Morgan v. Independent Order of Sons & Daughters of Jacob of America

44 So. 791, 90 Miss. 864
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 44 So. 791 (Morgan v. Independent Order of Sons & Daughters of Jacob of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morgan v. Independent Order of Sons & Daughters of Jacob of America, 44 So. 791, 90 Miss. 864 (Mich. 1907).

Opinion

Mates, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 5th day of October, 1894, Samuel Morgan became a member of the Independent Order of the Sons and Daughters of Jacob of America. This organization is a mutual benefit association. Samuel Morgan was about fifty-eight years old at the time he joined, and was illiterate, unable to read or write, or sign his name. The beneficiaries named in the insurance certificate issued by the order of the Sons and Daughters of Jacob of America at the time he joined the order are the appellants in this case, Lucy Morgan and others. Samuel Morgan was continually a member of this order from the time he joined in 1894 until the day of his death, which occurred on the 15th day of July, 1905, eleven years after he became a member of [870]*870the order. Throughout all this period of time he paid all the obligations of the order required by its rules, and at the time of his death there was nothing due from him to the order; he having paid all dues and assessments up to that time. After the death of .Samuel Morgan, the beneficiaries named in the policy of insurance presented same to the order and made demand on it for the sum due them as per the certificate of insurance issued to Samuel Morgan in his lifetime. The Sons and Daughters of Jacob declined to pay the insurance, and denied their liability under the insurance policy, on the ground that at the time of the death of Samuel Morgan he was what is called “nonfinancial” — that is to say, not in good standing with the order, — and therefore the certificate of insurance was void. This claim of nonliability on the part of the order is based- upon the fact, as they claim, that- by sec. 5 of Art. XI of the by-laws each and every member of a subordinate lodge of the order is required to pay into the treasury of the Supreme or Grand Lodge, located in the territory of his or her membership, a regular monthly advance assessment of $1 on the first day of each month; and they claim that Samuel Morgan did not pay this assessment for June, 1905, on the first day of June, as required by this article of the by-laws. The facts shown by the record, however, are that, while it is true that Morgan did not pay on the first day of June, he did pay, as the receipt shows, on the second day of June, and a receipt was issued to him for this June assessment. At the time he paid this June assessment it was accepted by the scribe of the local lodge to whom it was properly payable, and by him forwarded to the Grand Lodge, and nothing was said to him at the time about this fact rendering him “nonfinancial” in the order, or, in other woi’ds, suspended.

The appellee hopes to win this suit upon this solitary fact; that is to say, escape liability because this assessment for June was not paid upon the first day of June, but upon the second day, and therefore, Samuel Morgan, under other by-laws which [871]*871we shall hereafter quote, became suspended from the order, ipso facto, without further action on the part of the order, and his beneficiaries were not entitled to recover on this policy. By sec. 1 of Art. IY of the by-laws of the order, it is provided that “a member, by the records of his or her lodge, and by returns to and records of Supreme and Grand Lodge, shown fully and .regularly paid on all financial claims of the order, due after date of his or her membership, is, if since his or her joining or renewing or reinstating more than sixty days have elapsed, a financial member of the order.” By sec. 2 of Art. YI, “Any member who owes three months’ dues, or fails to pay any assessment on or by the date it is due, or fails to pay any Supreme or Grand Lodge tax when due, or fails to pay any fine in thirty days after imposed, or fails to pay any tax of his or her lodge when due, is nonfinaneial and suspended from the order.” And by sec. 3 of Art. YI, it is provided that “a nonfinaneial and suspended member, possessed of the qualifications of a new applicant for membership in the order, personally appearing in a regular meeting of his or her old Ipdge, paying up in cash all dues, taxes, assessments, fines, and lodge debts held in arrears against him or her, shall, according to limitations under which new members become benefit members, be reinstated to financial membership.” The sections under which the order claims exemption from liability for this insurance are sec. 2 of Art. YI and see. 5 of Art. XI. Section 5 of Art. XI requires the payment, in advance, of $1, on the first day of each month; and sec. 2 of Art. YI provides that any member who fails to pay any assessment on or by the date it is due is nonfinaneial and suspended from the order. The contention of appellee is-that, because this assessment of $1 for June was paid on the second day of June, instead of the first, Samuel Morgan, by virtue of this section, became “nonfinaneial” and suspended from the order, and therefore the insurance policy was vacated. It must be borne in mind, however, that the local scribe accepted this assessment [872]*872on the second, issued his receipt therefor, sent it in to the Grand Lodge, and again a month afterwards accepted another payment, and that no notice was ever given to the insured that these payments were not accepted as a continuation of the insurance, or that the order considered him nonfinancial and suspended. .When a member becomes nonfinancial and suspended, the only provision that is made for his reinstatement is by personally appearing in a regular meeting of the lodge, and there paying in cash all debts, etc., in arrears against him, whereupon he is admitted according to the limitations under which new members can become benefit members.

The court cannot overlook the fact that associations of the character now before the court largely deal with the illiterate and ignorant. The by-laws consist of a multiplicity of rules and regulations in volume composing a small book. A correct interpretation of their meaning often puzzles the most astute, ís it, then, a matter of wonder that courts construe their contracts most favorable to the insured? This court has said in Murphy v. Independent Order, etc., 77 Miss., 830, 27 South. Rep., 624, 50 L. H. A. 111, that in dealing with these orders there shall be a liberal construction of the by-laws in favor of the insured, so as to prevent a forfeiture, if possible. This is but the announcement of the universal rule upon this subject by all the courts, the rectitude and wisdom of which is made manifest by this record, wherein this order is seeking to invalidate the insurance policy of Samuel Morgan, on which he has paid for eleven years, because the assessment was paid on the second day of June, instead of the first, just one day after the date the by-laws specified that it should be paid. In Thompson v. Knickerbocker Ins. Company, 104, U. S., 252, 26 L. Ed. 765, in the conclusion of the opinion, the court says: “Courts do not favor forfeitures, hut they cannot avoid enforcing them when the party by whose default they are incurred cannot show some good and stable ground in the conduct of the other party on which to base a reasonable excuse for the default. We do [873]*873not accept the position that the payment of the annual premium is a condition precedent to the continuance of the policy. That is untrue. It is a condition subsequent only, the nonperformance of which may incur a forfeiture of the policy, or may not, according to the circumstances. It is always open for the insured to show a waiver of the condition, or a course, of conduct on the part of the insurer which.gave him just and reasonable ground to infer that a forfeiture would not be exacted. But it must be a.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 So. 791, 90 Miss. 864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-independent-order-of-sons-daughters-of-jacob-of-america-miss-1907.