Sharpe v. Grand Lodge, Ancient Order of United Workmen

188 N.W. 100, 108 Neb. 193, 1922 Neb. LEXIS 272
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1922
DocketNo. 21983
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 188 N.W. 100 (Sharpe v. Grand Lodge, Ancient Order of United Workmen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sharpe v. Grand Lodge, Ancient Order of United Workmen, 188 N.W. 100, 108 Neb. 193, 1922 Neb. LEXIS 272 (Neb. 1922).

Opinions

Clements, District Judge.

The plaintiff is the widow of Marion R. Sharpe, and the beneficiary named in the fraternal benefit certificate issued by defendant to her said deceased husband, and, in this action, she seeks to recover on said certificate. . The petition is in the usual form, the allegations of which are admitted in the answer. Defendant seeks to avoid liability by alleging and contending that assured failed to pay an assessment of $11.20 which became due May 1, 1917, and that by such failure he thereupon stood suspended and forfeited all of his rights as a member from and after May 28, 1917. Such forfeiture is denied by plaintiff. At the trial the defendant, admitted that, under the pleadings, the bur[195]*195den of proof rested upon it, and, at defendant’s request, the trial court made an order to that effect. After the defendant had closed its case and rested, on motion of plaintiff, the court directed the jury to return a verdict for plaintiff, which was done and a judgment was rendered thereon. Defendant appeals.

The facts disclosed by the record, briefly stated, are as follows: In March, 1892, said Marion R. Sharpe became a member of the defendant society through its local lodge located at Goehner, Nebraska, and defendant thereupon issued to him the certificate sued upon. His assessment rate at that time was $1 a month. In July, 1905, it was raised to $2 and in September, 1915, to $3. Assured paid all of the assessments made against him under these various rates and all dues claimed by the defendant up to the 1st day of May, 1917. In January, 19Í7, defendant revised its constitution and by-laws, and' thereby again raised its rates therein, stating that said new rates should go into effect May 1 of that year. By this revision Mr. Sharpe’s assessment rate was increased from $3 to $11.20. -Assured was a resident of Seward county, Nebraska, but on May 1, 1917, and for sometime before and after said date, he was absent from this state visiting in Kansas and California. In the early part of May, 1917, the financier of said Goehner lodge, Mr. O’Neall, received a post office money order for $3 from Sharpe’s son and another for a like amount from his friend, Mr. Muir, both of which were sent for the purpose of paying Marion R. Sharpe’s assessment. After receiving said money, O’Neall wrote to Sharpe telling him that his rate had been raised and that it required $8.20 more to pay his May assessment. He did not credit Sharpe on the books of the defendant for any of the money so received, but held the sum received of Mr. Muir until about the middle of June and that received of Sharpe’s son until about the 1st of July, 1917, and then returned same to said parties. He refused to credit or apply this money for the expressed reason that [196]*196he understood and insisted that the new rate went into effect May 1, and the funds so received were insufficient to pay the amount required by such rate. About July 7 of that year Mr. O’Neall was notified that $11.20 had been wired to a bank in Seward to pay Sharpe’s assessment, and between the 19th and 24th of July he received a post office money order of $11.20 for that same purpose, but he refused to credit or apply either of said sums, giving as his reason for such refusal that Sharpe had been suspended on May' 29 and could not be reinstated without a health certificate. Sharpe died on July 21, 1917.

The defense in this case is based upon an alleged forfeiture for failure to pay an assessment. “Forfeitures are not favored, and should not be enforced unless the courts arc compelled to do so.” Springfield F. & M. Ins. Co. v. McLimans, 28 Neb. 846. “Forfeitures are looked upon by the courts with ill-favor and will be enforced only when the strict letter of the contract requires it.” Connecticut Fire Ins. Co. v. Jeary, 60 Neb. 338; Haas v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., 84 Neb. 682. “Forfeitures are not favored, and to be available as a defense to an action must be pleaded and strictly proved.” Farmers & Merchants Ins. Co. v. Newman, 58 Neb. 504. Under the foregoing rules, in order to establish its defense, the burden was upon defendant to prove every material fact necessary to constitute a forfeiture of the certificate sued on. This necessarily included proof that the revision and increase of rates made in January, 1917, were legal and valid, and that the new rate which raised Sharpe’s assessment from $3 to $11.20, and for the nonpayment of which latter sum it is sought to enforce a forfeiture, had taken effect and was in force during the month of May, 1917. Defendant recognized .this, assumed the burden of proof, and attempted to prove said facts by introducing its constitution and by-laws passed in January, 1917, by which Sharpe’s new rate was fixed at $11.20 a month, and in which it is stated.that said new rate should be' in effect on and after May 1, 1917. De[197]*197fendant also pleaded and proved that, in the case of Funk v. Stevens, 102 Neb. 681, the legality and validity of said new rate was fully determined and established. We shall assume, in the further consideration of' the case at bar¿ that the decision in the Funk case established the validity of said new rate and settled all material questions therein involved and determined. We have carefully examined the pleadings in the Funk case, which were introduced in evidence herein by defendant^ and also the opinion of this court in said case, and find that neither the question of whether any notice was required to be given before said new rates could be enforced, nor the question of when said rates went into effect was in issue or determined in that case, and said questions are therefore open for determination in the instant case.

The provisions of the statute of the state under which a fraternal beneficiary association or a mutual insurance company is organized become and are a controlling part of the contract between it and its members. Bacon, Benefit Societies, sec. 53; Farmers Mutual Ins. Co. v. Kinney, 64 Neb. 808; Morgan v. Hog Raisers Mutual Ins. Co., 62 Neb. 446. The introduction in evidence of defendant’s constitution and by-laws as revised in January, 1917, which provide that the new rates shall take effect, on May 1 of that year, would, we think, be sufficient proof that sai rates were in force from and after that date, if there were no provisions of the statute, of which the court takes judicial notice, which modify or control the time when such changed rate could take effect.

Section 8295, Rev. St. 1918, provides that no change or raise in the schedule of rates of a fraternal beneficiary as sociation shall be effective “until ninety days from and after due notice of such change shall have been given by the proper officer or officers of such governing body to the members of such society through its official paper and by notice thereof to the local lodges or societies by mail to the proper officers of such local orders.” There is no evidence [198]*198in the record tending to show that notice was given to members by publication in defendant’s official paper, and the only evidence as to notice given to local lodges is that of Mr. O’Neall, financier of Goehner lodge, who testified that he was informed of said raise of rates in the fore part of May, 1917. Plaintiff contends that defendant failed to prove that said new rate was in force in May, 1917, and therefore the right to forfeit Sharpe’s certificate for failure to pay said rate has not been established, and the trial court evidently adopted this theory.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 N.W. 100, 108 Neb. 193, 1922 Neb. LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharpe-v-grand-lodge-ancient-order-of-united-workmen-neb-1922.