Leland v. Modern Samaritans

126 N.W. 728, 111 Minn. 207, 1910 Minn. LEXIS 680
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 3, 1910
DocketNos. 16,558—(90)
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 126 N.W. 728 (Leland v. Modern Samaritans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leland v. Modern Samaritans, 126 N.W. 728, 111 Minn. 207, 1910 Minn. LEXIS 680 (Mich. 1910).

Opinion

Brown, J.

Defendant is a mutual benefit insurance association organized under the laws of this state, with its headquarters and principal place of business at Duluth. Its constitution provides for three distinct organizations, viz., the Imperial, Grand, and subordinate councils; the two latter owing allegiance to and the agencies through which the Imperial Council transacts its insurance business. Members become such and obtain their benefit certificates by joining the subordinate councils; the certificates being issued, and in the case of the death of members paid, by the Imperial Council. The Grand Council is clothed .with authority to establish subordinate councils, and concurrently with the Imperial body with authority and supervision over' the same. The association is supported and funds obtained for the payment of death claims by dues, per capita taxes, and assessments imposed upon and paid by the members; the amount due from each being fixed and determined by the laws of the order. The constitution, by-laws, rules, and regulations of the order are expressly made a part of each contract of. insurance, and the members obligate themselves to a prompt and strict compliance therewith. By a failure to make payment of dues and assessments within the period prescribed the member so in default becomes ipso facto suspended, and forfeits all rights under his certificate of membership, unless subsequently reinstated in the manner permitted by the by-laws.

Plaintiff’s husband, decedent, became a member of the order by joining the subordinate council at Duluth in July, 1897, and thereafter continued such, and in good standing, until the day of his [209]*209death, unless he forfeited all rights by reason of a failure to pay an assessment due a few days prior to his death. That assessment was due on March 1, and payable before the end of the month, and decedent died April 14 without having paid it.

In this action, brought upon decedent’s certificate of membership, defendant pleaded in defense that decedent had forfeited all rights by his failure to make this payment. The facts are not disputed, and to avoid the default plaintiff set up in her reply to the answer, and sought on the trial to prove, a course of conduct on the part of the subordinate council and its officers in receiving from decedent and other members payment of dues and assessments after they were due, and when by force of the by-law's they stood suspended, which it is claimed constituted a waiver of strict compliance with the by-laws and estopped the association from insisting upon a forfeiture. The court excluded the evidence, and defendant had a verdict. The court thereafter, upon plaintiff’s motion, granted a new trial on the ground that the ruling was error. Defendant appealed. The only question presented is whether the court erred in the respect stated.

1. The by-laws of the order provide in substance and effect that all assessments and dues shall be due on the first day of each month and payable to the financial scribe on or before the last day of each month, and, further, that any member who shall fail to pay his assessments or dues within the time so provided shall become suspended without action by the association, and that during the period of suspension the benefit certificate shall he “absolutely null and void.” The members are required to make payments to the financial scribe of the subordinate council of which he is a member.

It appears without dispute in this case that at no time subsequent to January, 1906, did decedent pay tifié assessments due from him within the time prescribed by the by-laws. Subsequent to that date he uniformly paid his assessments quarterly, instead of monthly, and each payment was made at a time when he was from ten to fifteen days in default and under suspension. To illustrate: An assessment falling due the first of the month, and payable to avoid suspension before the end thereof, was not paid until some time in [210]*210the middle of the following month, when he would pay an amount sufficient to cover the assessment for the preceding, the present, and the month following. These payments were accepted without question, and, as stated, this custom and practice was uniform for the last two years of decedent’s membership.

Proceeding upon the rule laid down in Mueller v. Grand Grove, U. A. O. D., 69 Minn. 236, 72 N. W. 48, plaintiff sought to prove that the subordinate council was cognizant of the custom, acquiesced therein, and in consequence the default was waived. It appeared in that case that the member had been permitted by the local grove to pay his assessments at irregular intervals without objection or suggestion that he had been or was liable to suspension, and the court, speaking through Mr. Justice Collins, held that the society could not, after long-continued conduct of this nature, by which the member was lulled into the conviction that his delay was unobjectionable and his good standing unaffected, suddenly and without notice insist that he was no longer in good standing and had forfeited all his rights and benefits under the contract. The decision in that case has not been departed from, and it controls the case at bar, unless the further point presently to be mentioned takes it out of the rule there laid down.

The case of Elder v. Grand Lodge, A. O. U. W., 79 Minn. 468, 82 N. W. 987, is not in point. In that case no attempt was made to show knowledge on the part of the local lodge of the habit of its secretary in receiving payments when members were in default; reliance being had upon the conduct of that officer alone. The same may be said of Graves v. Modern Woodmen of America, 85 Minn. 396, 89 N. W. 6, where the Elder case was followed.

2. But it is contended by defendant that when decedent made the payments at the time stated he had the lawful right under the by-laws to do so, and that the society had no option whether to accept or refuse the same, and therefore, whether the subordinate council had notice of the custom or not, there was no waiver of the rights of defendant. In this we are unable to concur.

By the constitution and by-laws of the society all members failing to make payment of assessments within the month for which they [211]*211are due stand suspended from all rights under their contracts. But those laws further provide that any member in good health may be-reinstated by the payment of all arrears together with a penalty of twenty-five cents. The record before us contains no suggestion! that the payments by decedent at the time and in the manner already stated were made for the purpose of becoming reinstated to good! standing in the society, but rather to retain a standing which he then understood as entitling him to all his rights under' the contract. There is no claim that he ever applied for reinstatement, and no claim that he ever produced evidence of his good health, or paid the penalty provided for the reinstatement of delinquent members. The conditions of good health and payment of the penalty of twenty five cents were as essential to reinstate under the laws as the payment of back assessments, and there is no suggestion that either was-ever insisted upon.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
126 N.W. 728, 111 Minn. 207, 1910 Minn. LEXIS 680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leland-v-modern-samaritans-minn-1910.