McLendon v. Woodmen of the World

52 L.R.A. 444, 106 Tenn. 695
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 13, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 52 L.R.A. 444 (McLendon v. Woodmen of the World) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLendon v. Woodmen of the World, 52 L.R.A. 444, 106 Tenn. 695 (Tenn. 1901).

Opinion

Wit-tcrs, J.

The defendant is a fraternal and beneficial order. Its objects and purposes are thus set out in its “Constitution and Laws”:

“Sec. 3. The • object of this order shall be to combine white male persons of sound bodily health, exemplary habits, and good moral character, between the ages of eighteen and fifty-two, into a secret, fraternal, beneficiary, and benevolent order; provide funds for their relief; comfort the sick and cheer the unfortunate by attentive ministrations in times of sorrow' and distress; educate its members in moral, social, and intellectual matters, and promote fraternal love and unity; create a fund from which, upon reasonable and satisfactory proofs of the death of the beneficiary member who has complied with the lawful requirements of the order, there shall be paid a sum not to exceed three thousand ($3,000) dollars to the person or persons named in his certificate as beneficiary or beneficiaries, which beneficiary or beneficiaries shall be his . wife, children, adopted children, parents, brothers, sisters, or other relatives, and to 'erect a tombstone or monument at the grave of every such deceased member.”

It is insisted that J. J. McLendon, the husband of the plaintiff, Mrs. A. T. McLendon, was a fraternal and beneficial member of the order at the time of his death on the third day of January, 1899, and that the plaintiff became thereby [698]*698entitled to tbe payment of $1,000 as his beneficiary.

.By way of defense if is said on behalf of - the order that J. J. McLendon, at the time of his death, was not a beneficial member of the order; that no certificate ■ had been delivered to him, and that at the time of his death his application for membership and insurance was pending, but the contract had not been consummated and closed.

There were two trials in the Court below. Upon the first trial there was a verdict of a jury and judgment for $1,180.17, which was by the Court set aside, presumably on the ground that there was no liability on the part of the company. A bill of exceptions was taken and preserved. Upon the second trial, the plaintiff having introduced her evidence and rested her case, the defendant association demurred to the- evidence. Upon that demurrer issue was joined, and upon the hearing the trial Judge gave judgment for the defendant company, and plaintiff has. appealed and assigned errors.

The evidence in the case is largely embodied in an agreed statement of facts. From this statement it appears that the deceased, McLendon, husband of plaintiff, made his application to become a member of the order November 28, 1898.

This application was forwarded by the local camp at Memphis to J. B. Frost, an officer of the order at Atlanta, Georgia, -who, after counter-[699]*699singing it, sent it to the Sovereign Camp of the order, at Omaha, Nebraska. By it the application and. physician’s report were delivered to the Sovereign Camp Physician on December 19, 1898, who returned it to the local camp physician to fill in certain answers in the applicant’s “personal history.” After filling in the required matter, it Avas returned to the Sovereign Physician December 29, 1898. It was then accepted by the order, and it issued the certificate December 31, 1898, and immediately sent it to the clerk of the local camp at Memphis.

Prior to the thirty-first of December, when the certificate was dated and issued, the applicant was taken sick, and from this sickness died January 3, 1899. The application, ■ medical report, and certificate are all made part of the record by the agreed statement of facts.

The only payment made by the deceased was $1 physician’s fee and $2 entrance fee. The printed constitution, by-laws, and rules of the order are also made part of the record.

It is agreed that the Sovereign Physician would state, if examined, that the application and medical examination was returned to the local camp physician in good faith for the purposes heretofore stated, and not for purposes of delay, but the truth of this statement is not conceded. By a supplemental agreement it appears that after the certificate was signed, dated, and issued, it was [700]*700. sent by the Sovereign Camp at Omaha to J. B. Frost, Provisional Head Consul at Atlanta, Georgia, who received it on or about January 4, 1899, and not knowing of the death of the applicant-on the preceding day, January 3, 1899, he countersigned the certificate and sent it forward to the local camp; that the certificate was never signed by the Consul Commander and clerk of the local camp, and was not delivered to. J. J. McLendon, or any one for him, on account of his illness and death, and that this illness antedated December 31, 1898, the date of the issuance of the certificate; that McLendon’s death occurred January 3, 1899, prior .to the receipt of the certificate by the clerk of the local camp from Frost, the Provisional Head Consul at Atlanta.

Tt was further agreed that all payments required of J. J. McLendon at the time his application was received and acted upon were made, and that all money received from . him was tendered back to his widow after his death. Proof was introduced to show that some persons were initiated and obligated into the local Memphis camp as members before they received their benefit certificates, but it was not the custom of the local camp to do so.

The application, of date November 28, is for membership in the order and participation in the beneficiary fund to the extent of $1,000 at the death of the insured, or such amount as the [701]*701Sovereign Physician may approve, and a monument. It states that the entrance fee and certificate fee, amounting to $10, accompanies the application, and it directs that a beneficiary certificate be issued, payable at his death to his wife, Anna T. McLendon. It also contains this statement, among others:

“I do ' hereby consent and agree that this application shall form the sole basis of my admission to and membership in this' order, and the beneficiary certificate to be issued on this application,” etc. It further provides that the- application and examining physician’s report are, the basis of and shall form part of the certificate issued thereon. It is further agreed that all of the provisions and laws of the order now existing, or hereafter adopted, shall form a .part of the certificate issued hereon, whether printed on or referred .to in such certificate or not.

“I further agree that the liability for the payment of benefits to me, or my beneficiary, shall not begin until after this application shall have been accepted by the Sovereign Physician, a' beneficiary certificate issued thereon and personally delivered to me, and I shall have made all the payments required in Section 56 of the constitution and laws of. the order, and I shall have been obligated in due form.”

TTpon the back of the certificate is indorsed, “I certify that the applicant herein named was elected [702]*702to membership .the twelfth .day of December-, 1898.” This is signed by the local clerk. Also indorsed is the certificate of the local physician as to the careful, personal examination of the applicant, a certificate of his identity, and that his fee for examination has been paid, etc.

Also a note that the application should be forwarded, if in a Southern State, to Jno. B. Frost,. Provisional Head Consul, Atlanta, Georgia.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 L.R.A. 444, 106 Tenn. 695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclendon-v-woodmen-of-the-world-tenn-1901.