Supreme Tribe of Ben Hur v. Miller

122 Ill. App. 489, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 551
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedOctober 9, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 122 Ill. App. 489 (Supreme Tribe of Ben Hur v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Supreme Tribe of Ben Hur v. Miller, 122 Ill. App. 489, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 551 (Ill. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Hr. Presiding J ustice Pdterbattgh

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action in assumpsit, brought by appellee against appellant, a fraternal insurance order, to recover the sum of $1,200, alleged to be due her by the terms of a beneficiary certificate issued by appellant to one Alexander B. Weber, who became a member of Caledonia Court Ho. 20, a subordinate lodge of said order, located at Urbana, Illinois, on December 2, 1901, and who died on Harch 15,1904. A trial by jury resulted in a verdict for appellee, upon which judgment was rendered for $1,200.

The declaration avers,- in substance, the issuance of the certificate to Weber, under which appellee, his aunt, was designated as beneficiary; .that assured was at the time of his death a member in good standing of said order; his death on Harch 15, 1904, and compliance by the insured, and appellee as beneficiary, with all the requirements and conditions of such certificate and the laws and regulations of the order. To the declaration appellant interl posed the general issue and two special pleas, the first of which avers that at the time the certificate was issued and ever since, there was in full force and effect the following law, rule and regulation of said society, viz.: “ If a member, sane or insane, voluntarily or involuntarily, attemps to commit suicide, such member shall ipso facto void all rights under his beneficial certificate and stand suspended from the order and shall not be eligible for reinstatement or membership thereafter; ” that said Weber, on February 11, 1904, voluntarily attempted to commit suicide by shooting, at Bloomington, Illinois; that because of such attempted suicide said Weber forfeited all his rights under said certificate, and was, by said act, suspended from said order and was not at the time of his death a member of the same. By the second special plea it is averred that Weber obtained said certificate by making false statements and answers in his application for said membership and certificate, which he had therein warranted to be full, true and complete, and by fraudulently concealing material matters and things that he should have therein disclosed.

In reply to the first special plea it is averred by appellee that Weber did not attempt to commit suicide; and further that prior to the date of the alleged attempt Weber had paid all assessments under said certificate, and that after said date, the appellant society, with knowledge of said attempt, by its officers and agents, received and accepted from appellee the monthly dues and assessments for the months of February and March, 1904, by reason of which it waived all right to insist upon a forfeiture by reason of such violation of the rules of the order. Upon the question of the attempted suicide John H. Pike, who on February 11,1904, occupied the room adjoining that occupied by Weber, testified substantially as follows:

“ Weber’s room was next to mine; he came into my room while I was shaving. He took his arm and pushed me to one side and pulled the dresser drawer out and looked in and closed it, and went and sat down on the bed. I said, ‘ What are you looking for, Alex. ? ’ He made no reply. He sat there a little while and said, 11 don’t know what in the hell to' do.’ I said, ‘ What is the matter with you ? ’ He said, ‘ Nothing.’ I said, ‘ I guess there is something the matter with you.’ ‘Well,’ he said, ‘I got into it.’ I said, ‘ I told you a long time ago to keep your mouth shut and attend to your own business.’ We talked on for a little while and I finished shaving, left the light burning and went down into the bath room. Just after I got there they called me. The shooting took place in my room. I did not hear the shots. I had been out of my room only about two minutes when my attention was called to the commotion upstairs. I was the first man in that room. I went into the room and struck a match and lighted the lamp. He had blown out the light. I struck a match and looked around, and saw him lying on the bed. He had nothing in his hands. 1 went to him and said, ‘ Weber, what in the hell have you done ? ’ He said, ‘ I shot myself.’ I said, ‘ What for % ’ He said, ‘ Damned if I know. I wish I had made a good job of it.’ His clothes were afire. I tore his vest open and put the fire out. We turned him on his right side and back, pulled his clothes up and felt along to see the course of the wound. The wound was on the left side just at the lower rib probably three inches below the nipple. The size of the ball was No. 38. Had no further conversation with him. I visited him at the hospital. Had conversation with him there but once, but did not have a talk with him how he came by his wound. He was confined to his bed at that time. He simply said he shot himself. I do not know how he came to shoot himself. Saw the revolver after the shooting. It was lying under the dresser by the end of my trunk or-'about eight or ten feet from the bed.”

Carl Craig testified, in substance, as follows: “I knew Alex Weber in his lifetime. He boarded at my mother’s. I stayed there also. I did not hear any gun shot report. When I got into the room Weber was lying on the bed. He was fully dressed, with one foot touching the floor, the other hanging just over the edge of the bed. He had his hand to his side. ' We examined him and found that a bullet had entered his body there. We found a revolver under the edge of the dresser. The bed was in one corner of the room and the dresser in the other corner, about ten feet from the bed. This was just after supper, between 6:30 and 7 o’clock. When I asked him what he had done with the revolver, I could not tell definitely what he said. My best recollection is that he.said he threw it. He did not point or indicate where he had thrown it. They conveyed him to a hospital. Have given all the conversation had with Weber while he was lying on the bed in that room at mother’s residence. Mr. Pike was there. He was talking with Weber in the room. Weber said he wished he had done a good job. Do not know what Pike said to him prior to that. I asked him if he had shot himself. He said he did. I asked him why he did it, but he made no answer. There was not a word said in these conversations with regard to the shooting being an accident. Did not hear the question of accident talked of. They did not ask" whether it was an accident, whether somebody was the cause of it, or whether it was anybody’s else negligence or anything of that kind.”

Prom the foregoing testimony, which is practically uncontradicted, no other inference or conclusion can be reasonably drawn than that on the occasion in question Weber voluntarily attempted to take his own life, thus violating the rule or by-law set out in the first special plea; the effect of which act was ipso facto to suspend him from membership in the order and to render the beneficiary certificate void. The contention of appellee that Weber could not be suspended from the order upon a mere rumor that he had attempted suicide, without a trial or investigation, under section 103 of the by-laws, is without force. The section referred to, which provides merely that when it is charged or has come to the knowledge of the Supreme Tribe that a beneficial certificate has been obtained by false representations or concealments of any material fact, notice shall be given to the member and a hearing or inquiry had upon such charge, is wholly inapplicable.

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122 Ill. App. 489, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/supreme-tribe-of-ben-hur-v-miller-illappct-1905.