Sawyer v. Iowa State Conference

263 N.W. 236, 220 Iowa 806
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedNovember 12, 1935
DocketNo. 43002.
StatusPublished

This text of 263 N.W. 236 (Sawyer v. Iowa State Conference) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sawyer v. Iowa State Conference, 263 N.W. 236, 220 Iowa 806 (iowa 1935).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

Hattie Sawyer is the widow of M. G. Sawyer. He died on April 5, 1933, and at the time of his death was a bricklayer and mason by occupation. She commenced this suit in equity against the Iowa State Conference and the Iowa City Local No. 18, both being separate units of the Bricklayers, Masons and Plasterers International Union of America, to compel the payment of death benefits to the widow of a deceased member, to establish a trust in a portion of the mortuary fund, and, in the event of its being depleted, to enforce the making of an assessment against the membership of said organizations, and for general equitable relief.

The defendants filed answer, admitting they were doing business in Iowa as an association, but claiming that Mrs. Sawyer’s husband was duly and legally dropped from the membership of said subordinate union on account of the nonpayment of dues and assessments owing by him for at least three consecutive months; that he was in the month of November, 1932, four months in arrears in the matter of payment of dues and assessments, and thereby ceased, under the constitution, rules, and regulations of said association, to be entitled to any of the benefits of said local, state, and national organization; that he was never duly or legally reinstated to membership; that he was not a member in good standing at the time of his death, and not entitled to participate in said mortuary fund of the defendants. Defendants also claimed that if M. G. Sawyer paid any dues or assessments to the secretary of the local lodge after he was duly and legally dropped from membership, said payments were not accepted with the authority or approval of either the state or national organization, but contrary to the rules of said organization; that the deceased was not a recorded member in the office of the secretary of the defendant association at the time of his death. Defendants also denied that proper proof of loss had been furnished, as required by the constitution, rules, and regulations.

To the answer the plaintiff filed a reply, in which she denied that her husband, M. G. Sawyer, was legally dropped from membership, and denied that he was in arrears in payment of dues to *808 the association; and further pleaded that if he ever had been dropped from membership he was fully reinstated; that he paid all assessments; that under a well-established practice and custom, reinstatement became automatic upon the payment of any. delinquent dues and assessment; and that in any event the defendants had waived any provisions of its by-laws relating to reinstatement. She then pleaded estoppel, based upon the conduct of the defendant Iowa Conference in receiving and retaining assessments paid by the members, and claimed that she did furnish proof of death as required by the defendants.

The lower court found that the equities were with the plaintiff, and entered a judgment in her favor and against the Iowa State Conference of the Bricklayers, Masons and Plasterers International Union of America, and the Iowa City Local No. 18, in the sum of $400, together with interest and costs. The court ordered that any_ money or other property found in the mortuary fund of the defendants, or either of them, be impressed with the lien of the judgment therein declared; that said defendants and either of them were ordered to make a proper assessment on the membership of said organization in compliance with the constitution, rules, and regulations of said organization, to raise sufficient funds to pay said judgment and interest, within a reasonable time.

From this judgment and decree the Iowa State Conference has appealed. The Iowa City Local No. 18 did not appeal.

M. G. Sawyer was a bricklayer and mason by occupation. On October 4, 1922, he was initiated into the Iowa City Local No. 18 of the Iowa Conference of the Bricklayers, Masons and Plasterers International Union of America. There were three separate and distinct units in this organization; the local at Iowa City, the Iowa State Conference, with offices at Waterloo, and the International Union, with headquarters in Washington. One of the benefits of belonging to the association was that the Iowa State Conference maintained what was known as the mortuary fund. A part of the dues of each member of the local organization was contributed for the purpose of maintaining this fund so that upon the death of a member in good standing his widow was entitled under the rules and constitution to receive the benefits of the mortuary fund. At the time that Sawyer first joined the organization, the amount was $500, but later, by proper amendment to the constitution and *809 rules, it was cut to $400. No policy of insurance or benefit certificate was issued, but the members received what was known as a working card or due book and the constitution, laws, and working code of the Iowa State Conference. That Sawyer was duly initiated in 1922 is not denied; that he paid his dues in the amount of approximately $2.50 per month to the secretary of the local, No. 18 at Iowa City, is not denied. But he had the habit, as it seems was the custom of a great many members of the local at Iowa City, not to pay the dues each month, but to pay them sometimes one or two months in advance, and then again he would be in default some one, two, or three or four months, after which time he would make a payment, paying in full the dues. This method of paying dues continued over the entire period that Sawyer was a member, which was eleven years. The defense here raised is that under the constitution and by-laws the failure to pay dues for two months suspended a member, without notice, from the rights, benefits, and privileges under the constitution; and that if a member failed to pay dues for three consecutive months he was dropped, without notice, according to the rules and regulations. It appears without any question that Sawyer did not pay the said assessments and dues for July, August, September, and October of 1932, until December of 1932, when he paid to the secretary of the Iowa City Local No. 18, who was the collecting official of the Iowa Conference, the sum of $17.50, which amount paid up all the dues in arrears and the dues for December of 1932. Thereafter, he paid the dues each month as they became due, up until the time of his death, which occurred in April of 1933.

The constitution of the association did contain the clause that in case of the failure of a member to pay dues for a period of three months, without notice he was automatically dropped and could not be reinstated except upon proper application. But the appellee claims that this provision was waived due to the method in which business was conducted and the dues were accepted; that the waiver was due to the fact that the secretary of the local, No. 18 at Iowa City, accepted these dues; and that the custom and practice of paying dues had been to pay either in advance for a couple of months, or, when they became in arrears, to pay dues in a lump sum. To this contention the appellant answered that the secretary of the subordinate union under the constitution and by-laws had no right or authority *810 to accept any dues from any member who was three months or more in arrears, except in cases where permission had been granted by the executive board of the Iowa Conference, and that the executive board of the Iowa Conference never had granted permission in the case of M. G. Sawyer.

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Bluebook (online)
263 N.W. 236, 220 Iowa 806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sawyer-v-iowa-state-conference-iowa-1935.