Reed v. Ancient Order of Red Cross

69 P. 127, 8 Idaho 409, 1902 Ida. LEXIS 29
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 29, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 69 P. 127 (Reed v. Ancient Order of Red Cross) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reed v. Ancient Order of Red Cross, 69 P. 127, 8 Idaho 409, 1902 Ida. LEXIS 29 (Idaho 1902).

Opinion

QHARLES, C. J.

— The appellant, a corporation organized as a fraternal society for the protection of its members against loss by reason of.accident and death, issued, through its supreme president and supreme secretary, on the twenty-eighth day of April, 1900, a certificate of membership to one Maurice Dobbins, in which it agreed to, and did, insure the said member against injury from accident and death, upon certain terms and conditions. In said certificate, among other things it is stipulated “that Maurice Dobbins has been regularly admitted a member of Clarks Pork Lodge 2, located at Clarks Fork, Idaho, and while in good standing in this fraternity is entitled to all the benefits of membership; and at death his beneficiary, being Courtie Dell Reed, related to him as a sister, shall be permitted to participate in the mortuary fund to the amount .of one assessment on the membership, not exceeding the sum of [412]*412$3,000, which sum will be paid to said beneficiary within ninety days after satisfactory proof of such member’s death shall have been received by the supreme trustees.” This action was commenced upon said certificate, and the complaint alleges the performance of the conditions required of said member, Dobbins, during his life, and the performance of all the conditions required of the- said beneficiary, the respondent, Courtie Dell Reed, after the death of said member. The complaint also alleges “that at the time of the death of said Dobbins there existed and remained, and ever since has existed and remains, a mortuary fund, belonging to said defendant, ample and sufficient to pay the amount of said insurance, to wit, the sum of $3,000, and out of which it is proper and just that the same should be paid, and which said mortuary fund was and. is created for the purpose of paying such claims.” There is no specific allegation in the complaint as to the amount of money that one assessment on the membership would produce. There was no demurrer to this complaint, and the defendant answered, denying the allegations of the complaint, except as to the corporate existence of the defendant and the issual of said benefit certificate. The answer also avers and sets forth some of the provisions of the constitution, which will hereafter be discussed. The cause was tried before the court and a jury. After the jury was sworn, and the respondents had called their first witness, the appellant objected to the introduction of any evidence on the ground that the complaint did not state a cause of action, and that the complaint shows that the plaintiffs had not sought the proper remedy. Counsel for appellant, in stating said objection, said: “This is an action solely for money, but it is based upon this benefit certificate, which does not provide they shall be paid the specific sum of $3,000, but gives the beneficiary the right to participate in the mortuary fund to the extent of one assessment on the membership of that order; and they are not entitled, under their beneficiary certificate, to §,n absolute money judgment, and have, therefore, brought their suit wrong.” This objection was overruled, to which appellant excepted, and the first assignment of error [413]*413is based upon this action of the court, and is stated in the record as follows: "The court erred in overruling defendant’s objection to the introduction of any evidence in behalf of the plaintiffs in this cause, made upon the ground that the complaint does not state a cause of action or a cause of suit, and that the complaint in this cause shows upon its face that the plaintiffs have not sought the proper remedy, the said action being an action solely for money; but it is based upon a benefit certificate which does not provide for the payment of any specific sum of money, and gives the beneficiary the right to participate in a mortuary fund to the extent of one assessment on the membership of the defendant order.” Counsel for appellant devotes a large part of his brief to a discussion of this assignment of error. He contends that the respondents mistook their remedy, and that the proper remedy was a suit in equity for specific performance, and cites the following authorities: Smith v. Association (C. C.), 24 Fed. 685; In re La Solidarite Mut. Ben. Assn., 68 Cal. 392, 9 Pac. 453; Curtis v. Insurance Co., 48 Conn. 98; Association v. Sears, 114 Ill. 108, 29 N. E. 480; Newman v. Association, 72 Iowa, 242, 33 N. W. 662; Rainsbarger v. Association, 72 Iowa, 191, 33 N. W. 626; Bailey v. Association, 71 Iowa, 689, 27 N. W. 770; Deardorff v. Association, 89 Cal. 599, 27 Pac. 158; Burdon v. Association, 147 Mass. 360, 17 N. E. 874, 1 L. R. A. 146. We have carefully examined each of the decisions cited, and find that none of them are in point. The certificate sued on in this case is entirely different from those involved in the cases cited. In the cases cited the respective benefit associations undertook to pay to the nominee or beneficiary after the death of the assured, the proceeds of an assessment less costs and expense of collection, not to exceed in amount a certain sum. Here the stipulation is that the appellant will pay out of the mortuary fund "the amount of one assessment,” not to exceed $2,000. The complaint alleged a mortuary fund in the appellant’s treasury to exceed the maximum amount of the mortuary benefit stipulated in the certificate, and proved that there was some five or six thousand dollars in said fund. The facts alleged in the com[414]*414plaint justify the inference that one assessment on the membership amounted to more than $2,000, and there is no contention on behalf of appellants that one assessment on the membership would not produce $2,000 or more. The amount of “one assessment on the membership” is a matter particularly and peculiarly within the knowledge of the appellant, and not to be presumed, to be within the knowledge of the respondents. While the complaint did not state positively that one assessment on the membership amounted at the date of the death to $2,000, yet it does not appear in the record that that objection to it was ever made in the lower court; and after verdict and judgment we will not hold that defect in the complaint fatal, the specific objection not having been raised by special demurrer on the ground of uncertainty in the trial court.

The transcript contains the constitution and general laws of the appellant. Section 27 thereof contains the following provision: “He [a member] shall be liable for all subsequent benefit assessments in accordance with the laws of the order. The rate of assessment shall be [gives table of rate of assessment from age sixteen to fifty-five years], which assessment shall be for the purpose of creating a mortuary fund out of which to pay the mortuary claims of the order, and no part of the mortuary fund shall be used for any other purpose.” The complaint defectively stated a cause of action. The only defect in the statement thereof in the complaint was the uncertainty as to the amount of one assessment on the membership, but this objection could only be made by special demurrer, and, if not made in that way, was waived. (Eev. Stats., secs. 4174, 4178.) It must be kept in mind that the stipulation in the certificate was to pay, not the proceeds of one assessment of the membership, less expenses and cost of collection, not exceeding $2,000, but that the said beneficiary should be paid out of the mortuary fund the sum of the amount of one assessment on the membership. The assessment is referred to in the certificate to fix the extent of the liability of the appellant, and not with the intent or purpose of creating a fund with which to pay the death loss.

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Bluebook (online)
69 P. 127, 8 Idaho 409, 1902 Ida. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-ancient-order-of-red-cross-idaho-1902.