O'Connor v. Knights & Ladies of Security

178 Iowa 383
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 29, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 178 Iowa 383 (O'Connor v. Knights & Ladies of Security) 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
O'Connor v. Knights & Ladies of Security, 178 Iowa 383 (iowa 1916).

Opinion

Gaynor, J.

This action is brought to recover an amount alleged to be due on a certificate of insurance issued by the defendant company to Victor E. O’Connor, in the amount of $1,000. This certificate was issued on the 21st day of October, 1913, and the plaintiff was named as beneficiary. The assured, Victor E. O’Connor, died on the 2d day of April, 1914, within six months from the issuance of the certificate. The certificate provided that, if the assured died within six months from the issuing of the policy, the beneficiary should be entitled to receive but 60 per cent of the total amount named in the policy. It is admitted that due proofs of death were filed, as required by the certificate and laws of the company. The national executive committee of the appellant company passed upon plaintiff’s claim and rejected the same. The assured paid all the assessments required by the certificate and the laws of the society, up to the time of his death.

The' defense is based on the claim that the February, 1914, assessment and dues were not paid during the month of February; that the same were not paid to the local council until the 5th day of March, 1914; that he was, at the time of and prior to the time of payment, in ill health and dangerously sick, and that this fact was not known to the insurer at the time the February assessment was paid and received. This defense is based on the constitution and by-laws of the society, which provide, in substance, and so far as material to this controversy, as follows:

“On or before the last day of each month, the member shall without notice, pay the sum of one assessment and the local dues to the financier of the local council. The financier of each subordinate 'council shall keep a book, wherein all regular and special assessments and dues received from each member holding a valid certificate shall be credited. Such [386]*386entries shall be made, showing the date when actually received by 'the financier. All assessments for every month shall become due and payable on the first day of the month. The certificate of each member who has not paid ^uch assessment or assessments and dues on or before the last day of the month shall, by the fact of such nonpayment, stand suspended without notice, and no act on the part of the council or any officer thereof, or of the national council, shall be required as essential to such suspension, and all rights under said certificate shall be forfeited.”

The constitution and by-laws further provide:

“No right under such certificate shall be restored until it has been duly reinstated by the member complying with the laws of the order with .reference to reinstatement. ’ ’ It further provides:
“Each member who has been suspended for nonpayment of dues, or, nonpayment of an assessment or assessments, shall only be reinstated in accordance with the constitution and laws of the order.”

Under the heading, “How a Member May Be Reinstated Within Sixty,Days,” we find the following:

“Any beneficiary member suspended by reason of nonpayment of an assessment or assessments, or dues, may, within sixty days from the date of such suspension, be reinstated upon the following conditions, and none other: ... by payment, within sixty days from date of suspension, of all ar-, rearages of every kind, including assessments and dues, for .which he would have been liable had he remained in good .standing; provided, however, that he be in good health at the time of making payment to the financier- with a view to rreinstatement. The payment of any such assessments and ‘dues for reinstatement shall be a warranty by such member that he is in good health at the time of such payment. Provided, further, that the receipt and retention of such assessments and dues, in ease the suspended member .is not in good health, . . . shall not have the effect of reinstating said [387]*387member, or of entitling bim or his beneficiaries to any rights under his benefit certificate. ”

The laws further provide:

“The national council shall not be bound by the acceptance of arrears of assessments and dues from suspended members who are not entitled to reinstatement in accordance with the laws of the order. The receiving of such arrears and receipting therefor by any officer of a subordinate council, . or by any other person, or the payment by or on behalf of any suspended member, or arrears of assessments and dues with a view of reinstatement, except as provided for in the laws of the order, shall not be binding on the national council. The failure of any financier to report to the national council, as suspended, 'any suspended member of his council, shall not operate in any case as a waiver of the forfeiture occurring on account of the suspension.”
“The retention by the financier, or by the order, of 'assessments and dues paid by members or for them, with a view to reinstatement, other than as provided in the laws of the order, either before or after death, shall not constitute a waiver of any provisions of these laws until a demand has been duly made for their return by such member or his beneficiary or legal representative. ’ ’

• It is further provided:

“The national council is not bound by knowledge of or notice to officers or members of local councils. No officer of this society, nor any local council officer, or member thereof, is authorized or permitted to waive any of the provisions of the by-laws of this society which relate to the contract between the member and the society. . . . Neither shall any knowledge or information obtained by,- or notice to, any subordinate council or officer or member thereof, ". . .be held or construed to be the knowledge or notice to the national council or the officers thereof, until after said information or [388]*388notice be given in writing to’the national secretary of tlie order. ’ ’

There is a further provision that the local council and its officers are the agents of the members in making application for membership, admission of members, reinstatement of members, and the collection and transmission of all assessments to the national council; and that the national council shall not be liable for any neglect in any of these members, nor be bound by any irregularity, neglect, or illegal action by a subordinate council or by any^of its officers.

It is the contention of the defendant that, under these bylaws, Victor E. O’Connor became suspended from the defendant society on the first day of March, and was not a member of the society at the time of his deáth; that, in September, 1914,- it tendered back to the representatives of Victor E. O’Connor and the plaintiff all assessments and dues received by it or its local council from said Victor E. 0 ’Connor, from and after the date of his suspension aforesaid, to wit, March 1, 1914, which it refused to accept, and that it is now ready and willing to return said dues.

■ Briefly stated, defendant’s contention is this: That the February, 1914, assessment was due by the terms of the constitution and by-laws of the order, which were a part of the contract, on the first day of February; that a failure to pay this assessment during the month of February, on or before the last day, worked a forfeiture of the certificate and all rights under the certificate. Reliance is had upon the provision reading as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
178 Iowa 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oconnor-v-knights-ladies-of-security-iowa-1916.