Grand Lodge of the Ancient Order of the United Workmen v. Young

123 Ill. App. 628, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 792
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 1, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 123 Ill. App. 628 (Grand Lodge of the Ancient Order of the United Workmen v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grand Lodge of the Ancient Order of the United Workmen v. Young, 123 Ill. App. 628, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 792 (Ill. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Baume

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit by appellee against appellant to recover the amount of a .benefit certificate for $2,000 issued to William J. Graham, the deceased husband of appellee. Upon the trial in the Circuit Court there was a verdict against appellant for $2,167, a remittitur by appellee of $67, and judgment against appellant for $2,100.

There was no controversy on the trial as to the fact that the certificate was issued to deceased; that he remained a member of the order in good standing until April 28,1897; that on June 18, 1897, he was adjudged insane, and remained insane until his death July 7, 1903. On behalf of appellant it was contended that Graham was duly suspended in accordance with the constitution and by-laws of the order on April 28, 1897, for a failure to pay assessments 366, 367 and 368, due on that day, and that he was never reinstated to membership in the order; that the re-’ ceipt offered in evidence by appellee,purporting to bear date April 28, 1897, for assessments 366, 367 and 368 was never given by appellant for said assessments, but was given for assessments 362 and 363, due February 28, 1897, and that said receipt had been altered so as to purport to be for the April assessments; that said Graham paid no assessments for the month of 'May, 1897, but that the receipt in evidence, purporting to bear date May 25,1897, was given for assessments due March 28,1897, and had been altered as to date, assessment numbers and amount, so as to purport to be for the assessments due May 28, 1897.

On behalf of appellee, it was contended that the receipts in evidence were genuine; that the alterations, erasures and changes apparent upon their face were made before the same were issued; that at the time Graham was adjudged insane, he was in good standing in the order, and that the dues and assessments that thereafter accrued or might accrue were tendered by appellee to appellant; that, although Graham was legally suspended for the non-payment of assessments 366, 367 and 368, due April 28, 1897, he, thereafter, on May 25, 1897, paid to appellant assessments 369, 370 and 371, due May 28, 1897, and that by receiving payment of said assessments, appellant waived the prior suspension, if any, and the receipt of such payment operated to reinstate him in good standing in the order; that, after Graham became insane, appellant refused to accept payment of dues and assessments for the reason that the insured was insane, and for no other reason, and that appellant was thereby estopped from setting up any other or different ground of forfeiture, as a defense to a suit on the benefit certificate.

To show the payment of assessments due April 28, 1897, and May 28, 1897, appellee offered in evidence “Exhibits 3 and 4,” the former purporting to be a receipt by E. S. Bundy, financier of the local lodge of which deceased was a member, for assessments 369, 370 and 371, due in M , and the latter a like receipt for assessments 366, 367 and 368, due in April. Appellant objected upon the ground that the receipts on their face showed evidence of changes and alterations, and that a sufficient explanation had not been made by appellee to permit them t,o go to the jury, but the objection was overruled and the receipts admitted in evidence. In this state there is no presumption of law whether an instrument has been altered from its condition when executed, but it is a question of fact, and the party producing such an instrument is called upon for an explanation. Catlin Coal Co. v. Lloyd, 180 Ill. 398; Merritt v. Boyden, 191 Ill. 136; Landt v. McCullough, 206 Ill. 214.

Appellee and Mary Edmonson, a witness called on her behalf, both testified that the receipts were found by appellee, July 6, 1897, in the pocket of her husband’s clothing, with a knife, lead pencil and piece of tobacco; that they were in the same condition and had the same appearance when so found as when they were offered in evidence upon the trial, and that they were in the handwriting of E. S. Bundy, the lodge financier. This explanation was sufficient to authorize the court to permit the receipts to go to the jury, and the objection thereto was properly overruled.

It is also urged that the court erred in permitting appellee to testify to certain alleged conversations had by her with E. S. Bundy, the lodge financier, since deceased. Appellant is in no position to raise the question, because the conversations referred to were brought out upon the cross-examination of appellee by counsel for appellant, and her subsequent examination with reference thereto by her own counsel added nothing prejudicial to appellant.

The testimony of appellee as to conversations with Bundy was, however, incompetent. Bundy, as the financier of the local lodge, was, in his lifetime, the agent of appellant, and by section 4 of chapter 51, Revised Statutes, appellee was an incompetent witness as to any admission or conversation between herself and such deceased agent. Zeigler v. Clinton Ins. Co., 84 Ill. App. 442; Rothstein v. Siegel, Cooper & Co., 102 Ill. App. 600.

Upon retiring to consider their verdict, the jury requested permission of the court to take with them the magnifying glass used by the witnesses, in testifying to the erasures and alterations appearing upon the several receipts offered in evidence and also used by the court and counsel in inspecting the same, which request was denied by the court. The original receipts offered in evidence have been certified to this court and an examination of the same persuades us that the request should have been granted. The receipts, upon their face, bear evidence of having been altered by means of erasures and by writing over the words erased. Unless the jury were afforded the same opportunity possessed by the witnesses, who testified to the erasure of certain words and figures, the writing over such erasure in different ink from that used in the body of the receipts, and that the outline of portions of certain words and figures so erased, not visible with the naked eye, was discernible with the aid of a magnifying glass, they could neither apply nor weigh the evidence of the witnesses in arriving at a conclusion. An examination of the receipts with a magnifying glass discloses much that cannot be seen with the natural eye tending to support appellant’s contention with reference to the alterations, and therefore the request made by the jury was proper and should have been granted by the court. Kannon v. Galloway, 2 Baxter, (Tenn). 230; Morse v. Blanchard, 117 Mich. 37; Short v. State, 63 Ind. 376.

Appellant offered in evidence, and the court admitted, the original report made by the recorder of the local lodge to appellant, from which it appears that the insured was entered upon the records of the local lodge as “suspended” on April 28, 1897, for non-payment of assessments then due, and was so reported to appellant. Appellee insists that the report was improperly admitted, but has failed to assign any cross-error thereon. As we understand the facts, the records of the local lodge covering the time in question were destroyed by fire and are, therefore, not available to appellant as evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
123 Ill. App. 628, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grand-lodge-of-the-ancient-order-of-the-united-workmen-v-young-illappct-1906.