National Aid Life Ass'n v. Kerr

1937 OK 293, 67 P.2d 935, 180 Okla. 59, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 724
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 4, 1937
DocketNo. 26034.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1937 OK 293 (National Aid Life Ass'n v. Kerr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Aid Life Ass'n v. Kerr, 1937 OK 293, 67 P.2d 935, 180 Okla. 59, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 724 (Okla. 1937).

Opinion

BUSBY, J.

Myrtle Kerr, as plaintiff, instituted this action in the district court of Tulsa county to collect from the National Aid Life Association the sum of $2,500 which she asserted was due her by reason of a benefit certificate issued upon the life of her husband, Theophilus Kerr, who died on the 19th day of May, 1933.

Upon the trial of the cause a jury was impaneled to determine the issues, but at the close of the evidence the jury was discharged upon agreement of the parties and the controversy was submitted to the trial court for determination. The decision was in favor of the plaintiff, and the National Aid Life Association appeals.

There is no material controversy in the facts. In order to provide protection after his death for those dependent upon him during his life, Theophilus Kerr in 1925 purchased a benefit certificate for $2,509 from the Oklahoma Aid Association, which later became and now is the National Aid Life Association. In 1931 Mr. Kerr directed a change of beneficiary, and in connection with the change a new benefit certificate was issued in lieu of the old.

The contract between Mr. Kerr as a member of the association and the association consisted of the benefit certificate, the . application of Mr. Kerr under which he was accepted as a member, the by-laws of the association, and the statutes under which the certificate was issued. Holford v. National Aid Life Ass’n, 177 Okla. 284, 58 P. (2d) 588; Home Aid Ass’n v. Akers, 176 Okla. 561, 56 P. (2d) 770.

The various members of the association were placed in circles or groups. As the owner of the certificate upon which this action was based, Mr. Kerr was placed in a group designated by the association as No. 22. By the terms of the agreement between the parties, he was required to pay, in addition to regular semi-annual' assessments, death benefit assessments which it was contemplated should be made when another member of the same group should die.

The deceased, until immediately before his death, kept his 'assessments paid with promptness and diligence, which demonstrates his care and caution in endeavoring to protect his rights under the certificate held by him. In fact, during most of the time he held the certificate he kept a small amount on deposit with the company to meet assessments as they were made. On April 14, 1933, he received at his address in Tulsa, through the mail from the Oklahoma City office of the association, a notice of death benefit assessment, which notice had been deposited in the mails of Oklahoma City on April 12th to advise him of an assessment made as of ■April 13, 1933. On April 21,'1933, he made out a check to cover the assessment, enclosed the same in an envelop addressed to the association at Oklahoma City. He delivered the envelop with the enclosed check to a negro porter who worked for him with directions to deposit the same in the mails. The envelope was one furnished by the defendant association and enclosed with the notice of death benefit assessment. The negro forgot to carry out the directions. He carried the envelope containing the .check around in his pocket until April 29, 1933. On that date, Mrs. Kerr received a notice from the defendant association addressed to her husband to the effect that another certificate (the certificate involved in National Aid Life Ass’n v. Kerr, infra) had lapsed for nonpayment of the death benefit assessment and that a certificate of good health would be required for reinstatement. This *61 could not be given because on the day before Mr. Kerr had been sent to the hospital stricken with an illness which proved fatal. Mrs. Kerr communicated with the porter, who, being- reminded of his oversight, deposited the envelope in the mails at Tulsa. The date of mailing was April 29, 1933, the 15th day after Mr. Kerr had received the notice of assessment. The check, however, was not received by the defendant association until about two days later.

According to the contract between the parties, the member had 15 days in which to pay a death benefit assessment. The whole controversy in this case depends upon the proper method of computing this time. The association urges that the date from which the time should be computed was April 13, 1933, that being the date as of -which the death benefit assessment was made. The plaintiff urges April 14th as the proper date from which to commence the computation of the time, that being the date on which the notice in the regular course of the mails would reach the member and on which, according to the finding of the trial court, the notice did reach Mr. Kerr. The association urges, in order to prevent a lapse of the certificate, the check must have been received at its Oklahoma City office on or before April 28th, the 15th day from April 13th; whereas, the plaintiff asserts that a deposit of the check in the mails at Tulsa on April 29th, the 15th day after April 14th, the date of the receipt of the notice of assessment, was sufficient in point of time to keep the benefit certificate in good standing.

The solution of the problem requires a consideration of the relative contractual provisions as contained in the benefit certificate. the application of the member under which membership was obtained, and the by-laws of the association, interpreted, of course, in the light of legal principles which are available and appropriate as a guide.

The law as well as equity abhors a forfeiture in this class of eases and when a contract between a benefit association and its member is susceptible of either of two constructions, one of which will sustain, while the other will destroy the contract, the former will be adopted “to avoid a forfeiture.” United Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employees & Railway Shop Laborers v. Blair, 140 Okla. 23, 282 P. 141.

The trial court, upon consideration of the contractual provisions and the relations between the association and Mr. Kerr, its member, sustained the view of the plaintiff and rendered judgment accordingly. The question here is whether that view is tenable, not whether another view could have been adopted.

We shall first determine the proper date for commencing the computation of the 15-day period within which payment could be made.

The benefit certificate, in the possession of the member at the time of his death, provided;

“The within named member agrees to pay the assessments levied by the mánagement of two dollars and .sixty cents ($2.00) upon the death of a member of the group of which he is a member payable within-fifteen (1) days from date of call, of which sum 10 cents shall be used for expenses. * * *”

And also contained the following relative provision;

“* * * It being agreed that notices of death and emergency reserve fund assessments will be given by United States mail to the post office address last furnished to the association by the member. Said member agrees further that failure by him or her to pay any death or emergency reserve fund assessment within the time herein set forth, or semi-annual dues by the fifteenth day of the months in which same are payable, shall terminate his or her membership and all rights or claims he or she may have had in or against the association on the date of said lapse.” ”

In interpreting the meaning of the foregoing provisions, it is important that due consideration be given the purpose to be served thereby.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1937 OK 293, 67 P.2d 935, 180 Okla. 59, 1937 Okla. LEXIS 724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-aid-life-assn-v-kerr-okla-1937.