Knights of the MacCabees of the World v. Parsons

179 S.W. 78, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 913
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 9, 1915
DocketNo. 6938.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 179 S.W. 78 (Knights of the MacCabees of the World v. Parsons) 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
Knights of the MacCabees of the World v. Parsons, 179 S.W. 78, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 913 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

McMEANS, J.

Lena Parsons brought this suit against the Knights of the Maccabees of the World, an Insurance organization, to recover $3,000, the sum of two life insurance policies, or benefit certificates, issued by the defendant to George Frank Parsons, the assured, payable at his death to the plaintiff, Lena Parsons, his stepmother, who was named as beneficiary in the policies. She alleged that George Frank Parsons, the assured, was dead, and that she had furnished to defendant proper notices and proofs of his death.

The defendant answered, admitting the issuance by it of the policies sued on, and specially pleaded that it was a fraternal beneficiary association witnout capital stock and that it was organized for the mutual benefit of its members, and further that in each of said policies it was contracted that the laws of the association in force at the maturity of the contract and the policies or certificates constituted the contract between the association and the assured, and that the benefits would only be paid at the death of the assured in the event he had complied with the laws of the association then in force or thereafter adopted. It denied that George Frank Parsons was dead, and specially denied plaintiff’s right to recover upon the policies, even if he were dead, for the reason that he was not in good standing in the order at the date of his alleged death on March 2, 1913, in that he had failed' to pay the assessments due upon his policies for the month of February, 1913, which failure, under the laws of the association and by the terms of the policies, ipso facto worked a forfeiture of said policies. It further alleged that the said George Frank Parsons had violated the obligations taken by him upon becoming a member of the association by knowingly embezzling the funds of the association.

The case was submitted by the court to the jury upon the three following special issues: (1) Is George Frank Parsons dead? (2) If you have answered first special issue, “Yes,” then was George Frank Parsons in good standing in defendant order at the time of his death? (3) Did plaintiff furnish to defendant order proof of the death of George Frank Parsons as required by the benefit certificates sued on and the by-laws of defendant in force at the time and as pleaded by plaintiff? The jury answered each of the three special issues in the affirmative. At the request of the defendant the court submitted the following special issue:

“Is the evidence conclusive that George Frank Parsons was killed in the explosion of the Luf-kin depot, March 2, 1913, or is it less than conclusive?”

To which the jury answered:

“We, the jury, answer the last issue that the evidence is conclusive that George Frank Parsons was killed in the explosion of the Lufkin depot on March 2, 1913.”

Upon the return of the verdict, the court, upon motion of plaintiff, entered judgment thereon in favor of the plaintiff and overruled the motion of defendant to enter judgment upon the answers to the special issues in its favor. From the judgment thus *80 entered, the defendant, after its motion for a new trial had been overruled, has appealed.

Appellant’s first assignment of error is as follows:

“The court erred in overruling the defendants motion for a new trial because the evidence is insufficient to show that George Prank Parsons had paid his duos and assessments for the month of February, 1913, by the 1st day of March in said yeax-, in compliance with defendant’s bylaws and contract.”

In his second application for a benefit certificate, made in December, 1912, George Frank Parsons agreed and warranted that Ms failure to pay any monthly rate or assessment wMch should be made by the order within the time provided by its laws, or to pay the dues fixed by its laws, or in the manner and at the time provided by its laws or the by-laws of the local lodge or “tent” to which he might belong, should vitiate Ms benefit certificate and forfeit all payments made thereon.

Section 330 of the laws of the order provides that:

“A life benefit member failing to pay a monthly rate, per capita tax, or additional assessment within a month from the first day on which it is due, shall stand suspended, without notice, fi’om all lights of life benefit membership and from all the benefits and privileges of Ms tent.”

Section 332 provides:

“These monthly rates will be due, without notice, on the first day of each month and must be paid by the member to his tent record keeper on or before the last day of the month. The fix'st of the above monthly i-ates shall become due and payable on the date of admission, or on the delivery of the certificate in case of increase in the benefits, and must be paid in either case before the member shall have any right to participate in the life benefit fund of the association.”

Section 309 provides that a member shall not be entitled to participate in the life benefit fund of the association for an increased amount until he has paid the record keeper of Ms tent an advance monthly rate of such increase.

Section 159 provides that the tent or local lodge, in performing the duties and administering the powers provided by the laws of the association, shall be the agent of the members thereof and not of the association, and that no act or failure to act by the tent, or by any officer or member thereof, shall create or be construed to create any liability on the part of the association.

Section 270 provides:

“No member shall be in good standing in the association unless he has paid all monthly rates, additional assessments, the per capita taxes, fi-aternal tax, dues and fines levied against him, and has complied in every particular with the laws of the association.”

Section 234 declares the record keeper of the local tent to be the agent of the tent and its members and not the agent of the association, and that no act or failure to act on Ms part shall have the effect of creating any liability on the part of the association, or of waiving any right belonging to it.

George Frank Parsons held two policies or benefit certificates, one for $1,000 and the other for $2,000. The smaller was taken out first, and the larger, being known .as the “increased benefit,” was applied for by him on December 23, 1912, and the certificate therefor, duly executed by the proper officers of the association on January 7, 1913, was delivered to him on February 1, 1913. Defendant failed to show on the tidal that the nates on the increased insurance had not been paid at a proper time, although resting under the burden to prove- this if it would escape liability by reason of his failure to so pay; but, on the contrary, the proof adduced by plaintiff was sufficient to justify a finding that he did pay such rates in advance, and we so find.

Parsons was record keeper of his tent or lodge, and under the laws of the order it was made his duty, as such officer, to collect from each member of the local tent his montMy dues, assessments, etc., all of which fell due on the 1st day of the month. Under the laws of the.

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179 S.W. 78, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 913, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knights-of-the-maccabees-of-the-world-v-parsons-texapp-1915.