Pasley v. Brady Mut. Life Ass'n

2 S.W.2d 278
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 19, 1927
DocketNo. 7171.
StatusPublished

This text of 2 S.W.2d 278 (Pasley v. Brady Mut. Life Ass'n) 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
Pasley v. Brady Mut. Life Ass'n, 2 S.W.2d 278 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

McCLENDON, C. j.

Suit by M. A. Pasley against the Brady Mutual Life Association, an unincorporated “local mutual aid association,” organized under R. S. 1925, art. 4859, *279 and the officers and directors of the association, to recover upon a certificate insuring Mrs. Pasley in the sum of $1,000 upon the life of her husband. Trial to court "without a jury and judgment for defendants.

The controlling question involved in the appeal is whether Mr. Pasley had forfeited his membership in the association at the time of his death. The essential facts follow:

Under the certificate and by-laws of the association, the members, were required, in addition to an admission fee, to pay semiannual dues of $1, which at the time of Mr. Pasley’s death were payable on the 1st day of March and November of each year, and additionally an assessment of $1 upon the death of each member. The by-laws provided that:

“The secretary treasurer shall have supervisory control of the association, pass on applications, pay out all claims against the association, provided that in all contested claims he shall refer the same to the president and board of directors.”
“No assessment or collection pf dues shall be made for an amount less than nor greater than one ($1.00) per member, provided assessments and collections of dues may be made at one and the same time,, or a double assessment made when necessary.”

The certificate provided:

“A failure to pay said assessment or dues within fifteen days after date of call shall forfeit his membership in this association.
“In sending out assessment notices it shall not be necessary for said association to do more than mail a written or printed notice properly stamped and addressed to said member at his or her last-known post office address.”

Under date of October 5, 1925, the secretary sent out the following notice to each of the members:

“Notice of Assessment No. 11 and November Dues, 1925.
“This is to notify you of the death of Malehior E. Beyer, Mason, and Mrs. Susie O. Black, Brady, and of semiannual dues payable November 1, 1925.
“One member will pay for the two deaths, $1.00. A man and wife would be due $2.00, etc. To pay your November dues, double the amount.
“Assessment No. 11 should have been made September 5, 1925, but was delayed so that the assessment and November dues might be collected at the time time, avoiding expense to you and us. Last date of payment is November 1, 1925.
“This card stamped and returned to us will insure a return receipt. Your check indorsed by us is a good receipt.
“The ‘Brady Mutual,’ always good, was never better than now. Call on us or write us for correct information.”

Both Mr. and Mrs. 'Pasley were members of the association, and a joint notice was addressed to them, which, for the purposes of this appeal, we will assume was mailed October 5, 1925.

Mr. Pasley died November 3,1925. He had paid all previous dues and assessments except those covered by the above notice which had not been paid. The amount thereof was tendered to the secretary on November 10, 1925, but was declined on the ground that failure to pay the assessment on or prior to November 1, 1925, forfeited his membership. The secretary testified, in substance, that under the certificate and the custom of the association the November 1st dues must be paid within 15 days after November 1st, otherwise the policy lapsed.

The only provision either in the certificate or the by-laws of the association with reference to forfeiture of membership is the above-quoted provision of the certificate, and the question presented is whether under that provision membership was forfeited by reason of failure to pay the assessment of October 5,1925, on or prior to November 1, 1925. The dues were payable November 1, 1925, and under this clause membership would not be forfeited for failure to Ray them until 15 days after November 1st had elapsed. Appel-lees’ contention, however, is that membership was forfeited because the assessment was not paid by November 1, 1925. Strictly speaking, “call” means “an official declaration that sums subscribed were required to be paid” (9 O. J. 1118), or the act of a corporation “demanding the payment of all or a portion of unpaid subscriptions,” whereas “assessment,” as applied to stockholders, is the official act of making a demand upon them for payment above the par value of their stock. Technically, therefore, a “call” fixes the due date of an existing contractual liability, whereas an “assessment” creates a liability. “Call” is quite generally used synonymously with “assessment” ; and this is usually the holding when liability of a stockholder under a stock assessment is involved. See Campbell v. American Alkili Co. (C. C. A.) 125 E. 207; Wall v. Basin Mining Co., 16 Idaho, 313, 101 P. 733, 22 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1013. But the word is equivocal and is sometimes used synonymously with date of payment either of a “call” or of an “assessment.” As was said in the early English case of Railway v. Mitchell, 4 Eschr. 540:

“The word ‘call’ is capable of three meanings. It may either mean the resolution, or its notification, or the time when it becomes payable. It must mean either one of these three.”

In that case the court had for construction an act of Parliament requiring that calls for installments of stock subscription should be made at least three months apart; and, while it was not essential to the adjudication and was therefore not decided, the learned justice said:

“It is probable that the Legislature intended that the days of payment should not be nearer to each other than three months, as it might *280 be deemed inconvenient to the shareholders to find capital at shorter intervals.”

Construing together the forfeiture clause of the certificate, the by-laws, and the notice, we think the expression “date of call” means date of payment, and therefore Mr. Pasley’s membership in the association was not forfeited at the time of his death.

The certificate read that “a failure to pay said assessment or dues within 15 days after call” should forfeit his membership. This was clearly a period of grace. It will be observed that “date of call” is applied to payment both of dues and of assessments. The dues were absolutely payable on the 1st of March and November of each year. As applied to them, “date of call” could only mean "the date they were payable. The secretary’s testimony concedes this, and in fact it admits of no other interpretation. The by-laws provided that both assessment and dues might be made payable at the same time, and the secretary’s notice made them so. If appellees’ contention were correct, the membership became forfeited when 15 days had expired after October 5, 1925, the date of notice. But the notice stipulated, “last date of payment is November 1, 1925.” This was a clear statement that the assessment and dues, to both of which the notice alluded, were payable on that date.

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Related

Southland Life Ins. v. Hopkins
244 S.W. 989 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1922)
Wall v. Basin Mining Co.
101 P. 733 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 S.W.2d 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pasley-v-brady-mut-life-assn-texapp-1927.