Supreme Assembly, Royal Society of Good Fellows v. McDonald

35 A. 1061, 59 N.J.L. 248, 30 Vroom 248, 1896 N.J. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 35 A. 1061 (Supreme Assembly, Royal Society of Good Fellows v. McDonald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Supreme Assembly, Royal Society of Good Fellows v. McDonald, 35 A. 1061, 59 N.J.L. 248, 30 Vroom 248, 1896 N.J. LEXIS 41 (N.J. 1896).

Opinion

[249]*249The opinion of the court was delivered by

Nixon, J.

The plaintiff in error is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Rhode Island, with power to institute and grant charters to subordinate assemblies in other states. In pursuance of such authority a subordinate assembly was established in Jersey City, in this state. One of the objects of’the corporation is to create a “Widows’ and Orphans’ Benefit Fund,” from which, upon the death of any member in good standing, a sum not exceeding $3,000 is to be paid to such member’s family as he may direct. To constitute this fund an initiation fee is paid by the members, who also become liable, upon the death of a member, to an assessment, the amount of the initiation fee and the subsequent assessments varying according to the age of the member, reckoned by a table of rates fixed by the constitution and laws of the Supreme Assembly. No person over fifty-six years of age or under eighteen is eligible to membership.

One John McDonald, a citizen of New Jersey, became a member of this corporation by initiation in the subordinate assembly instituted at Jersey City, having first complied with all the requirements of the constitution, rules and regulations of the society, and received from the corporation a certificate entitled “Royal Society of Good Fellows’ Benefit Certificate,” for the sum of $3,000, payable to Eliza McDonald, his wife, upon satisfactory evidence of his death, provided he remained in good standing in the order at the time of his death. The certificate is dated December 23d, 1886, and duly attested by the officers of the Supreme Assembly.

On the 15th of November, 1893, John McDonald died, and due proof of his death, as required by the laws of the society, was furnished to the Supreme Assembly. Payment of the $3,000 stipulated in the benefit certificate being refused, Eliza McDonald, the widow and beneficiary, brought suit and recovered judgment for that amount.

The plaintiff in error, at the trial below, rested its defence upon two grounds, insisting, first, that John McDonald, in his written application for membership, falsely and fraudu[250]*250lently represented that he was under the age of fifty-six years, and second, that he afterwards failed to pay one of the'death. assessments within the time prescribed by the constitution and laws of the society, and thereby was suspended at the time of his death from membership and had forfeited all rights conferred by the benefit certificate.

The nature of the contract entered into by the parties to a benefit certificate such as was held by McDonald at the time of his death was'stated by Mr. Justice Depue in the case of Holland v. Chosen Friends, 25 Vroom 490, in which the learned judge said “The contract of the association with its beneficiary members is made up of the application for such membership, the certificate issued, whicji is an acceptance of the application, and the charter, constitution and by-laws of the society, and, in its construction and eifect, does not differ essentially from an ordinary policy of insurance.” Therefore, by the well-settled law relating to life insurance policies, any false statement as to age in the application for membership/ whether willfully or ignorantly made, whereby the insuring corporation was induced to make a contract it otherwise would not have made, or any failure by the insured to perform the obligations assumed by him in the contract, would be a sufficient bar to any action upon a certificate such as McDonald held.

Article 3 of the constitution and laws of the Supreme Assembly declares that only those who are between the ages of eighteen and fifty-six years can become members. In the contention at the trial below that John McDonald was above the latter age when admitted, the plaintiff in error offered the deposition of one Peter Quinn, which was excluded by the trial judge from the consideration of the jury. The exclusion of this • deposition is assigned for error. It was taken at Stewartstown, Ireland, by James B. Taney, United States Consul at Belfast, who was duly commissioned for that purpose. Peter Quinn, the deponent, was the parish priest at Stewartstown, and was asked to produce, and did produce, the “Registry of-Baptisms” of his parish, which, as he deposed, [251]*251came into liis possession when he assumed charge of the parish and of which he has since had the custody. From this book, in answer to certain questions, he proceeded to read extracts giving the dates of baptism of certain children of Hugh and Sarah McDonald, the parents of John McDonald. But the name of John McDonald does not appear by this deposition to be upon the register at all, and the only probative effect it could have upon ■ the question of his age is merely inferential from the relative ages of other members of the family reputed to be older or younger, for only the date off their baptism was'recorded. It is a well-settled rule that a parish register, showing only the date of a child's baptism, is not evidence of the date of its birth or of its identitv. Thu rule as to when the registry-book itself is admissible does not seem so clear.

In the case of Childress v. Cutter, 16 Mo. 24, it was heid that “ church registers are not admissible in evidence, except by statutory provision, unless the law of the country or state in which they are kept recognizes them as documents of an authentic and public nature.”

In the case of Hunt v. Order of Chosen Friends, 64 Mich. 671, the Supreme Court stated a somewhat different rule, and held that a sworn and examined extract from the parish record of a Catholic church, showing the baptism of the deceased party and reciting the names of the parents and their description, and a statement of the age of the person baptized, supported by evidence of the priest that such a record was required by the rules of the church, which record is thirty years old, is admissible as evidence of age. Applying either of the above tests of admissibility, the incompetency of the deposition in question becomes apparent, for it fails to show by what law or authority the registry was kept, or by whom kept; neither does it state to what religious denomination the church at Stewartstown belongs. There was no error in excluding this deposition from the consideration of the jury.

Further error is alleged because the trial judge charged the jury in the following language: “Now, there is one part of [252]*252this case that the court has concluded to deal with in such way that there will remain no difficulty in your mind about it. It is contended here that he was not a member in good standing at the time of his death, in that he had not paid all the dues and assessments in the by-laws to be paid by him. The court has concluded to direct you not to consider that defence at all. As I perceive it here, that defence is not made out; the contention is not supported by any evidence, and the court directs you that you need not give that matter any consideration.”

In this action, as appears by the record, the plaintiff alleged the performance of all conditions precedent generally, and the plaintiff in error pleaded the general issue, and pleaded specially only the alleged misrepresentation as to age. At the trial the defence was also made of the non-payment of a death assessment within the time prescribed by the constitution and laws of the society. Section 126 of the Practice act (Gen. Stcit, p. 2554) requires such a defence to be specially pleaded.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 A. 1061, 59 N.J.L. 248, 30 Vroom 248, 1896 N.J. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/supreme-assembly-royal-society-of-good-fellows-v-mcdonald-nj-1896.