Mathers v. Protected Home Circle

55 Pa. Super. 421, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 388
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 8, 1913
DocketAppeal, No. 157
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 55 Pa. Super. 421 (Mathers v. Protected Home Circle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mathers v. Protected Home Circle, 55 Pa. Super. 421, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 388 (Pa. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion by

Henderson, J.,

Plaintiff’s action is based on a benefit certificate issued by the defendant- on the life of John B. Mathers in favor of the plaintiff, who was his wife. The defendant is a fraternal, beneficial association having a general organization known as the Supreme Circle, and subordinate organizations known as local circles, having a membership in the place in which the subordinate body is located. The beneficial certificates to the members of the organization were issued by the Supreme Circle. The certificate issued to John B. Mathers was in its general form the same as that issued to each member of the organization and contained the provision that the payment of seventy-two cents should be made thereon at the beginning of each month after the receipt of the certificate, such payment to be made within fifteen days after becoming due, and in case such payment is not made before the expiration of such fifteen days this benefit certificate shall become null and void (and may not be thereafter revived except upon the filling out and acceptance of the supreme accountant of a reinstatement blank furnished by the Supreme Circle), in consideration of which payments the defendant promised to pay to plaintiff or the legal representatives of John B. Mathers, the sum of $1,000, “Provided always that said member shall be in good standing in this order at the time of death.” The plaintiff and her husband were members of Circle No. 22, of Butler, Pennsylvania. John A. Mathers died on September 19? 1911, The defense to the aption TW that [424]*424he was not in good standing in the order at the time of his death because of- the fact that the payment due from him to the Supreme Circle for the month of July on his benefit certificate had not been paid within the time prescribed in the contract, by reason of which the certificate became null and void in accordance with its terms. It was not denied that the insured had failed to make payment during the month of July, but the plaintiff alleged that the defendant had waived strict performance of the contract as to the time of payment and that an estoppel therefore was effected precluding it from enforcing the forfeiture. The evidence shows that at other times prior to July payments had been made on the certificate after the last day of the month, when they should have been paid, according to the contract and the usage of the defendant, and that the plaintiff tendered to the accountant of her circle the July payment on August 4 or 5, but that acceptance of it was refused for the reason that Mathers was suspended for nonpayment and that he, had fallen sick in July, because of which fact it would be necessary for him to apply for reinstatement in accordance with the laws of the order. Evidence was also introduced to show that in the case of a considerable number of other members of the circle payments had been made by them after the time fixed for payment in their certificates. It appeared from the evidence that the amount due from the members of the local circle to the Supreme Circle on their benefit certificates was paid each month at the time required by the order, the accountant advancing the money for the members who were in default and taking the chance that she would be reimbursed. There was some evidence that this was on an arrangment by such members with the accountant, although the plaintiff testified that she knew of no such arrangement. The accountant did not advance the July payment for Mathers. It was conceded that the failure to make payment according to the terms of the certificate would work a forfeiture of the right of the in[425]*425sured thereunder, and also of the beneficiary, unless the defendant by its course of conduct waived prompt payment. The trial court submitted to the jury the question whether there had been such course of conduct on the part of the defendant with reference to the time of payment of monthly dues to it as would estop it from alleging a forfeiture. The question is whether the defendant is affected by the act of the local accountant pn accepting some of the benefit payments after the time when they should have been paid, and whether such acceptance of delayed payments by the accountant of the local organization amounted to a waiver by the defendant of performance according to the terms of the contract. Such a waiver consists in the performing of some act or acts inconsistent with an intention to insist on strict performance. It is to be observed that the relations of the plaintiff and her husband were not directly with the defendant but with the accountant of their circle. The duties of this accountant, so far as is shown in the evidence, were to receive from the members the several sums due on their benefit certificates and forward the same to the Supreme Circle not more than five days after the beginning of the next month, to report all suspensions for nonpayment and to pay to the local body the dues to which it was entitled. There is no evidence that the Supreme Circle had any knowledge that any payments were made to the collector after the time limited in the certificate. On the contrary, all the evidence on the subject is to the effect that the payments on the Mathers’ certificate, ■ and for the other members, were promptly made and that in case of the default of any member to make payment the accountant advanced the money to make up the necessary amount. This was done a number of times by the accountant in the case of a small percentage of the membership of the local order. The authority of the accountant to waive the terms of the contract in favor of the beneficiary could only be inferred, if it existed, for it nowhere appeared that any such authority existed. Assuming [426]*426that this officer was the agent of the Supreme Circle in receiving and paying over the amounts due on the certificates, there is no evidence that any other duty or authority existed than such receiving and paying over, and in view of the undisputed evidence that the defendant had no knowledge that the payments were not made as required by the contract, we do not find in the evidence a foundation on which to rest a conclusion that the defendant is estopped from enforcing the contract according to its terms. The defendant is not an ordinary business corporation; it has no capital stock. The peculiar and limited purposes of its organization are carried out by the action of its members as well as its officers. It is a mutual organization in which each member is bound by the laws and regulations which determine his obligations and powers. No member could be said to be imposed upon by the dereliction of an officer when the member has equal knowledge with the officers of the laws which control them both. The plaintiff and her husband, as members of the Protected Home •Circle, are presumed to have known their rights and duties as well as did the local accountant. It can hardly be said that the action of the accountant could legally put them in a worse position in respect to the obligations to the corporation binding on them as members. If a course of business be tolerated by. the principal officers of such an organization, a local officer may become vested thereby with authority to waive prompt payment of dues. If a collector for a considerable period accepts dues after default and remits them to the supreme officers, who accept them with knowledge that they were paid after they were due, this would be a state of facts from which a waiver might be inferred. But to produce such a result, knowledge of such conduct on the part of the local officer should be brought home to those to be affected thereby in the absence of evidence of such general authority of the agent as would bind the principal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 Pa. Super. 421, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mathers-v-protected-home-circle-pasuperct-1913.