Grand Lodge of Ancient Order of United Workmen v. Taylor

24 Colo. App. 106
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1913
DocketNo. 3619
StatusPublished

This text of 24 Colo. App. 106 (Grand Lodge of Ancient Order of United Workmen v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grand Lodge of Ancient Order of United Workmen v. Taylor, 24 Colo. App. 106 (Colo. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Bell, J.

This suit was brought in the district court of Pitkin ■County, Colorado, by Uriah Taylor, as guardian of May, Helen, William and Bryan McDonald, minors, heirs of [107]*107William Ii. McDonald, deceased, against the Grand Lodge of the Ancient Order of United Workmen .of the State of Colorado, on a certificate of insurance to recover the sum of $2,050.00, with interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum.

The controlling issue in the case is whether the deceased, William H. McDonald,' or anyone for him, paid the assessment due in February, 1904, before the death of the insured, which took place about March 13th, 1904.

William H. McDonald, deceased, held his certificate on condition that he should “pay assessments made upon him for the beneficiary or guaranty fund or lodge dues to the financier of the lodge of which he was a member on or before the last day of the month, in which said assessment or lodge dues are levied (or) shall forfeit all his rights as such member, shall stand suspended .from all rights, benefits and privileges of the order from and after that date, and shall not be reinstated except as hereinafter provided. ’ ’

The power is taken away by the constitution of the order from any grand lodge officer, subordinate lodge or any other officer to waive any provision whatever of the constitution of the lodge.

Under the constitution and general laws of the order any suspended member who has forfeited all of his rights by reason of the non-payment of his assessments for the beneficiary or guaranty funds or lodge dues may be reinstated, if he be living, at any time within three months from the date of such suspension by paying all assessments and lodge dues that have been levied during the time of the suspension, including the pending assessments and dues at the time of the suspension, and upon furnishing a certificate of good health at the time the assessments are paid in the manner and upon the blank prescribed by the order, by a majority vote of the lodge.

It is charged and proven that there was an assess[108]*108ment called for on the first day of February, 1904, as provided for in the laws of the order; and it is charged by the appellant that the said William IT. McDonald did not pay the same on or before the last day of the said calendar month, to-wit, the last day of February, 1904, and by reason of the non-payment thereof the said McDonald became suspended from the order, and lost and forfeited all his rights, and that the said beneficiary certificate became suspended; and that the said McDonald was never in his lifetime reinstated in said order, and could not, under the laws of said order, be reinstated after his death.

The appellee avers in his replication that the appellant is estopped to plead the constitution and laws of the order or of the state because, he alleges, that the order has, by custom and conduct in dealing with the deceased and other members of the order, waived and condoned the payment of all dues, assessments and requirements of the technical regulations of the order, and pleads payment on the 26th day of February, 1904, of the $3.50 assessment then due.

This case was before the supreme court on substantially the same pleadings and the same evidence as are before' us in this hearing, and was decided at the September Term, 1908, and is reported in 44 Colo., 373-378, 99 Pac., 570.

The opinions of the supreme court on a former appeal of the case, become thereafter the law of the case as to all questions passed upon by it.—The First National Bank of Ouray v. Shark, City Treasurer, 53 Colo., 446, 128 Pac., 56-60.

When this case was before the supreme court it held that:

“No officer or member of the supreme, or of the subordinate or inferior lodge, had the power to waive performance of any duty imposed upon or required by [109]*109any lodge officer or member by any of the laws, rules, or regulations of the supreme lodge.”—Grand Lodge of the Ancient Order of United Workmen v. Taylor, 44 Colo., 376, 99 Pac., 572.

The supreme court further held that:

“The uncontradicted evidence is that McDonald, the insured, died not later than the 13th day of March, 1904. The assessment upon him and other members for the next preceding month of February had been levied, and the assessment was not paid before the last day of that month or at all, and was not tendered by anyone to the financier until the 14th of the following month of March, the day after the death of the insured.
“Mugfur was then the financier of the lodge. Its members, it appears, were mostly workingmen, and to accommodate them Mugfur permitted payments of monthly assessments to be made to his wife at their home, and authorized her to sign receipts for such payments in his name. The evidence is clear,that no one but Mugfur and his wife had any authority to receive payment of assessments. Both of them swore positively that neither McDonald nor anyone for him, paid, or offered to pay, McDonald’s February assessment during that month. The day after McDonald’s death,.one of his children tendered to Mugfur the February assessment, but was informed at the time by him that it was too late and that he could not receipt for the same. Being further importuned to accept this money and tender it to the subordinate lodge to see if it would be accepted by the order, Mugfur took the money from the insured’s daughter and told her that, while he could not receipt for the same, he would present the matter to the lodge to see if any relief' could be given. Subsequently he presented his request to the lodge and was informed that under the rules and regulations the money could not be accepted, and was ordered to return the money. Mugfur tendered [110]*110the money back to the insured’s daughter, and she refused to accept it. The only testimony that might be claimed as tending to contradict this testimony was the statement of Mugfur himself on cross-examination that some of the members of the order, but not McDonald, had left money for their assessments with a local merchant, which afterwards was tendered to the financier and receipts therefor given; and that assessments, but not McDonald’s, had sometimes been received after the last day of the particular month for which they were levied; but in no case is there any evidence that money had been tendered by, or accepted from, beneficiaries of an insured after his death.
“We think this evidence shows that McDonald’s assessment for the month of February was not paid during that month, and that payment of the same was not tendered until after his death. This, under the-plain and unambiguous language of the rules and regulations of the order, operated as a suspension, and thereby the insured forfeited all rights to participate in the beneficiary fund.” — 44 Colo., 371, 378, 99 Pac., 572, supra.

This effectually disposes of the claim of waiver or estoppel of the subordinate lodge or the supreme lodge as far as the evidence was concerned when before the supreme court.

We think that there is no material change in the weight of the evidence now from what it was when before the supreme court.

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4 Colo. 410 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1878)
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Grand Lodge of Ancient Order of United Workmen v. Taylor
99 P. 570 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1908)
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128 P. 56 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1912)

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Bluebook (online)
24 Colo. App. 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grand-lodge-of-ancient-order-of-united-workmen-v-taylor-coloctapp-1913.