National Fraternity v. Karnes

60 S.W. 576, 24 Tex. Civ. App. 607, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 4
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 9, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 60 S.W. 576 (National Fraternity v. Karnes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Fraternity v. Karnes, 60 S.W. 576, 24 Tex. Civ. App. 607, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 4 (Tex. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

JAMES, Ci-iiee Justice.—The

action is to recover of appellant the sum of $2500, as due on a certificate of membership held by Dr. Thomas C. Karnes, payable to appellee, his widow.

As an understanding of the pleading of the defendant is important in deciding some questions raised by the briefs, we shall state in substance the leading defenses. It alleged that every person, to become a member, must, under the laws of the order, make an application .upon printed forms in use, and undergo a medical examination in accordance with another printed form, both of which become the only basis of membership entitling the applicant to benefit shares. That on April 21, 1898, Karnes made his written application for membership and his written statement on medical examination upon the proper forms furnished by defendant, both of which are made exhibits, and that therein and thereby he contracted and bound himself in printed and written words as follows:

“(1) To pay to the lodge all assessments, fines, and other charges lawfully levied and imposed by authority of the board of control to maintain the several funds of the fraternity. One assessment to be paid to the accountant of the lodge on or before the first day of each month, without any previous notice being given or required, in accordance with the constitution and laws of the fraternity. (2) To conform to all the laws, rules, and regulations of the fraternity now in force or which *609 may hereafter be adopted. (3) That the application and the statements made in his medical examination shall form the basis of the membership in the National Fraternity. (4) That he shall have no claim upon the fraternity for benefits except in conformity with article 1.3 of the constitution and laws of the fraternity, which is hereto attached, marked ‘A,’ and made a part hereof. (5) That if, for any cause he become suspended as provided by the laws of the fraternity, he shall not be entitled to any benefits whatever during the period of such suspension. (6) That he would waive all claims for disability benefits resulting from the use of intoxicating liquors, opium, and other stimulants. (7) That he would waive all benefits granted by the National Fraternity if he made any false statements or answers to questions set forth in his petition for membership and examination.”

That in his statement on medical examination he answered certain questions, thus: Question 10: “Do you now, or have you ever used opium or other narcotics?” Answer “No.” Question 15: “How many weeks have you been disabled by sickness or accident in the last five years?” Which said question the said Karnes answered, “Four weeks; malarial fever.” Question 18: “Is there anything to your knowledge or belief in your physical condition, family or personal history or habits tending to shorten your life, or to cause sickness, which is not distinctly set forth above?” Which question the said Karnes answered, “No.” Question 19: “Have you now, or have you ever had, any serious illness or disease not fully set forth above, or met with any accident or injury, or undergone any surgical operation?” Which question the said Karnes answered “No.”

Thereupon the pleading alleges that each and all of said answers were false at the time, and that Karnes well knew them so to be at the time he made .them, and then proceeds to allege that he had long prior thereto and subsequently up to the date of his death used narcotics, to wit, “morphine, a drug from opium, and cocaine, both of which were and are narcotics; that in .truth and in fact within five years, and on or about the 10th day of January, 1895, the said Karnes had been disabled by an accident, to wit, by being shot, which gunshot wound was a serious one, and disabled him for life, and was a cause of his death; that from said wound he was laid up in bed for some weeks, and be never recovered from the same, and that at the time he made said application he had theretofore undergone a dangerous and serious surgical operation with the view of relieving him of said gunshot wound disability, which operation did not cure him, or even benefit him, and that the said Karnes, being a physician, well knew that these facts would and did “tend to shorten his life,” and he knowingly, fraudulently, and falsely made all such statements, and that by reason thereof and his agreements herein set forth, this plaintiff is estopped from recovering herein, in that all benefits are waived by reason of said false statements. That defendant is a corporation, controlled by char *610 ter and constitution and by-laws, a copy of which, in force at the time of said Karnes applying, is hereto attached and made a part hereof; and that up to date of the said Karnes’ suspension, he only paid in dues, fees, and assessments the sum of twenty-three dollars, and that defendant here tenders into court all of same to the plaintiff as being all the defendant received from him from the date of his application to his suspension, and upon his said fraudulent and false application, not discovered by defendant until after Karnes’ death.

■ “7. Further answering, defendant says that the said T. C. Karnes became suspended on the first day of August, 1898, by failure to pay his assessment then due, and under the laws, rules, and regulations of defendant, he forfeited his benefit shares, and is not entitled to the same, and plaintiff can not recover. That under article 19 of the constitution of the National Fraternity, any member failing to pay an assessment when due, on all shares held, shall stand suspended from all rights and privileges in the fraternity; that on the 1st day of August there was due by the said Karnes assessments amounting to six dollars; that he did not pay the same, and under proper rules of defendant he was suspended.

“8. Defendant company, by reason of the hereinbefore pleas, prays that plaintiff take nothing by her suit, and that it recover all costs in the cause, and for equity and general relief.”

The twenty-seventh, twenty-eighth, twenty-third, seventeenth, and twenty-fifth assignments relate to refused instructions which were based upon the theory that the answers and statements made by Karnes were warranties. The charges involved in the twenty-eighth, seventeenth, and twenty-fifth ignored and would have excluded the issue that defendant was estopped by the knowledge of its agents. The doctrine of waiver applies when the statements are warranties, as well as when they are mere representations. As to the twenty-third assignment, the charge would have instructed the jury that any use by Karnes of narcotics, regardless of the character and extent of the use, would have avoided the policy; and we think the court correctly construed the term use, in this contract, to have reference to a use which amounted to a custom or habit.

The twenty-seventh assignment complains of the refusal of the following charge: “You are instructed that Dr. T. C. Karnes in his statement on medical examination, which forms the basis of the contract, and in the certificate of membership, warranted his answers in said statement on medical examination to be true. You are therefore instructed that if you should find from the evidence that said Karnes used morphine or other narcotics prior to the 30th day of' April, 1898, and prior to the 25th of May, 1898, the date of his acceptance of the certificate of membership, that Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
60 S.W. 576, 24 Tex. Civ. App. 607, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-fraternity-v-karnes-texapp-1901.