People ex rel. Hardin v. Supreme Lodge Modern American Fraternal Order

204 Ill. App. 559, 1917 Ill. App. LEXIS 483
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 16, 1917
StatusPublished

This text of 204 Ill. App. 559 (People ex rel. Hardin v. Supreme Lodge Modern American Fraternal Order) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. Hardin v. Supreme Lodge Modern American Fraternal Order, 204 Ill. App. 559, 1917 Ill. App. LEXIS 483 (Ill. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Thompson

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee, William Hardin, filed a petition praying for a writ of-mandamus directed to the Supreme Lodge Modem American Fraternal Order, commanding it to accept monthly dues and mortuary payments accrued and to accrue on account of a certificate of membership issued to petitioner in the defendant Order, and to reinstate petitioner in all the rights and benefits of a member in good standing in the defendant Order.

The petition sets forth a copy of the application for membership, the certificate of membership issued to petitioner dated June 19, 1901, with a copy of the bylaws then in force and the amendments and additions thereto since that time, with certain correspondence between petitioner and the supreme secretary of the Order in which the Order claims to have canceled the membership certificate issued to petitioner for the reason that he is engaged in the saloon business.

The defendant filed a special demurrer to the petition on the ground that the petitioner is not entitled to the writ on the facts pleaded. The court overruled the demurrer, and defendant, standing by its demurrer, a writ of mandamus was ordered as prayed. The defendant appeals.

The application for membership signed by appellee June 17, 1901, contains the statement: “I further agree that shall I engage in any of the occupations designated as hazardous I shall stand suspended as a beneficiary member so long as I am engaged in such hazardous occupation, and no notice from any officer shall be necessary to cause my suspension, and in such case no recovery shall be had upon the certificate issued on this application * * *. This application and the laws of the Supreme Lodge now in force or which may be hereafter promulgated are made a part of my contract of insurance with the Modem American Fraternal Order, and I agree to obey and conform to all the laws, rules and regulations of the Order.”

The certificate states that it is issued upon condition that the application “together with the Laws, Rules and Regulations of the Order, now in force or hereafter adopted, be cmd are hereby made a part of this contract.”

At the time appellee joined the Order, by-law No. 28 provided under the heading “Hazardous occupation:” “No person shall be admitted to membership in the beneficial department who is engaged in either of the following occupations: Manufacturers of gun powder * * * and persons engaged in the sale of malt or spirituous liquors as a beverage, either as agent, clerk or principal.

“Any beneficial member engaging in any of the above hazardous occupations, who shall come to his or her death as a result of such hazardous employment, shall not be entitled to recover from the Order on his or her benefit certificate for such death.”

In August 1901, the by-laws were amended and a section entitled “Prohibited risks” adopted. This section provides that “saloon keepers and bartenders” and certain other occupations shall not be admitted to membership, and if any member should engage in the prohibited occupations and come to their death or meet injury as a result of such prohibited occupation, no recovery could be had on the certificate.

In 1910, the by-law concerning prohibited risks was again changed in wording only, the substance remaining the same so far as it affected saloon keepers.

In May, 1914, the by-law concerning “Prohibited risks” was again changed. The effect of this change was not only to prohibit the admission of “manufacturers of gun powder * * * saloon keepers and bar tenders,” but it further provided that if “any beneficiary member engage in any of the above prohibited occupations '* * * such member shall thereby forfeit his or her membership and no recovery can be had on his or her certificate.”

The appellee engaged in the business of keeping a dramshop in the City of Lincoln, in December, 1904. In September, 1915, the supreme secretary of appellant wrote to appellee asking him if he was engaged in the saloon business or as a bartender? He answered stating that he “was then in the saloon business.” Thereupon the supreme secretary wrote a letter to appellee stating that the appellant in May had passed the amended by-law forfeiting all certificates held by saloon keepers, and that the amendment had been published in the official paper of the Order and the local lodges notified of the amendment and informing appellee that his benefit certificate was canceled under the amendment. In ‘the letter was included a check for $17.60 covering all payments made to the Order by appellee since May, 1914. The appellee tendered back the check and a sum equal to all dues and assessments that would have been made on his certificate had it remained in force.

The certificate contains a clause that it shall be incontestable after remaining in force three full years after its date. Appellee contends that by virtue of that provision the appellant could not avoid the certificate for any reason. That clause only relates to conditions existing at the time the certificate was issued and not to subsequent breaches of the contract. Weil v. Federal Life Ins. Co., 264 Ill. 425; Flanigan v. Federal Life Ins. Co., 231 Ill. 399. Such stipulations give the insurer a limited time in which to ascertain the truth of the representations made to obtain it, but cannot control and prohibit a fraternal organization from adopting reasonable by-laws at any time for the conduct of its members, where the application and the certificate both provide that the certificate is issued on condition that the laws of the Supreme "Lodge now in force or which may hereafter be promulgated are made a part of the contract. The right to modify the contract by new or amended by-laws is clearly reserved by apt words in the certificate, and the application states that the laws of the Supreme Lodge now in force or which may hereafter be promulgated are a part of the contract. That provision of the certificate has no effect on the issue here involved.

The controlling question is, did the appellant have the right to pass a by-law which would automatically deprive appellee of his membership because he had become a saloon keeper? It is contended on behalf of appellant that a by-law of a benefit society which provides for the forfeiture of all beneficial rights of a member who engages in the saloon business is not unreasonable and that it is legal, and that under the facts stated in the petition the by-law adopted in 1914 was valid and binding on appellee. By-law 28, of the appellant, adopted in 1897, classed all persons engaged in selling liquors as being in a hazardous business, and provided that no member engaged in such business, who should die or be injured because of such employment, should be entitled to benefits from the Order. In the application for membership signed by appellee, while by-law 28 was in force, he agrees “that shall I engage in any of the occupations designated as hazardous I shall stand suspended as a beneficiary member so long as I am engaged in such hazardous occupation, and no notice from any officer shall be necessary to cause my suspension.”

After the appellee had been a beneficial member for a little over three years he engaged in the business of running a saloon.

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Bluebook (online)
204 Ill. App. 559, 1917 Ill. App. LEXIS 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-hardin-v-supreme-lodge-modern-american-fraternal-order-illappct-1917.