Olsen v. Supreme Council of Royal Arcanum

224 S.W. 129, 205 Mo. App. 260, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 101
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 8, 1920
StatusPublished

This text of 224 S.W. 129 (Olsen v. Supreme Council of Royal Arcanum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Olsen v. Supreme Council of Royal Arcanum, 224 S.W. 129, 205 Mo. App. 260, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 101 (Mo. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

BECKER, J.

In 1903 defendant issued 'to Lars Olsen a benefit certificate of insurance payable at his death, if in good standing, to his wife, Minnie Olsen. Olsen died March 8, 1917. The defendant refused to pay and plaintiff as beneficiary brought suit for $2000, the sum specified in the certificate, together with $200 penalty for vexatious refusal to pay, and $400 attorney’s fees. The case was tried to a jury and a verdict found for plaintiff for $2600, and from the judgment entered in accordance therewith defendant in due course appeals.

We note that the petition alleges that the defendant company is a foreign corporation, ‘ ‘ engaged in writing life insurance on the natural premium plan in the State of Missouri and is liable to be sued in the' courts of this State as an assessment life insurance company under article 2, chapter 61, Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1909.”

The defense are: First: That the defendant is a fraternal beneficiary society duly incorporated as such under the laws of the State of Massachusetts, and en *264 gaged in doing business as such in tbe State of Missouri under license from the insurance department of said State. Second: That the insured was suspended for nonpayment of assessment for the month of January, 1917. Third: That said insured, in the month of February, 1917, elected to adandon his membership in the defendant order and discontinued the payment of the assessments therein and severed his connection with said order. Fourth: That during the month of January, 1917, plaintiff, acting as the agent of the insured and in accordance with his wishes, as well as in her own behalf, notified the collector of the local council of which the insured was a member, that the said Olsen desired to become suspended from said order and thereafter would pay no further assessments, whereby the said plaintiff became estopped from claiming anything under the benefit certificate issued to said Olsen.

The reply denied that the defendant was entitled to conduct business in the State of Missouri as a fraternal beneficiary society, and sets up an alleged waiver on the part of the defendant of its by-laws requiring the payment of assessments on a day fixed and certain.

I.

As to the issue raised, whether the defendant company is a fraternal beneficiary society or not, it is sufficient to dispose of it by stating that tbe defendant in due course introduced in evidence a duly certified copy of its license to do business as a fraternal beneficiary society, issued by the proper authority in this, state, and thereby made out a prima-facie case that it is a fraternal beneficiary society. [Sec. 16, Laws of Missouri, 1911, p. 290; Gilmore v. Modern Brotherhood of Amer., 186 Mo. App. 445, 171 S. W. 629.] Plaintiff offered no evidence to overcome this prima-facie case, while on the other hand the record contains additional uncontradicted evidence that the society is without capital stock, organized and carried on solely for the mutual benefit of its members and their beneficiaries and not for profit; that it has a lodge system with ritualistic form of work and representative form of government, *265 and that its funds are derived from the payment of assessments by the members, and that benefits are paid only to the classes mentioned in the statute; and in addition the benefit certificate shows on its face that it is a contract of a fraternal beneficiary society. Furthermore an examination of the record discloses that an imstruction given at plaintiff’s request is predicated upon the defendant being a fraternal beneficiary society, thereby admitting the character of the appellant.

II.

It will be noted that plaintiff recovered not alone the sum of $2000, the amount stipulated in the certificate of insurance, but recovered penalty for vexatious refusal to pay, and attorney’s fees, under section 7068, Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1909, as amended in the Laws of Missouri, 1911, p. 282. The defendant, as we have held above, is a fraternal beneficiary society, duly licensed as such to do business in this state and therefore is not amenable to the provisions of said section, in that section 7109, Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1909 as amendedin section 5, of the Laws of 1911, p. 284, specifically provides that fraternal beneficiary societies shall be “exempt from the provisions of the insurance laws of this State . . . and no law . . . passed shall apply to them unless they be expressly designed therein,” and said section 7068, Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1909, as amended, is found in the chapter on insurance entitled, “general provisions,” and fraternal beneficiary societies are not expressly designated therein. It follows that it was error on the part pf the trial court to have instructed the jury that if they found for plaintiff they might assess damages for vexatious refusal to pay and award the plaintiff a reasonable attorney’s fee.

*266 III.

It is conceded that Olsen was required by the terms of his contract to pay one assessment on or before ten o’clock p. m., on the last day of each month under the penalty of ipso facto suspension, and that the insured, as well as plaintiff acting for her husband, intentionally refused to pay the assessment for January and February, 1917.

We note the following excerpts from plaintiff’s own testimony: i

Q. “You did not pay the January assessment?” A. “No; I didn’t have the money.”

Q. “Could you pay the February assessment?” A. “No, sir; because I wrote to my husband and told him I didn’t have the money to pay and I wanted him to send it and he told me the Council would carry him for a while — said those were his rules — the by-laws, or whatever you call it.”

Q. “And yet you knew you had to pay one assessment every month, or get some one to. pay ? That is true isn’t it?” A. “Yes, sir.”

Q. “But if you thought that the January assessment would be paid by the council, how about the February assessment?” A. “Well, my husband told me that they would carry that.”

Q. “Pay it indefinitely?” A. “Until I could pay.”

Q. “And you never went and told them you couldn’t pay?” A. “No, sir, I didn’t.

Section 9 of the Laws of 1911, 1. 286, applicable to fraternal beneficiary associations provides that the certificate, the charter or articles of incorporation, the constitution and laws of the society and the application for membership and medical examination, signed by the applicant, and all amendments to each thereof, shall constitute the agreement between the society and the *267 member, and that any changes, additions or amendments duly made or enacted, subsequent to the issuance of the benefit certificate shall bind the member and his beneficiaries and shall govern and control the agreement in all respects the same as though such changes, additions or amendments had been made prior to and were in force at the time of the application for membership.

Section 22 of the same law (Laws of 1911, p.

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Related

Gilmore v. Modern Brotherhood of America
171 S.W. 629 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1914)
Gooden v. Modern Woodmen of America
189 S.W. 394 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
224 S.W. 129, 205 Mo. App. 260, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olsen-v-supreme-council-of-royal-arcanum-moctapp-1920.