United Moderns v. Rathbun

52 S.E. 552, 104 Va. 736, 1906 Va. LEXIS 140
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 18, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 52 S.E. 552 (United Moderns v. Rathbun) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Moderns v. Rathbun, 52 S.E. 552, 104 Va. 736, 1906 Va. LEXIS 140 (Va. 1906).

Opinion

Keith, P.,

delivered the opinion of the court. '

Plaintiff in error, The United Moderns, a beneficial society, issued a policy of life insurance to Frederick Gr. Rathbun, for the benefit of his infant children, for the sum of $1,000.

On becoming a member, as appears from the policy, Rath-bun stipulated that he would “comply with all and singular of the Constitution, Laws and Regulations of this Order,” and the policy further provided that “the member shall not be personally liable for. dues or assessments, but a failure to pay shall forfeit all right to benefits as provided in the Constitution and laws aforesaid.” The certificate of insurance also contained the following statement signed by Rathbun: “This certifies that I accept the within certificate and the benefits conferred, fully understanding and agreeing that the same is to be and remain a liability upon the order only upon condition:

“First. That the statements made by me in my application for membership and to the medical examiner are true;
“Second. That I pay or cause to be paid all assessments, dues or money payable to the order, promptly, on or before the day the same becomes delinquent.
. “Third. That I fully comply with the Constitution, Laws and Regulations of the Order. The within certificate to be and remain null and void for and during any such failure or default upon my part, as aforesaid.”

[738]*738Article 13, section 1 of the Constitution of the order provides: “The first monthly payment falls due on the' date of the issuance of the beneficiary certificate, and thereafter one monthly payment shall fall due on the first day of each succeeding calendar month, and must be paid on or before the last day of the month in which it falls due, and no notice shall be required from the Order for such payment.” And section 2, that “Members failing to make all payments as they become due, do elect, by reason of such failure, to terminate their membership in the Order, and shall thereupon stand suspended by the non-payment of the call, and, under the law, do elect and agree, by reason of such failure, not to hold the Order for any liability whatsoever, and do thereby surrender all rights as a beneficiary member; provided, that if the member is in good health and shall pay any past due payment within ninety days of the time it became due, together with all other payments that may have become due gn the meantime, and shall also accompany his payment with his certificate that he is in good health, and the local financier shall remit such payment to the supreme recorder within fifteen days after receipt of same, his beneficiary certificate shall become reinstated from the date of payment, provided that the member is in fact in good health at the time, but the fact of payment and furnishing certificate shall not bind the Order unless the member was in fact in good health.”

Just here it may be proper to notice an objection made by defendants in error to the proof of the constitution and by-laws, which is, that it does not appear that they were the constitution and by-laws in force at the time the certificate of membership was issued to the decedent.

The constitution and laws of the order were proved. The members are presumed to know the constitution and by-laws, and if a change had been made in them affecting the rights of defendants in error, the burden was upon them to introduce proof to that effect. Greenleaf on Ev. (15 Ed.), § 41.

[739]*739On the 14th of September, 1903, the insured died, and a demand having been made by the beneficiaries in the policy upon the • association payment was refused upon the ground that the insured was not, at the time of his death, a member in good standing, but had forfeited his rights under the policy by failure to pay the premiums as they fell due. Thereupon suit was .instituted by the beneficiaries by their next friend in the Circuit Court of Elizabeth City county, which terminated in a judgment against the plaintiff in error for the full amount of the policy, and to this judgment a writ of error was awarded by this court.

The first error assigned is that plaintiffs in the court -below had not complied ivith the terms of the policy, which provides that “Every member and the beneficiary of every member shall before instituting .any suit in the civil courts of the country against the order, first present their claims or contentions, together with the facts and proofs relied upon, to the proper officer, committee or authority of the order entitled to consider the same, and, in the event of an adverse ruling by any subordinate authority to which an exception is taken, shall exhaust all remedies rvithin the order by appeal as a preliminary to any other proceedings.”

We think the evidence shows a sufficient compliance with this provision, and that sufficient efforts to secure a settlement from the order without suit were made and proved unavailing; that the beneficiaries were justified in resorting to the courts for relief, and this assignment of error is therefore overruled.

• It appears from the evidence that the insured was an organist in St. John’s church, in the town of Hampton; that in the spring and summer of 1903 his health became impaired, and that he failed to pay certain assessments promptly, as they fell due; but that, upon the payment of the money and the production of a physician’s certificate as to the condition of his health, he was reinstated, and continued to pay his dues, though at intervals he would fall a month or two behind, and would then be reinstated in accordance with the rules of the order.

[740]*740About the middle of July be went to Lebanon, Ohio, and entered a sanitarium, the church of which he was the organist, in consideration of his long and faithful service in that capacity, agreeing to continue to him the payment of his salary.

The financial agent of the .association mentioned to the rector of the church that there was a premium due on Rathbun’s policy, and the rector told him that he knew Rathbun was sick, and that, being sick and having unusual expenses, he was in, straits for money, but that the vestry of the church and he (the rector), personally, did not mean that this insurance should lapse; and thereupon the rector and the agent went to the treasurer of the church to make arrangements .with respect to the payment of the dues. It seems that both the rector and the financial agent of the order looked upon the arrangement as a continuing one. The treasurer advanced the money, and put the slips or tickets which the agent of the order had brought with him into his private cash-drawer, and it appearing that the salary of Rathbun as organist had been paid up to the first of July, the treasurer carried the tickets over until the next payment.

On the 1st of August the treasurer of the church drew a check in favor of Mrs. Rathbun, mother of Mr. Frederick G. Rathbun, for the amount of his July salary, without reserving anything (as perhaps he should have done under the arrangement) for the payment of the premiums. To the little girl who carried the check to Rathbun’s mother, he said: “Tell your grandmother that I hold certain slips for insurance of your father’s and I suppose she wishes to cash them out of this check.” In .about an hour afterwards Mr. Rathbun, the father of the insured, came to the office, paid the money and took the slips away with him. On the 1st of September the treasurer paid the amount of the August salary.

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Bluebook (online)
52 S.E. 552, 104 Va. 736, 1906 Va. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-moderns-v-rathbun-va-1906.