Mulherin v. Bankers' Life Ass'n

144 N.W. 1000, 163 Iowa 740
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 14, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 144 N.W. 1000 (Mulherin v. Bankers' Life Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mulherin v. Bankers' Life Ass'n, 144 N.W. 1000, 163 Iowa 740 (iowa 1914).

Opinion

Ladd, C. J.

1 mutual insurment o? assessment: evidence, I. The defendant is a mutual assessment association and on November 26,1909, issued three certificates of membership to Thomas Mulherin, stipulating in each “that, ™ ^le .event of his death during membership, beneficiary shall receive the sum of two thousand dollars and the guaranty fund deposited with the association by said member amounting to thirty-nine dollars.” Mulherin died January 17, 1911, and, the defendant having denied liability on the ground that certificates had lapsed because of his failure to pay assessments, this action was begun. The defense interposed was: That at a regular meeting the directors of defendant on June 21,1910, adopted a resolution which was duly recorded. “That an assessment of ten per cent. (10%) be and the same is hereby levied upon the membership of this association, based pro rata upon the guaranty fund, for the purpose of providing funds for the payment of death losses, said assessment to be due and payable during the month of July, 1910, and to be designated as call 109. Eesolved, that five per cent. (5%) on [742]*742the guaranty fund of this association be and the same is hereby ordered collected with call 109 from all members whose certificates are dated July 1, 1888, and subsequently thereto, and prior to May 1, 1910, as the semiannual expense dues, to be due and payable during the month of July, 1910.” A notice was issued reciting:

This is to notify you that a levy of ten per cent, upon the amount of the guaranty fund has been made to provide benefit fund for death losses, no part of which can be used for expenses.

Your portion for the benefit fund is................$11.70

This call embraces the expense dues for six months for the contingent fund........................... 5.85

Total........................................$17.55

Overpaid call 108 ...............................40

$17.15

... . This sum is due July 5, 1910, and payable only to this association at its home office or to a depository bank. One month’s grace is allowed so that payment may be made on or before August 1, 1910. If not made by that date, your membership and insurance will thereby cease without action by the association.

This notice is alleged to have been inclosed in an envelope returnable to defendant if not delivered by August 1, 1910, properly addressed to Mulherin, and duly stamped and placed in the United States mails for delivery. As no response was received, a second notice was mailed September 10th following, wherein the items of the assessment and when payable were recited, together with the fact that no response had been made to the previous notice, adding: “If you have paid please report to us at once the time and manner of payment and to whom in order that we may investigate. ... In the event you conclude not to apply for reinstatement, please advise us of the reason for your lapse and read the copy of [743]*743your guaranty note upon your certificate by which you will see that the whole amount becomes due at once.” This was sent as a registered letter, and a receipt purporting to have been signed by Mulherin returned to the company. Again on October 13th a letter stating that Mulherin’s certificates had lapsed and that the assessment with the balance owing on the guaranty note must be remitted with certificate of health accompanying application for reinstatement. Though duly mailed in an envelope with return card thereon to the assured at his address, there was no response, nor was the letter returned. Under section 7 of the third article of the by-laws, it was the duty of the assured, if no notice of assessment had been received by July 10th, to so inform the association within three days thereafter, and by the next section his failure to so advise it “shall be taken as conclusive evidence of the receipt by him of the original notice.” It is to be assumed, then, that Mulherin received the notices. Indeed, this is not questioned, but it is insisted that defendant utterly failed to prove the nonpayment of the assessment. Payment thereof might have been made directly to the association or to an authorized- depository bank, if within the time designated in the notice but not afterwards.

The chief clerk in defendant’s auditing department testified: “Mr. Mulherin did not pay the assessment call No. 109, to my knowledge. . . . (After referring to second notice.) I think there was no response to that notice. . . . The association never received payment on the assessment call 109 from Thomas Mulherin, a depository bank, or any one else.” There was other testimony that no response was ever made to any of these notices. With knowledge that defendant was proceeding on the theory that the assessment was unpaid and the certificates forfeited, it is utterly improbable that he should have remained silent if he had paid the assessment directly, or through an authorized depository bank especially, and we are of opinion that the evidence quoted, when consid[744]*744ered in connection with these facts, was sufficient to carry the issue as to payment to the jury.

2. Same : notice of assesment sufficiency. II. Appellee insists that the assessment and notice were not in compliance with section 1788 of the Code in that neither designated the portion of the assessment to be paid for death losses accrued and the portion for those antic-That section declares that “the artides and by-laws of each such association and its notices of assessment shall state the objects to which the money to be collected is to be devoted, and no. part of the proceeds thereof shall be applied to any other purpose than as stated, and the excess, if any, beyond payment of the benefit, shall be set aside and applied only to like purposes.’’ The design of this statute was not to compel such associations to specify the particular items on which the moneys collected would be expended but the objects or purpose in a general but inclusive way. Section 1 of article 11 provides that the board of directors, to provide funds by assessment to meet all claims promptly “may from time to time determine and fix the amount deemed necessary therefor, the place at which, and time at which or during which it shall become due and payable, and the manner of notifying the members thereof, and may regulate the method of collecting the same; and the board may in like manner also provide funds in advance, for the payment of any claims which may be anticipated during the three months next ensuing basing estimate therefor on the '■American Experience Table of Mortality.”

The purpose of the assessment was to provide a fund out of which to pay benefits during the ensuing three months, and it was no less a benefit fund out of which to pay death losses because these were anticipated than had deaths already occurred and losses accrued. The decisions cited by appellee construe articles not authorizing the anticipation of death losses and are not in point. We are inclined to regard the designation of the objects of the assessment as sufficiently specific.

[745]*7453. Same : nonpayment of personal liability. III.

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Bluebook (online)
144 N.W. 1000, 163 Iowa 740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mulherin-v-bankers-life-assn-iowa-1914.