Knights of the Modern MacCab. v. Mayfield

147 S.W. 675, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 492
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 4, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 147 S.W. 675 (Knights of the Modern MacCab. v. Mayfield) 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 Modern MacCab. v. Mayfield, 147 S.W. 675, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 492 (Tex. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

RAINEY, C. J.

Appellee sued the appellant to recover $1,000 on a benefit certificate issued by appellant to W. S. Mayfield, deceased, also to recover $500 as attorney’s fees, and $95 due on account of a disability claim. Appellant answered by general and special demurrers and specially that appel-lee ought not to recover because the certificate had been forfeited for failure to pay dues, and that she had failed to exhaust the remedies of the order before resorting to the court.

The ease was tried before the court without a jury and judgment rendered for $1,-000 and legal interest from October 7, 1908, from which this appeal is taken.

The evidence shows that appellant, defendant below, is a fraternal benefit mutual *676 association as defined by tbe laws of Texas. W. S. Mayfield joined the defendant on January 6, 1906, being a member of Aquilla Tent No. 1,401. He was commander of this tent. His certificate is dated January 17, 1906. His certificate provided that no claim for benefits should be valid against this order which may arise while the member is in default in making payment of any dues or assessments in the manner and within the time required by the laws of the order. It further provided that the laws of the order and the amendments thereto should be made a part of the certificate. He was a member in class 1 and held certificate for $1,000 in which the plaintiff was named as beneficiary. He died October 7, 1908. The rate of assessment to be paid by members in class 1 with Mayfield was the sum of $1.25. Notice of the assessment is required to be made by the great record keeper by publishing such notice in the official organ and mailing a copy of same to the member at his last-known address, and it is provided by the laws that this shall be sufficient notice to the member of his liability for the assessments. Section 197 of the laws provides in substance that an assessment being due and notice thereof given the members through the official organ, the finance keeper shall immediately proceed to collect the same, and each benefit member in class 1 shall pay such assessment to the finance keeper during the calendar month in which same is due and payable as appears in the official organ, and that any member failing to pay such assessment within said time shall stand suspended from all rights and benefits of a benefit member of the order. Assessment No. 148 became due from the members with July 1st as the last date for payment. W. S. Mayfield paid his to H. M. Hill in time, or rather Hill paid it for Mayfield out of his own funds, but did not collect from all the members of the tent, and did not send it off to the home office in time, because, he says, he was unable to get the signature of the commander of the tent to his report, and thought this necessary. Hill had been paying the assessments for Mayfield and said that he would have paid Nos. 149 and 150 had he known that he had authority to collect money after the suspension of the tent. Assessment No. 149 became due from the members July 1, 1908, with July 31st as last date for payment; and assessment No. 150 became due from the members August 2, 1908, with August 31st as last date for payment. These two assessments were duly made as provided by the laws of the order, and notice thereof duly mailed to Mayfield, at Aquilla, Tex., as provided by the laws. H. M. Hill was the local finance keeper of Aquilla Tent, and was a member of the tent, and along with the other members of the tent was suspended because of the nonpayment of assessment No. 148, and further was suspended as an individual member for failure to pay assessments Nos. 149 and 150, and so stood suspended on and after August 1, 1908, and has never been reinstated in tbe order. The finance keeper is elected from the members by the members. On August 19, 1908, A. M. Slay, great record keeper of the order, notified Mayfield, as tent commander, that his tent stood suspended for nonpayment of assessment No. 148. On receipt of this letter Mayfield’s brother-in-law tendered on or about August 22, 1908, sufficient funds to H. M. Hill to pay 149 and 150. This was after Hill’s suspension, as stated above. Assessments Nos. 149 and 150 were never paid at any time or tendered for payment to A. M. Slay or any other officer of the grand lodge. On or about September 21, 1908, Mayfield forwarded to A. M. Slay his receipt for No. 148 and received a letter from Slay dated of that date stating to him that he would have to pay 149 and 150 and also furnish health certificate. Under laws of the order, a member had 30 days after suspension in which to be reinstated by paying his dues without health certificate. If more than 30 days after suspension, then he must pay the dues and furnish health certificate. Assessment No. 149 became finally due July 31, 1908. And Mayfield, not having paid or tendered same for payment prior thereto, stood suspended under section 197 of the laws on August 1, 1908. He had all of the month of August, 1908, to pay 149 and be reinstated under section 199 without health certificate. After having made tender to Hill on August 22, 1908, he had remainder of that month to send money to the home office and be reinstated without health certificate under section 199.

Section 181 of the laws provides that where whole tent is suspended, but some of the members have paid their dues to the local officer, and hold his receipt, then they shall send it in and pay to the great record keeper all assessments not remitted for them by the local officers, and that this action shall keep their certificates in full force. From July 20, 1908, to time of his death, Mayfield was sick in bed and unable to at-" tend to any business of any character, delirious, etc. He was afflicted with typhoid fever and this caused his death. Section 118 of the laws provides that a member holding certificate in class 1, who shall become totally and permanently disabled from any cause, shall .be entitled to participation in a disability fund. Section 120 provides that any member desiring to obtain benefits for total and permanent disability shall file his claim therefor with the great record keeper upon blank prescribed by the executive committee, accompanied by the affidavits of two reputable physicians showing such disability to be total and permanent as required in section 118, and no such claim shall be al *677 lowed or paid until approved by the great medical examiner, provided further that it shall not be allowed until 90 days after presentment and then only upon satisfactory proof of such continued disability. It is agreed no notice of disability other than shown by the statement of facts was made to the defendant. No notice of such claim is shown in the statement of facts. It is provided in the certificate issued to Mayfield that no officer or member of any subordinate body, or any officer or agent of the Knights of the Modern Maccabees, has any right or authority to waive a strict compliance with any of the provisions of the laws of the order relative to the payment of dues and assessments as they may be called or fixed from time to time. Also that no claim shall be valid arising while the member is in default in paying any assessment, whether the default arises from his own negligence, or from relying upon any assurances to him by any officer or agent of the order, or any officer, agent, practice, or custom of any subordinate order of this body. Also provided in section 126 that officers of subordinate tents should be agents of the member, and that order would in no event be liable for fault or negligence of officer of a tent.

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Bluebook (online)
147 S.W. 675, 1912 Tex. App. LEXIS 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knights-of-the-modern-maccab-v-mayfield-texapp-1912.