Grand Lodge of Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen v. Kennedy

188 S.W. 447, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 900
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 7, 1916
DocketNo. 1007. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 188 S.W. 447 (Grand Lodge of Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen v. Kennedy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grand Lodge of Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen v. Kennedy, 188 S.W. 447, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 900 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

HENDRICKS, J.

John B. Kennedy was a member of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, and met his death as a railway brakeman, on February 2, 1914. Previous to his death he held a beneficiary certificate, issued by the appellant, payable to the ap-pellee Mrs. Nanty Kennedy, his mother, in the event of his death.

The Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen is a labor organization and also a fraternal beneficiary association, the Grand Dodge of which consists of a delegate from each subordinate lodge, as well as the Grand Dodge officers. The subordinate lodge, of which Kennedy, deceased, was a member, is an association of individuals subordinate, of course to the Grand Dodge, and operates under a charter emanating from the supreme body. The Grand Dodge is the governing body,' making the laws and enforcing them, and is maintained and kept up through a per capita tax, levied upon all the members of the subordinate lodges. The Grand Dodge is controlled by a constitution, and each of the subordinate lodges has a local constitution, with the same provisions, making the jurisdiction of the Grand Dodge over the subordinate lodges one of uniformity. One of the ordinances of the order is, in substance, that any member of the lodge failing or refusing to pay his dues or assessments becomes expelled, without any notice or further action whatsoever, and thereby any beneficiary certificate held by a member is void. The dues of the members of the lodge are payable monthly in advance before the first day of each month, to the treasurer of the local lodge, and, if not so paid, the automatic expulsion exists, as stated. A member expelled for nonpayment of dues may be readmitted upon application on a form provided by the General Secretary and Treasurer of the Grand Dodge for that purpose, and by payment of all arrearages up to the date of expulsion, also the current month dues and assessments, and an additional fee of $1, designated as a “proposition fee.” Beneficiary members having been expelled for nonpayment of dues, but readmitted after qualifying, are, of course, restored to all previous rights. When a member has been automatically expelled under the rules of the order for nonpayment of dues, either one of two forms, No. 188 or 131, as an application for readmission, prescribed by the Grand Dodge, must be used. If the readmission is within two months after expulsion, form 138 is used, but if an applicant is readmitted after two calendar months from the date of expulsion, a medical examination "is necessary, and form 131 is required. Bach of these forms, designated as an “Application for Readmission,” must be signed by the expelled member and received at a regular meeting of the subordinate lodge.

Form 138, which is an element of this particular litigation, required to be signed by an applicant for readmission within 60 days after expulsion, contains a statement and declaration as to good health, and that applicant’s sight and hearing have not been impaired, and that he has neither sustained an injury nor undergone a surgical operation, except as stated in the application. This application for readmission and reinstatement does not require the medical examiner’s certificate as prescribed by form 131 to be used when readmission is attempted after 60 days from the ,date of expulsion.

John H. Kennedy; the deceased member, was expelled for nonpayment of dues on December 1, 1913, and on January 23, 1914, the Grand Dodge at Cleveland, Ohio, received from Kennedy’s lodge at Sherman, Tex.,' his arrearages transmitted by the treasurer of the local lodge. On January 28, 1914, A. E. King, the General Treasurer and Secretary of the Grand Dodge, at Cleveland, Ohio, wrote and mailed a letter to W. H. Johnson, the treasurer of the local lodge, as follows:

“Dear Sir and Brother: I am in receipt of your form 110, on which you report the readmission on January 2d, of J. H. Kennedy, expelled on December 1st, 1913, for nonpayment of dues. The readmission appears to have been illegal, no application for readmission on form 138 having been submitted and such application is required where a member has been expelled for nonpayment of dues and readmission takes place within two calendar months from the date of expulsion. Unless such application is submitted showing the readmission to have been regular the money remitted for him must be returned when it is reached in its regular order. If the application referred to was not used then, of course, he cannot renew his membership after the close of this month until a new application for beneficiary certificate has been forwarded to the Grand Dodge and approved.
“Fraternally yours,
“[Signed] A. E. King.”

Kennedy’s dues for February were also paid to and collected by the local lodge at Sherman within the time prescribed by the rules of the order, before his death February 2d. The application for readmission on form 138, over the signature of Kennedy, was a necessary prerequisite to his readmission into the order, and to the reinstatement of his beneficiary certificate.

Upon the submission of special issues the jury found that Kennedy signed a written application for readmission as a member of the Brotherhood, on the form prescribed by *449 the Grand Lodge, and also found that such application was forwarded to and received by the Grand Secretary of the Grand Lodge. The Grand Lodge, the appellant herein, assigns error that a peremptory instruction should have been given in its behalf by the trial court to the jury. After giving the brief of appellant, relative to the particular question, careful consideration, we conceive the contention to be that the evidence is insufficient to show that such form was ever signed, and likewise insufficient to show that it was sent to the Grand Treasurer at Cleveland, Ohio.

[1] W. H. Johnson, the local treasurer, testified that after the suspension of Kennedy, he made two remittances to the Grand Lodge of his arrearages. Kennedy was expelled the last day of November and was readmitted, in so far as the action of the local lodge is concerned, about the 3d of January, though the arrearages were not forwarded to the Grand Lodge until about the 26th. The letter and testimony of Mr. King, the General Secretary and Treasurer, is affirmative to the effect that form 13S (the necessary application for readmission) did not accompany the dues. The effect of Johnson’s testimony is that while he did not see Kennedy sign the application for readmission, to the best of his recollection he signed the proper readmission blank, and that the same was forwarded to the Grand Lodge. We infer from the testimony that any members having the readmission blanks could take the signature on the blank of one of the expelled members for readmission. Johnson said the arrearages were collected with the additional ¡pl readmission fee, and further said, “To the best of my knowledge the blank was turned into the lodge, properly signed,” but he did not know who turned it in, and testified to an opinion, which does not seem to have been objected to, that to the best of his knowledge and recollection, as to the readmission of the deceased, he did his duty under the laws and regulations of the Grand Lodge.

John McDuffie, who was the president of the lodge, but who had never in reality served in that position, testified there was a meeting of the local lodge in January, 1914, at which he was present and at which time W. II. Johnson, the treasurer, acted as the president of the meeting.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 S.W. 447, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 900, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grand-lodge-of-brotherhood-of-railroad-trainmen-v-kennedy-texapp-1916.