Griffith v. Supreme Council of the Royal Arcanum

166 S.W. 324, 182 Mo. App. 644, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 447
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 7, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 166 S.W. 324 (Griffith v. Supreme Council of the Royal Arcanum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griffith v. Supreme Council of the Royal Arcanum, 166 S.W. 324, 182 Mo. App. 644, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 447 (Mo. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

NORTONI, J.

This is a suit on a certificate of life insurance. Plaintiff recovered and defendant prosecutes the appeal.

Plaintiff, an infant, who sues by her next friend, is the daughter of George S. Griffith, the insured, and the beneficiary of the fund under the provisions of the certificate.

The insured defaulted in the payment of a monthly assessment of $2.12 a few days before his death, and it is insisted plaintiff may not recover for the reason the insurance was forfeited because of that fact, through the operation of defendant’s by-law. But there is evidence tending to prove defendant waived this by-law, in that it permitted a- course of dealing between Compton Hill Council and the insured member which induced him to believe a forfeiture would not be invoked and the assessment would be paid for him by the council unless he was notified to the contrary. There is no controversy about the facts of the case, and the question for consideration relates alone to the waiver of the by-laws referred to through a course of dealing well known to one of defendant’s superior officers, it's Supreme Treasurer, A. S. Robinson, a member of Compton Hill Council, and a consequent estoppel against defendant to assert the contrary, in view of the fact that the insured, plaintiff’s father, relied thereon.

[649]*649Defendant is a fraternal beneficiary society, incorporated under the laws of the State of Massachusetts, but duly qualified to do business here, under the laws of Missouri. The society it represents is composed of a Supreme Council and numerous local, or subordinate, councils, one of which is Compton Hill Council, located in the city of St. Louis. Compton Hill Council consists of 1056 members. The officers of the local, or subordinate, council elected by it are, among others: a secretary, who keeps a record of the proceedings of the semi-monthly meetings; a collector, who collects the assessments; and a treasurer, who receives the money so collected by the collector and in turn pays it over to the supreme treasurer of the supreme council, A. S. Robinson, whose office is in the city of St. Louis. As before stated, 'A. S. Robinson, the supreme treasurer of the order, is a resident of St. Louis and a member of Compton Hill Council. The powers and duties of a subordinate council of the order, such as Compton Hill Council, are prescribed by the by-laws of the supreme council, among which is the following:

“The council and its officers, in performing' the duties and administering the powers provided by the laws of the order, shall be the agent or agents of the members thereof, and not of the supreme council, and no act or failure to act by the council or by any officer or member thereof, shall create, or be construed so as to create, any liability on the part of the supreme council.
“Neither the council or its officers or any one or more thereof' shall waive the performance of, or compliance with, any law or requirement of the supreme council, and such waiver shall be inoperative to bind, or create any liability upon, the supreme council.”

The fund from which' benefits are paid by the order is derived from the proceeds of monthly assessments. The assessments are payable to the collector of the subordinate council monthly, without notice, [650]*650on or before ten o ’clock p. m. of tbe last day of each calendar month, and the penalty for nonpayment within the prescribed time is ipso facto suspension under defendant’s by-law, which, it is asserted, in the instant case, is waived.

Another by-law of defendant provides that a subordinate council is authorized, out of a fund provided by it for that purpose, to pay for its members an assessment or assessments as a loan or gift. But with respect to this matter it is also provided by defendant as follows:

“A by-law or resolution whereby a council agrees to pay an assessment for a member as a loan is not binding upon the supreme council unless it is complied with, and no claim of a member, in case the assessment is not paid, shall be recognized or valid. If the collector shall omit to pay, within the prescribed time, an assessment for a member, in compliance with such resolution or by-law, the member- stands suspended at the expiration of the time for payment. ’ ’

Compton Hill Council had established a code of by-laws under the powers conferred upon it by the supreme council, and one article of these — that is, the laws of the local council — provided for a special relief fund, out of which the collector of the council was authorized to pay one assessment for any member who failed to pay his assessment within the prescribed time, and if such assessment were paid out of such fund, to render a bill to the member for the amount, plus twenty-five cents fee for - the use of this loan fund. No member was entitled, under the by-laws, to the use of the fund for a second failure to pay, unless he had refunded the council the amount of the previous assessment' paid by it for him. This fund belonged to the local council and was under its control, and was not the property of the supreme council. Section five of the by-laws of the local, that is, Compton Hill Council, .relating to the special relief fund, is as follows;

[651]*651“The council shall not pay for any member’s assessment from the special relief fund unless he is recommended to be carried by the suspension committee as provided for in this Article, or any member for more than two quarters’ dues, except upon the personal application of a member, or the written report of a brother in good standing to the effect that the delinquent is sick or in distress, and this application or report shall be made for each assessment or quarter’s dues which a delinquent member is unable to pay.”

The evidence is conclusive to the effect that, though these by-laws obtained, no heed was paid to them by Compton Hill Council and its officers, for it carried members, and paid the assessments for them, who were many months in arrears. Indeed, it is said by the secretary of the council that some members owed as much as $50 in assessments at a time, and the council paid for them. Moreover, of the 1056 members of Compton Hill Council, probably 100 were usually in arrears. It appears, too, the supreme treasurer of the order, A. S. Robinson, who was a member of Compton Hill Council and attended its meetings as often as once a month, knew of and acquiesced in this custom and practice, for it had obtained from twelve to fourteen years without protest from anyone.

Though defendant’s general by-law provides that each assessment shall be paid on or before ten o ’clock p. m. of the last day of the current month, and in event it is not so paid, the membership and the insurance in the order were ipso facto forfeited, and though the by-law of the local council provided that no member’s assessment should be paid from the relief fund, unless it be recommended by the suspension committee that such member be carried, the local council, with the knowledge of the Supreme Treasurer, A. S. Robinson, by its practice and established custom, reversed the latter rule entirely, for it appears that all members, though in default, were carried indefinitely, and [652]*652the payment of assessments made by the council for them, unless the suspension committee recommended otherwise.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 S.W. 324, 182 Mo. App. 644, 1914 Mo. App. LEXIS 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffith-v-supreme-council-of-the-royal-arcanum-moctapp-1914.