Mutual Aid Union v. Perdue

258 S.W. 375, 162 Ark. 551, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 201
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 18, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 258 S.W. 375 (Mutual Aid Union v. Perdue) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mutual Aid Union v. Perdue, 258 S.W. 375, 162 Ark. 551, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 201 (Ark. 1924).

Opinion

Smith, J.

On June 24, 1916, Mattie Perdue made application to the Mutual Aid Union, a mutual assessment company, hereinafter referred to as the company, for a certificate of membership. John T. Perdue, her husband, acted for her in making the application for membership, and signed her name to the application, and was designated in it as the party to whom all notices of assessments against her should be mailed in case she became a member.

The application was accepted, and the company issued to Mrs. Perdue a certificate of membership No. 837, having a maximum value of a thousand dollars, and placed her in Circle No. 40. Mrs. Perdue died on January 17, 1921, and the company refused, on demand, to pay the claim of her husband, the beneficiary 'named in the certificate, and this suit was brought to recover the sum payable under the certificate. The trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff, which was returned under the direction of the court, and, judgment being rendered accordingly, the company has appealed.

The company refused to pay the claim of the beneficiary on the ground that the insured was not a member at the time of her death, the company claiming that she had forfeited her membership because of her failure to pay an assessment, No. 10, issued October 19, 1920, in the sum of 88 cents. The court instructed the jury that the proof failed to. show that a valid assessment had been made.

Appellant says the questions for decision are: (1) Was there sufficient proof of a death upon which to base an assessment? (2) Was an assessment made as provided by the contract of insurance between the parties?

The constitution and by-laws of the company provided that notice .of an assessment should be given by mailing to the insured, or to the person named in the application to receive notices, and the testimony on the part of the company shows compliance with this requirement, and, as the verdict was directed against the company, we must presume that the jury would have found that notice had been given, although the testimony is conflicting on this issue.

The system employed by the company in. making assessments and in giving notice thereof was explained by the managing officers of the company, and was as follows: The company' employed the card system. Each member had a membership card, ruled1 for a period of twelve months, and, among other things, contained the name of the member, the name of the person designated by the member to whom notices of assessments should be sent, the number and circle of the certificate of membership, the date and amount of assessments, and whether paid or unpaid. The card used by the company for giving notice of an assessment contains, among other things, the number of the assessment, the date of the assessment, the amount of the assessment, the name and address of the deceased member on account of whose death the assessment is made. This notice is signed by the secretary .of the company, and gives the member instructions as to when and how to make remittance. The officers of the company testified that, in accordance with this system, notice had been mailed to appellee, but that no remittance had been made, and, after the expiration of the time allowed for payment, Mrs. Perdue’s card was placed among those of the suspended members.

The secretary of the company testified that he mailed appellee, on October 19, 1920, a notice of the death of a member, Elzada Monday, of Leflore, Oklahoma, and that the assessment was numbered 10, and was for the sum of 88 cents, and that this notice was sent out by him on receipt of the proof of the death of the deceased member.

The court excluded this testimony, holding that assessments could not be made by the secretary as a clerical matter, but that assessments could only be levied by the vote and action of the directors of the company, and that, in the absence of a showing that the alleged delinquent assessment had been made by the directors, there was no valid assessment of which notice could have been given, and that, if such an assessment had not been made by the directors, there was no valid assessment of which the assured could have been given notice or was liable to pay.

The correctness of this decision depends, of course, upon the provisions of the contract of insurance. As has been said, the company is a mutual one, engaged in the business of insuring the lives of its members, who are placed in circles of not exceeding a thousand members, and', upon the death of .any member, the surviving members are called upon to pay assessments, which are graduated, the first assessment paid by any member being 35 cents, and increasing 1 cent with each assessment until a maximum assessment of $1.15 is reached, after which the amount of the assessment is not further increased. The number of the assessments is, of course, dependent upon the number of deaths, and there might be a month in which there were no assessments, and there might be months in which there were more than one assessment.. The purpose of the notice was to advise the members of the assessments which had been made. As a circle was depleted by deaths, the places were filled by the names of new members, it being the policy of the company to keep all circles approximately full at a number not exceeding one thousand members.

The certificate of membership made the constitution and by-laws a part of the contract of insurance, and these were offered in evidence, and it is to these writings we must turn to ascertain the rights and duties of the company and its members. The relevant portions of the by-laws read as follows:

‘‘ Section 4. The levying of an assessment shall consist of mailing notices of the death of a member in any particular circle in which the assessment is made, on the authority of the board of directors, stating the amount of the assessment due from the individual member, and, when the records of the association show that an assessment has been levied, it shall be accepted as prima facie evidence of the mailing of notices to all members from whom assessments are due.”
“Section 6. Thése membership certificates shall be , written in circles containing not more than one thousand members, and no equity, rights or benefits shall accrue either to the member or his beneficiary beyond his circle or the circle to which he may have been subsequently assigned. These assessments shall be made on the members in the respective circles in which the death occurs; except when there is an accumulation of deaths in any circle, the members of another circle or circles may, at the discretion of the management, be assessed incident to such excess deaths, or assessments may be made irrespective of deaths, and revenue derived'therefrom shall be devoted to any purpose not inconsistent with the bylaws of the organization. All members are subject to each and every assessment made against their respective circle, at and after the date of their membership certificates.”
“Section 8. ¡When an assessment in any of the various circles has been deposited with the management of the Mutual Aid Union by the various members constituting a circle, and a death claim has been paid, the responsibility of the management of the Mutual Aid Union to its members of that circle ceases until another assessment by the management against the members surviving has been made and is received back into the treasury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
258 S.W. 375, 162 Ark. 551, 1924 Ark. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutual-aid-union-v-perdue-ark-1924.