Supreme Lodge United Benevolent Ass'n v. Lawson

133 S.W. 907, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 273, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 89
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 10, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 133 S.W. 907 (Supreme Lodge United Benevolent Ass'n v. Lawson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Supreme Lodge United Benevolent Ass'n v. Lawson, 133 S.W. 907, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 273, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 89 (Tex. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, Associate Justice.

Mrs. Berta Lawson, plaintiff, recovered judgment against the Supreme Lodge United Benevolent Association, defendant, upon an insurance policy issued by the defendant upon the life of her husband, George Lawson, and the defendant has appealed.

The policy was in favor of George Lawson and his wife, Berta. Lawson, and stipulated that upon the death of either of the beneficiaries *275 the insurer would pay two thousand dollars to the survivor. It was delivered to S. M. Lawson for and on behalf of the insured by the secretary of defendant’s local lodge in Fort Worth on March 20, 1909. George Lawson died on May 24, 1909, of typhoid pneumonia having been confined in the hospital for three weeks prior to his death and was very sick on May 20th. At the time of the delivery of the policy S. M. Lawson gave to the secretary a check of the Fort Worth Creamery, a private corporation, upon the State National Bank, for the amount of the first premium due on the policy, this premium being for the month of April, and upon receipt of the check the secretary issued and delivered a receipt reciting payment of the first premium by the insured. At the time the check was given and the policy delivered George Lawson was in good health.' He was then an employee of the Fort Worth Creamery Company and the amount of the check was deducted from the salary due him by that company.

Miss Pankey, the local' secretary to whom the check was delivered, testified that it was presented to the bank for payment several times, and having been dishonored, she returned it to the maker, and that she had never received any money for the first premium. However, on May 20th she accepted payment from Ben Lawson of the amount due as a premium on the policy for the month of May, and at that time executed a receipt to the insured reciting that the payment was accepted as payment of the premium for the month of May. She testified that when this receipt was issued she told Ben Lawson that the check for the first premium had not been paid and requested a return of the receipt therefor; that the understanding between herself and Ben Lawson at that time was that the insured had had no protection for the month of April; and further that at the time she accepted payment of the May premium she did not know of George Lawson’s illness.

S. M. Lawson and Ben Lawson were brothers of George Lawson and were both officers of the Fort Worth Creamery, Ben Lawson being its secretary and- the officer who signed the check for the first premium. He testified that at that time the Fort Worth ■ Creamery was doing a business of about thirty or forty thousand dollars a year; . . . that it had never issued a check that remained unpaid and that it is still doing business. He testified that when the premium for May was paid Miss Pankey “then said something to me about the check for the first month’s dues; she told me that the previous check had not been paid; that she had sent it to the bank and they had returned it on account of insufficient funds; I told her that if that was the case that it would be paid if it was presented later; she also said that the check had been sent back to us; I told her I had not seen the check, and that if it did not show up and if it was lost, I would issue her a duplicate check or pay her the money either one. . . . When I told Miss Pankey that if the first check was lost I would issue her a duplicate check or give her the money, she did not say which she would want. ... I did not know until I paid the May dues that the *276 check for the April dues had not been paid, or that the secretary claimed that that check had not been paid; I presumed the check had been paid until she told me that it had not. . . . Unless the check has been paid right lately it has never been paid; the last time I. checked my bank account it did not show up; I don’t know whether it has been paid since then or not; it was still out the last time I checked my bank account. Yes, I swear that I never received this check back from Miss Pankey; I know that I never received it back.”

Miss Pankev testified that she had never seen George Lawson and according to her testimony she had no communication with him concerning the policy nor any premiums thereon.

Plaintiff, Mrs. Berta Lawson, testified that she had never received any notice that the policy was or would be canceled for non-payment ■of any premiums and no evidence was introduced to show that George Lawson had any notice that the check for the first premium had not been paid.

The policy contained the stipulation, “This contract is mutually ■entered into by and between the Supreme Lodge and George and Berta Lawson on condition that premiums will be paid according to its regulations, terms and rates and in full compliance with its constitution, laws and rules of the United Benevolent Association.” The application for the policy signed by the insured contained the following: “It is fully agreed that membership shall not begin, and benefit certificate .issued under this contract shall not be binding or in force and effect, until this application has been accepted by the Supreme Office and all required fees and the first monthly payment has been made to said Association.”

One of the by-laws of the order required a certain obligation to be taken by an applicant before becoming a member of the order and ■contained this stipulation: “And if any member by mistake or otherwise receive his certificate before he shall have been thus obligated, and having paid his current month’s assessment the same shall not be binding on the order until he shall have been thus initiated or obligated and •shall have paid his current month’s assessment.”

By the terms of another by-law a member was given until the last day ■of the current month to pay assessments due for that month, and, by a provision of the charter, assessments were levied during the natural life of the member. Upon the trial plaintiff in open court tendered to defendant the amount of the April premium and defendant tendered to plaintiff the amount of the May premiums and both tender's were ■declined.

The following is the entire charge given to the jury by the trial court:

“You are instructed that if j'ou believe from the evidence that Miss Pankey as the secretary of the Port Worth lodge of the defendant association delivered the certificate sued on in this case to S. M. Lawson for the deceased, George Lawson, and delivered at the same time the receipt for all the dues, which were required to be paid by the deceased George Lawson, and accepted in payment of the same, and agreed to *277

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.W. 907, 63 Tex. Civ. App. 273, 1910 Tex. App. LEXIS 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/supreme-lodge-united-benevolent-assn-v-lawson-texapp-1910.