Nash v. Brotherhood

4 Balt. C. Rep. 171
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJanuary 2, 1923
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Balt. C. Rep. 171 (Nash v. Brotherhood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nash v. Brotherhood, 4 Balt. C. Rep. 171 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1923).

Opinion

DUFFY, J.

This is a suit by the beneficiary on a certificate of insurance issued by defendant to Frank Nash on July 29, 1907.

Suit was filed September 10, 1918, The first trial began November 12, 191.9. It resulted in a verdict for the idaintiff for $1,500. A motion for new trial was filed and the verdict was set aside. The second trial began May 31, 1921; it ended in a verdict for defendant by instruction of the Court. A motion for new trial was filed by the plaintiff and this verdict was set aside. The third trial began September 18, 1922; it resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff for $2,220, and now the case is before me on motion of defendant to sot this verdict aside.

The third amended declaration, filed March 29, 1919, contained three counts; to it the defendant pleaded the general issue pleas and a plea of limitations. A demurrer to this third plea had been sustained on May 3, 1919, with leave to amend, but no amendment was filed. During the course of the trial a fourth count was added to the declaration setting up a waiver by defendant. The defendant asked for delay to file pleadings, but this was refused. He demurred to the fourth count. This was overruled. He was then required to renew his general issue pleas to this count and opportunity to file other pleas was denied him, the Court assuring him that any defense he had to offer would he permitted under his gomera] issue pleas. This was done to avoid delay because there was not sufficient difference between the third count on which issue had been joined and the fourth count to have taken defendant by surprise. All of the evidence offered by the defendant was admissible under his general issue pleas. Por the scope of these pleas in insurance cases see 113 Md. 438—Citizens’ Insurance Co. vs. Conowingo Co.

The Grand Lodge, the defendant, is located in Cleveland. It operates in Maryland through a local lodge, Patapsco No. 432. The Insurance certificate is issued to members by the Grand Lodge through the local lodge. The member pays to the local lodge dues of the local lodge and joint hoard dues and the assessments on his certificate which are sent by the local to the Grand Lodge (Record, 52, 53).

Nash had been a locomotive engineer and had been discharged for drunkenness. He then took up laboring work for contractors. He seems to have lived on good terms with his wife and wrote to her when he was away. On August 7, 1913, he had been out of work for about a week; and on that day he left home in Brunswick, Md., to get work, as he had done several times before. His wife has never seen or heard of him since. A witness, [172]*172Tucker, a railroad conductor, who had worked with him, testified that he saw Nash on a train about Christmas time in 1914. He said, “Hello, Nash!” and the party addressed said, “How are you?” and pulled his hat down over his face. No other conversation occurred. Tucker testified that he identified this person as Nash. On July 7, 1914, his wife had the keeper of the morgue exhume a body which had been buried in Potter’s Field, and she testified that when she saw it, she it once identified it as that of her husband.

It appears from the testimony and was admitted by counsel that the local lodge paid Nash’s dues for a period of between three and four years ending April 19, 1917 (Record, 253 and 260). This would make these payments begin back in 1914, so that Nash’s dues were fully paid up to that date, and after the Stahlman letter of March 23, 1917, hereafter mentioned.

If the jury believed that it was Nash’s body exhumed in Potter’s Eield, and that information of that fact was given to a proper officer of the local lodge, then knowledge of the fact of death must be imputed to the local lodge, and if the local lodge was the agent of the Grand Lodge, constructive knowledge of this fact must be imputed to the Grand Lodge. I have been referred to no case in which the insurer voluntarily assumed the responsibility of keeping the policy alive after receiving notice from the beneficiary that the insured was dead; or at least sufficient notice to put the insurer which was keeping the certificate alive by payment of dues, upon inquiry as to whether the insured was dead or not.

It is true the assumption of these payments by the local lodge was voluntary, but it was assumed and continued for over three years and then was arbitrarily stopped; and the reason for stopping, given in the letters of January 9 and March 23, 1917, was as follows:

South Baltimore, Md.,

January 9, 1917.

Mrs. E. Nash,

Brunswick, Md.

Mrs. Nash: This is to advise you that this Lodge, Patapsco 432, B. L. F & E., will no longer hold Bro. Nash in good standing for dues on account of the Constitution forbids of paying out any more claims for disappearance of member without there is positive proof of death, so let me hear from you what you are going to do in regard to this.

Yours Frat.,

T. C. Stahlman, Fin. See., 102 W. Fourth Ave., Balto., Md.

Baltimore, Md.,

March 23, 1917.

Mrs. Nash: This is to advise you that Mr. Nash has been expelled for his dues aeording to Art. 12, Sec. 19, of the constitution. If you want him readmitted let me hear from you. I will write See. 19 to you as follows:

A liability arising from the disappearance of member, or the presumption of the death of a member arising from any such disappearenee shall not be incurred by the Brotherhood. The Brotherhood shall only be liable for the payment of a death claim when there is positive proof of the death of a beneficiary member.

So if you want me to continue to keep up these dues of Bro. Nash let me hear from you by the 28th of this said month.

E. O. Stahlman, See.

These letters were writen by Mr. Stahlman, financial secretary of the local lodge. But Mr. Pennell, recording secretary, did more than this, according to Mrs. Nash.

Pages 125-126 of Record:

Q. After you received that letter, didn’t you write to them and say that you would pay his dues?

A. Yes, sir; I did. I seen Mr. Pennell on March after that letter was written, and Mr. Pennell told me that I could keep them dues up, but if it wasn’t proven that Mr. Nash was dead, I never would get nothing, I could keep them up year after year. He told me that.

(The Court) Now who is Pennell?

(The Witness) That gentleman siting there (indicating).

[173]*173(Mr. Fleischman) Pennell is the recording secretary, I think, is his office in the local lodge?

(The Court) All right, go ahead.

Q. So that you understood, according to that, that no matter whether you paid dues or not, unless you proved Mr. Nash was dead, the Brotherhood would never entertain your claim?

A. Yes, sir.
Q. You understood that?

Now here we have the local lodge acting through these two secretaries in 1917, first writing her that the payments would be discontinued and then notifying her that if she continued the payments, she would never get her money unless she proved that Nash was dead and this means that degree of “positive proof of death” as required by Section 39 of the Constitution.

It will be noted that the stand taken by the local lodge in 3917 was entirely different from that taken in 1914.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Balt. C. Rep. 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nash-v-brotherhood-pactcompl-1923.