutive months of November, December and January. The evidence shows this fact to he true and that nothing was paid by him from October 13, 1919, until January 5, 1920, upon which latter date he paid eighty cents for each of the monthly premiums due on the first of November and. December of 1919. Thereafter, it appears that he paid similar monthly premiums as follows:

Eighty cents for January, 1920, on Feb. 11, 1920.
Eighty cents for February, 1920, on March 4, 1920.
Eighty cents for March, 1920, on March ' 4, 1920.
Eighty cents for April, 1920, on April 5, 1920.
Eighty cents for May, 1920, on April 5, 1920.

It is, therefore, contended that the policy became null and void on the 2nd day of December, 1919, that is, upon Graff’s failure to remit within thirty days after his first delinquency, to-wit: November 1, 1919, the premium due the previous month, which would have become delinquent on the latter date, and, further, because of his other untimely remittances, as shown in the above schedule of payments. The defendant pleads the constitution and by-laws of the Sovereign Camp, and specially pleads and incorporates in its answer the following provision in the policy:

“This certificate is granted in consideration of the monthly premium hereinbefore stated in the schedule and of the payment of a like amount on of before the first day of each consecutive month thereafter during the continuance of this contract, and the further consideration .of the delivery of this certificate during the lifetime and good health of the member.
[121]*121“All premiums are payable at the Home Office of the Society, but may be paid to ah authorized representative of the Society; such payments to be recognized by the Society must be entered at the time of payment in the premium receipt booh belonging with this certificate. If for any reason the premium be not called for when due, it shall be the duty of the member before said premium shall be in arrears thirty days, to bring or send said premium to the Home Office of the Society or to one of its local representatives. If the premiums are not paid as herein specified this contract shall be null and void.
“REVIVAL. — -Should this certificate become void for non-payment of premium, it will be revived within one year from the date to which premiums have been duly paid upon payment of all arrears, provided satisfactory evidence of the insurability of the member be furnished to the Sovereign Commander, but such revival shall not take effect unless at the date thereof the member is living and in sound health.”

Further answering, the defendant shows that the payment received by it on January 5, 1920, was received without its knowledge or information that Graff was not in sound health, and that this fact only became known to the Society after Graff’s death, and then only from the attending physician’s certificate of death, attached to the proof of death, showing that the last illness of the deceased was five or six months prior to his death. Upon the following issues the case' was fully tried, and from a judgment rendered for plaintiff, defendant appeals.

Under the admissions above noted, there remains for determination three questions of fact: 1st, did Graff ever believe that he had defaulted on the policy; 2nd, did he ever make application for reinstatement, and, 3rd, did he ever have knowledge or reason to believe that he was in bad health at the time that the defendant’s agent called for and collected the several premiums claimed to be in arrears?

The evidence shows that Graff was a young man, 24 years of age, when he died, and that he was á machinist in apparent strong, robust health, and that he was never at any time notified by the defendant or any of its agents or collectors of the fact that he was delinquent. It is reasonable to assume on this first point that he did know, or was charged under the law with knowledge of the fact, that he had not paid his second or third premiums when they became due, but there is nothing in the constitution or by-laws of the Society nor in the clauses of the policy itself, above quoted, that required him to apply for reinstatement, nor is there any evidence that he was ever notified that the company considered him a delinquent or considered that his policy had elapsed. On the contrary, it is clear from the evidence that despite the fact of his failure to pay the November or December premiums when due, the collector of the company called on January 5th and received from him the two previous months’ premiums, then in arrears. We find in the second clause of the policy above quoted that a “duty”, but certainly no obligation is imposed upon a policyholder to forward his dues when same are not called for. Other language in this same clause implies that the company expects, under any condition, to first call for the premiums rather than to have them forwarded. None of the collectors of the defendant Society were placed by defendant on the stand, and it is, therefore, not shown where any demand for delinquent dues had been made upon Graff. It-does not appear from any evidence in the record that Graff had any occasion to know that he was not in good health. The doctor who attended him was placed on the stand by the defendant, and, as its witness, testified, among other things, that he had examined Graff for the first time on December 16, 1919, and that .the symptoms which he seemed to have were rather of an uncertain nature, and that he had made no diagnosis of the patient’s trouble. It is further [122]*122shown that Graff continued his duties, which evidently involved labor of a strenuous nature, continuously until within a few days of his death, his death coming upon him suddenly from a rupture of the anaurism of the aorta.

. There was some attempt on the part of defendant to prove that Graff was afflicted with tuberculosis for many months prior to his death, but the doctor’s certificate and his testimony is quite to the contrary. The doctor further testifies that Graff was a large, square-shouldered man, of robust type, and that it was quite possible, in the early stages of this disease, from which he died, for him to have had the disease without knowing it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 La. App. 119, 1924 La. App. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graff-v-sovereign-camp-security-degree-woodmen-of-the-world-lactapp-1924.