Reisz v. Supreme Council American Legion of Honor

79 N.W. 430, 103 Wis. 427, 1899 Wisc. LEXIS 211
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 2, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 79 N.W. 430 (Reisz v. Supreme Council American Legion of Honor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reisz v. Supreme Council American Legion of Honor, 79 N.W. 430, 103 Wis. 427, 1899 Wisc. LEXIS 211 (Wis. 1899).

Opinion

Dodge, J.

1. The primary and vital question in this case is whether the fact that at the time of his decease Reisz had defaulted payment of an assessment due ten days before according to the strict words of his contract had unavoidably forfeited his rights.

It is urged that no such forfeiture occurred because the defendant had by a long course of dealing led the deceased to believe and understand that the provisions of the contract regarding failure of payment on the exact day specified would not be insisted on as suspending him from his membership] The findings of the jury on this subject have support in the evidence. It appears by the entries in decedent’s [430]*430receipt book that through the years 1892 and 1893 his payments were received frequently as late as two weeks after the specified pay day, and the secretary testifies that he was not suspended during those years. The collector testifies to1=1 receiving single assessments after due, although others had also been called, without question of decedent’s good standing, and that he was ready to receive the one assessment on July 10th, although two others, due, respectively, July 15th and July 20th, had been called before July 1st, and made no suggestion of insufficiency thereof until informed of Reisz’s death. In the interval between July 1st and July 10th no entry of suspension had been made on the lodge records, but immediately on learning of the death an attempt was made to enter a record as of an earlier date, thus indicating the officers’ understanding that their conduct up to that time had not been consistent with a theory of suspension meanwhile. It is, of course, true that under the by-laws decedent had a right at any time within sixty days after a default, if suspended, to reinstate himself by paying the defaulted assessment and such others as, though not due, had been called before default, and a mere payment and acceptance of money in accordance with that right would convey no necessary implication otherwise; but acceptance of overdue assessments without insisting, or even suggesting, that other acts were necessary for reinstatement, at least suggests an understand- ' ing that the transaction constituted a satisfaction of the original promise to pay, and that default did not exist. Such payment would otherwise be utterly futile, and it is unreasonable to suppose a member would make it. Defendant would be guilty of bad faith in receiving it if it intended to insist on its futility. In the light of the above-mentioned evidence from defendant’s officers, and the testimony of plaintiffs that throughout a long period such payments had been made and received from a few days to a month late, with no suggestion that anything more” was necessary to set [431]*431decedent right and protect his interests, the question of the intent and understanding of the parties was open to the jury, and they were justified in holding that such páyments were made and received on the understanding that decedent thereby kept his standing, and not that it was necessary to regain it. Erom that he might reasonably infer that he was in the future to be accorded a reasonable credit upon his assessments before there should be deemed to be a default causing his suspension, and that the strict letter of his contract had been modified or waived to that extent.

The fundamental general rule of the law, of course, is that the contract actually existing between the parties, the performance of the respective obligations to which they have agreed, shall be enforced; but a contract once made may be modified, and provisions favorable to a party thereto may be relaxed or eliminated. Bannister v. Patty's Ex'rs, 35 Wis. 215, 225; Insurance Co. v. Norton, 96 U. S. 234. Whether the minds of the parties have met on such modification or relaxation, then becomes the question for decision, and that question may be resolved as well from acts and conduct as from express words. When the exact performance of a condition is not of importance to the obligee, and results in serious injury or in forfeiture to the obligor, courts lean to such construction of words or acts as relaxes its stringency as being more likely to accomplish the true purpose and understanding of the parties, as well as to promote justice. Erdmann v. Mut. Ins. Co. 44 Wis. 376, 382.

In line with such general policy, the rule has become well established by authority that where, by failure of some exact performance, a forfeiture is imposed on one party by the strict terms of- an agreement, conduct of the other sufficient to induce a belief that such strict performance is not insisted on, but that a modified performance is satisfactory and will be accepted as equivalent, will justify a conclusion that the parties have assented to a modification of the original terms, [432]*432and that their minds have met upon the new understanding that a different mode of performance shall have the same effect — or, as it is often expressed, that the obligee has waived strict performance. Bannister v. Patty's Ex'rs, supra; Alexander v. Continental Ins. Co. 67 Wis. 422, 428; Staylow v. Wis. O. F. M. L. Ins. Co. 69 Wis. 228; Whiting v. Mississippi V. M. M. Ins. Co. 76 Wis. 592; True v. Bankers' L. Asso. 78 Wis. 287; Jackson v. N. W. M. R. Asso. 78 Wis. 472; Laycock v. Parker, ante, p. 161; Hartford L. A. Ins. Co. v. Unsell, 144 U. S. 439, 449; Insurance Co. v. Eggleston, 96 U. S. 572; Mayer v. Mut. L. Ins. Co. 38 Iowa, 308; Beatty v. Mut. R. F. L. Asso. 75 Fed. Rep. 65; Mueller v. Grand Grove U. A. O. D. 69 Minn. 236; Thropp v. Field, 26 N. J. Eq. 82; Dilleber v. Knickerbocker L. Ins. Co. 76 N. Y. 567, 572; 2 Bacon, Ben. Soc. § 433; 2 Beach, Ins. § 769; 2 Joyce, Ins. §§ 1356, 1361.

This rule is equally applicable to all contracts, although it is perhaps most frequently called into operation in case of insurance contracts, wherein are usually contained the most drastic provisions for forfeiture of all rights of the assured upon the slightest deviation from exact performance of various conditions, of some of which at least momentary and strict performance is often of but slight importance to the insurer. In Hartford L. A. Ins. Co. v. Unsell, 144 U. S. 448, the following language of the trial court is approved by the supreme court: “The plaintiff comes and says, ‘Conceding that this contract reads in this way, the company, by its conduct, waived the necessity of a strict compliance.’ She •does not say the company so said to her, or to her husband, ‘We do hot insist upon this; we waive this;’ but she says that the company so acted — so conducted itself in its dealings with her husband — that he, as a prudent, reasonable man, did believe, and had the right to believe, that payment on the very day specified would not be insisted upon. Of course, we speak by our actions, just as much as we do by [433]*433our words; and although there may be no spoken word, no written word, declaring a waiver, yet it may be that a man by his conduct, his course of dealing, justly and fairly leads the other party to believe that he does not care about a strict compliance. ...

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Bluebook (online)
79 N.W. 430, 103 Wis. 427, 1899 Wisc. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reisz-v-supreme-council-american-legion-of-honor-wis-1899.