Sleight v. Supreme Council of Mystic Toilers
This text of 107 N.W. 183 (Sleight v. Supreme Council of Mystic Toilers) 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.
Opinion
[380]*380
The record is in much confusion as to the amount actually paid by the deceased. She held a receipt for the amount now claimed to be delinquent, and this the appellants attempt to discredit by evidence tending to show that [381]*381it was in fact given for assessment No. 2 bnt as we have said, there is in reality no evidence that such an assessment as No. 2 was ever made. Again, the reports of the subordinate council sent to the supreme council show the payment of three assessments, Nos. one, two and three. If assessment No. 2 for 1900 was in fact made, it was the first assessment for which Mrs. Sleight was liable, and the advance assessment paid at the time of initiation should have been applied to its payment. Hetzel v. Knights and Ladies of Golden Precept, 129 Iowa, 655; Arrison v. Mystic Toilers, 129 Iowa, 303; Rambousek v. Mystic Toilers, 133 Iowa, 375. If three assessments of $1.50 each were in fact paid, while but two could legally be demanded, the' appellants had more than enough of a surplus to pay the quarterly per capita tax of fifty cents, which it is claimed was unpaid at the time of death. In a case of this kind a forfeiture will not be declared except upon clear and satisfáctory evidence, and this the record wholly fails to present.
It is manifest that the trial court found the plaintiffs entitled to the monument fund of $100 and to funeral benefits for the same amount. The appellees now admit that they are not entitled to the former, but do insist on the latter. We think they are entitled to it. The petition as amended alleges that the plaintiffs are the nearest of kin to the deceased, and the evidence shows that they are her children, and that they did in fact have charge of her burial. This clearly brings them within the provisions of article 28 of the laws of the defendant company. On the first appeal we held that the plaintiffs were not entitled to a money judgment for the death benefit, and as there has been no change in the issue affecting this right the plaintiffs are not now entitled thereto. It may be that on proper pleadings and proof it may appear that the plaintiffs are' entitled to a judgment for the full amount of the death benefit, but on the present record no more can be done than to order an assessment therefor within thirty days' after the filing of this [382]*382opinion, sucb assessment to be made on all contributing members at the time of the death of Laura A. Sleight. The plaintiffs are, however, entitled to a judgment for the funeral benefit of $100 with interest thereon at 6 per cent, per annum from the 1st day of November, 1900. As thus modified, the judgment is affirmed.
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107 N.W. 183, 133 Iowa 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sleight-v-supreme-council-of-mystic-toilers-iowa-1906.