Modern Woodmen of America v. Lane

86 N.W. 943, 62 Neb. 89, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 163
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1901
DocketNo. 11,508
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 86 N.W. 943 (Modern Woodmen of America v. Lane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Modern Woodmen of America v. Lane, 86 N.W. 943, 62 Neb. 89, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 163 (Neb. 1901).

Opinion

Pound, C.

This action was brought upon two benefit certificates issued to William A. Lane, husband of the plaintiff. Upon trial to the court, a jury being waived, the plaintiff, as beneficiary, recovered upon the certificate set up in her second cause of action, and judgment was rendered for the defendant upon the other. The cause is here on error to review the judgment for the plaintiff upon the second cause of action.

The trial court made very full and clear findings of fact and conclusions of law, and we have been furnished with unusually careful and elaborate briefs in which a number of points arising thereon are exhaustively discussed. But we find ourselves unable to review a great number of questions suggested, by reason of failure to assign them specifically in the petition in error. There are eight separate findings of fact .and three of law, and we are asked to review each of the latter specifically, upon an assignment in the petition in error that “the judgment is contrary to law and is not sustained by sufficient evidence.” As we shall show presently, the findings of fact are sustained by the evidence. But we need not pass upon the effect of the joint assignment of error under such circumstances for the reason that, even if the assignment that the judgment is contrary to law stood alone, it would not suffice to call for a specific [93]*93review of each of the conclusions of law. The Code of Civil Procedure (sec. 297) requires separate statement in writing of the findings of fact and conclusions of law, where trial is had to the court, if either party desires to except to “the decision of the court upon the questions of law involved in the trial.” As the expressed purpose of making separate findings and conclusions of law is to enable the parties to question the rulings of the court upon legal questions involved, it would seem that if they desire so to do they should except to the conclusions found, or such of them as they desire to make exception to, expressly and specifically. In Indiana, where a similar statutory provision is construed by the courts as intended for the “express purpose of enabling a party to except to the decision of the court upon the questions of law involved in the trial” (Nading v. Elliott, 137 Ind., 261, 36 N. E. Rep., 695), it is well settled that in order to obtain a review of separate conclusions of law, error must be assigned with respect to them specifically, and that an assignment that the judgment is contrary to law will not avail to that end. Nading v. Elliott, supra; Midland R. Co. v. Dickason, 130 Ind., 164, 29 N. E. Rep., 775, and cases cited. In Midland R. Co. v. Dickason, the court says: “In order to present for review in this court the correctness of the conclusions of law, deduced by the court from the facts found, two things are necessary: 1. An exception to the conclusions of law must be taken at the time the decision is made. 2. It must be assigned as error in this court that the court below erred in its conclusions of law. - * * The appellants having waived, by failing to except, all objections to the conclusions of law, it was not error for the court to render judgment for the plaintiffs in accordance with such finding and conclusions.” In Nading v. Elliott, the court says: “As the specifications make no legal attack upon the conclusions of law, but only seek to assail the judgment that the court rendered thereon, they are ineffectual to bring into review such conclusions.” This rule seems to follow from the ex[94]*94pressed purpose of the requirement that separate conclusions of law be made, and is in accord with the holdings of this court in analogous cases. World Mutual Benefit Ass’n v. Worthing, 59 Nebr., 587; Frenzer v. Richards, 60 Nebr., 131; Drexel v. Daniels, 49 Nebr., 99. See also Hanover Fire Ins. Co. v. Shrader, 11 Tex. Civ. App., 255, 31 S. W. Rep., 1100; Lytle v. Prescott, 57 Minn., 129, 58 N. W. Rep., 688; Smith v. Kipp, 49 Minn., 119, 51 N. W. Rep., 656. For these reasons we do not think that the assignment that the judgment is contrary to law requires us to' go further than to ascertain that the judgment follows from and is sustained by the findings of law, as to which there are no specific assignments of error. * As they are not complained of, we may take them to be the law of the case, and a judgment in accordance with them may not be said to be contrary to law.* Frenzer v. Richards, supra. ' If, however, it could be said that the assignment in question challenged the conclusions of law, there is still the difficulty that it would of necessity assign them as error en masse, and hence, in view of the obvious correctness of at least one of them, would clearly fail. ’ An assignment of error which assails several conclusions of law jointly,-will fail if any one is correct.' Jones v. Mayne, 55 N. E. Rep. [Ind.], 956. •

Another assignment of error, however, properly challenges the sufficiency of the evidence upon the 7th finding of fact, which is also complained of in the brief. In that finding, the court finds that after the certificate recovered upon was issued no dues or assessments became payable or were levied; that prior to such time, Lane had been in arrears for dues, but that the defendant Avitli notice and knowledge of that fact accepted a surrender of the prior certificate, and accepted and retained a fee for issuing, and issued the certificate in question. Several objections are made to this finding. It is said, first, that the clerk of the local camp, who received the money and sent it in witli the old certificate for cancellation and the application for the new one, while he knew that the [95]*95member was in arrears and under suspension, did not understand that he was waiving any rights of the defendant by his acts, and did not intend so to do. It is said that the evidence is that he “unthinkingly” signed the papers and sent them in. The rules of the society required a member to be in good standing in order to change the beneficiary by surrender of certificate and issuance of a new one, and required that, if suspended, he must be in good health in order to be reinstated. The clerk of the local camp, knowing these requirements and all the circumstances, proceeded to take the money, sign and forward the papers, because, he says, he thought if Lane “got well he could be reinstated and it would be in force just the same.” In other words, he was under no misapprehension as to the facts, and the sole objection is that he did not apprehend the full legal effect of acts he did voluntarily, with knowledge of all the circumstances. We think the finding of the court that defendant accepted the fee and the surrender of the old certificate with full notice and knowledge of the facts is abundantly justified by this evidence.* It is also said that the head clerk, who prepared and forwarded the new certificate,' did so by reason of carelessness or oversight of an employee in the certificate department in his office, in that such employee failed to look up Lane’s standing, but accepted the certificate of the clerk of the local camp to the application as sufficient evidence of. good standing. This was only a conjecture of the head clerk in his testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
86 N.W. 943, 62 Neb. 89, 1901 Neb. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/modern-woodmen-of-america-v-lane-neb-1901.