Shartle v. Modern Brotherhood

122 S.W. 1139, 139 Mo. App. 433, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 508
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 15, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 122 S.W. 1139 (Shartle v. Modern Brotherhood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shartle v. Modern Brotherhood, 122 S.W. 1139, 139 Mo. App. 433, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 508 (Mo. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

ELLISON, J. —

Plaintiff is the beneficiary in a

benefit certificate for $1,000 issued by defendant to her husband in his lifetime. He died and defendant refused to pay and plaintiff thereupon instituted this action.

The defendant is a fraternal benefit society organized under the statutes of Iowa and is also doing business in this State under authority of our laws. On the 20th of November, 1906, the deceased then being a resident of Independence, Missouri, made application to the subordinate lodge of defendant for that city for membership and for the benefit certificate in controversy. The application was approved on the 23d of November, 1906, and on the next day the benefit certificate was issued and sent by defendant’s “Supreme Secretary” from the home office 5 n Iowa to the secretary of the subordinate lodge at Independence. A few days thereafter, on the 5th of December, 1906, that secretary delivered the certificate to the deceased, and collected from him the benefit assessment for the month of December. A few days after this, viz. on the 13th of December, 1906, deceased died without having been initiated or accepted as a member of the Independence lodge and without having taken any of the ritualistic work prescribed by the by-laws of the society. On these subjects the by-laws contained the following provisions:

“Sec. A. . . . Upon receipt of the benefit certificate the President shall notify the candidate and. he shall be initiated by the subordinate lodge at a regular or special meeting. At any time before the initiation of an applicant, the lodge may, by a majority vote, refuse to initiate, in which case, the benefit certificate [438]*438with a certified statement of the action of the subordinate lodge, shall be immediately forwarded to the Supreme Secretary.
“Sec. D. The initiation fee shall be deposited by the secretary with the treasurer, and in case the applicant is rejected, said fee shall be returned to him by order of the lodge. But if the applicant fails to report for medical examination within thirty days after his election, or fails to report for initiation within sixty days after his benefit certificate is issued, he shall forfeit the membership fee, and if he desires to become a member, must'again make application, when his fees shall be credited on second application. . . .
“Sec. G. The liability of this fraternity for the payment of benefits upon the death or injury of a member shall not begin until all the acts, qualification and requirements prescribed in the above division, and in all the laws, rules, regulations and ritual of the fraternity shall have been fully complied with by him, and until all acts therein prescribed for the lodge shall have been fully complied with by it, and until his application shall have been approved by thé lodge and Head Physician, and a benefit certificate issued as provided in Sec. 0 of this division, and delivered to the applicant while in good health, and no officer of this fraternity is authorized or permitted to waive any of the provisions of this division, or these laws, or any other of the laws of this fraternity which shall relate to the contract of insurance between the members and the fraternity.”

It thus appears that there was delivered to deceased and he accepted a benefit certificate before he became initiated as a member of the defendant’s subordinate lodge for Independence, and before he took upon himself any ritualistic work. The by-laws above quoted provide that when the benefit certificate is received the applicant therefor shall be initiated by the subordinate lodge. If initiation is refused the certificate is to be returned to the Supreme Secretary at the home office. [439]*439It will be seen that tbe by-laws further provide that no liability shall attach “until all the acts, qualification and requirements prescribed . . . and all the laws, rules, regulations and ritual shall have been fully complied with.” Such laws also provide that no officer is authorized to waive any provisions thereof. The deceased died without having complied with any 'of these prerequisites entitling him to a benefit certificate.

The terms of section 1408 of the statutes of 1899 require (as the by-laws of defendant required) that these associations have a lodge system and a ritualistic form of work. The St. Louis Court of Appeals has said that “By requiring a lodge system the statute evidently intended that no person could become a member of these orders until he was initiated as a member of one of its lodges.” The by-laws of these associations expressly so provide. [Hiatt v. Fraternal Home, 99 Mo. App. 105.] And this is said to be not an idle form, but is necessary under the charter of the society. [Loyd v. Modern Woodmen, 113 Mo. App. 19.]

The question now under consideration has been before the courts in other states and it is held that initiation into the lodge and compliance with essential terms of the by-laAVS of the. association are necessary prerequisites to a valid and binding beneficiary certificate. [Matkin v. Supreme Lodge, 82 Tex. 301; Driscoll v. Modern Brotherhood, 77 Neb. 282; Loudon v. Modern Brotherhood, 119 N. W. 425 (Minnesota); see also Taylor v. Grand Lodge, 29 N. Y. Supp. 773.]

It cannot be denied, for the record conclusively shows, that deceased was never initiated into the society, nor were any of the essential matters done by him, required by the by-laws, which entitled him to a. benefit certificate or obligated the society to pay the certificate after his death.

But it is insisted that defendant is estopped to deny liability by having waived these provisions of its bylaws, and that the obligation arose from that fact.

[440]*440There is no doubt that an association of this character can become liable by waiver and estoppel, notwithstanding the prerequisites to liability, as required by the laws of the association, have not been complied with. [McMahon v. Maccabees, 151 Mo. 522; Supreme Fraternal Circle v. Crawford, 32 Tex. Civ. App. 603; Benefit Ass’n v. Blue, 120 Ill. 121; McCorkle v. Texas Benevolent Ass’n, 71 Tex. 149.] These authorities are taken from plaintiff’s brief, but in each of them it appears to be necessary that the society has acted towards deceased in such way as to lead him to believe the laws would not be enforced and that an obligation would attach notwithstanding there had not been any compliance with those laws. So it may be said that if the association, through it supreme officers, by a course of dealing with the deceased leads him to believe that it has assumed an obligation to pay the certificate without compliance with its laws, then it will not be permitted to deny liability. And though this course of dealing has been had with inferior officers — officers of the subordinate lodge — without authority to bind the society, yet if it has been carried on in such way or for such length of time as necessarily to have been known to the supreme officers of the general society, it will become binding.

What are the facts in this case as applied to this rule of law? Assuming, as we must, that deceased was acquainted with defendant’s by-laws, as we have quoted them, what evidence is there to show that he was lulled into security or deceived by the defendant; or that he was led to believe the defendant would not require him to comply with the laws, even to becoming a member of the society? We are not cited to any testimony of that character in the record.

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Bluebook (online)
122 S.W. 1139, 139 Mo. App. 433, 1909 Mo. App. LEXIS 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shartle-v-modern-brotherhood-moctapp-1909.