Wenom v. National Council of Knights & Ladies of Security

223 S.W. 824, 204 Mo. App. 547, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 61
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 29, 1920
StatusPublished

This text of 223 S.W. 824 (Wenom v. National Council of Knights & Ladies of Security) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wenom v. National Council of Knights & Ladies of Security, 223 S.W. 824, 204 Mo. App. 547, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 61 (Mo. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinions

This suit was instituted in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis, on November 16, 1916. It is based upon a beneficiary certificate issued by defendant National Council of the Knights and Ladies of Security, a fraternal beneficiary society organized in the *Page 551 State of Kansas and duly licensed as such society in the State of Missouri. The certificate was issued in January, 1915, to Lizzie Wenom, a member of Harmony Council No. 618, St. Louis, Missouri, for the sum of three thousand dollars. Lizzie Wenom died July 2, 1916, and the plaintiff is her son, and named as beneficiary in the certificate. The trial was before the court and a jury, and resulted in a directed verdict for the plaintiff in the sum of two thousand two hundred seventy-six dollars and ninety-six cents, and judgment accordingly.

The petition was in approved form.

The answer, among other things, admits the issuance of the benefit certificate sued on to Lizzie Wenom, and avers: that the benefit certificate and her medical examination thereto attached, together with the constitution and laws of the society, should all be construed together as forming parts of the contract between the parties, and that the rights of the member and beneficiary are to be determined thereby; and that there were provisions in the constitution and laws of the defendant order in full force and effect and binding upon the parties, namely, that assessments for every month shall become due and payable on the first day of the month, and that the certificate of each member who has not paid such assessments and dues on or before the last day of the month shall, by the fact of such nonpayment, stand suspended without notice, and no act on the part of the Council or any officer thereof, nor of the National Council shall be required as essential to such suspension, and that all rights under said certificate shall be forfeited. It further avers:

"Defendant further states that the said Lizzie Wenom did not pay her assessment and dues for the month of April, 1916, as required by said Benefit Certificate and said Constitution and Laws of the defendant; that because of said non-payment of said assessment and dues said Lizzie Wenom forfeited all rights of herself and beneficiary, this plaintiff, under said benefit certificate, that said Benefit Certificate thereupon became void, *Page 552 and said Lizzie Wenom was suspended for failure to pay said assessment and dues, and remained in suspension during the months of April, May, June and July, 1916; that she was in suspension at the time of her death, and that plaintiff is, therefore, not entitled to recover."

The reply consists of a general denial and the following paragraph: —

"For further reply to defendant's said answer, plaintiff states that the prompt payment of assessments and dues were waived by the defendant's established custom receiving from its members assessments and dues after the time fixed for the payment thereof without inflicting the penalty of suspension.

"That soon after the death of Lizzie Wenom, the plaintiff gave the defendant notice thereof; that with full knowledge and information of the nonpayment of the April, May, June and July, 1916, dues and assessments and the alleged suspension of Lizzie Wenom for nonpayment of said assessments and dues, together with full knowledge and information of the alleged forfeiture of the rights of said Lizzie Wenom and plaintiff under said benefit certificate, and the alleged voiding thereof, defendant furnished blank forms of statements for proofs of death to plaintiff with a request that the same be properly executed and returned to said defendant; that plaintiff, pursuant to said request, and at great trouble and expense, had properly made up and executed due proofs of death on the blank forms aforesaid, and plaintiff gave the same (fully completed) to defendant as requested by said defendant, which said completed proofs were received by defendant and accepted by it as satisfactory proofs of death under said benefit certificate, and were retained and have ever since said date been retained as such satisfactory proofs of death under said benefit certificate, and thereby the said defendant is estopped from claiming or asserting that at the time of the death of said Lizzie Wenom she stood suspended or that her rights or the rights of plaintiff *Page 553 under said benefit certificate were forfeited, or that the benefit certificate was void; that those things were all waived by defendant's conduct and actions as aforesaid."

To this reply defendant filed a general denial.

Plaintiff rested his case after introducing in evidence the beneficiary certificate and adducing proof of death of the insured. Among other provisions, the certificate contained the following: —

"BENEFICIARY CERTIFICATE issued by THE NATIONAL COUNCIL of the THE KNIGHTS AND LADIES OF SECURITY.
"THIS CERTIFICATE, Issued by the National Council of the KNIGHTS AND LADIES OF SECURITY, a Fraternal Beneficiary Society or Order:

"Witnesseth, That Lizzie Wenom, a member of Harmony Council No. 618, located at St. Louis, State of Missouri, in consideration of the agreements and warranties contained in her application and medical examination, is hereby admitted to Beneficiary Membership in this Order; and it is hereby agreed that; in consideration of the premises and in accordance with and under the provisions of the Laws of the Order, she is entitled to all of the rights, benefits and privileges of membership therein, and that at her death, she having complied with all of the provisions of the Constitution and Laws of the Order, now in force, or that may be hereafter enacted (without reservation or exception as to the nature, effect or scope of such after enacted Laws), and being at the time of her death a member of the Order in good standing, the said National Council hereby agrees to pay to Oscar Wenom, being relation to said member of son, the sum of *Page 554

THREE THOUSAND DOLLARS.
". . . This Beneficiary Certificate is issued by said National Council and accepted by the member only upon the following express warranties, conditions and agreements:

1. That the application for membership in this Order, made by the said member, together with the report of the medical examiner, which is on file in the office of the National Secretary, and both of which are made a part hereof, are true in all respects, and each and every part thereof shall be held to be a strict warranty and to form the only basis of the liability of the Order to said member or said member's beneficiaries, the same as fully set forth in this Certificate, and that the application and medical examination herein referred to and the constitution and laws of the society as the same now exist or as may hereafter be enacted, and this Beneficiary Certificate shall be construed together as forming parts of the contract between the National Council and the member.

"3. This Certificate is issued in consideration of the warranties and agreements made by the person named in this Certificate in said member's application to become a member of this Order and in said member's medical examination, and also in consideration of the payments made when initiated as a member, and said member's agreement to pay all assessments and dues to become due during the time said member shall remain a member of this Order, in the manner prescribed in the Laws of the Order.

"5.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Allman v. Order of United Commercial Travelers of America
213 S.W. 429 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
223 S.W. 824, 204 Mo. App. 547, 1920 Mo. App. LEXIS 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wenom-v-national-council-of-knights-ladies-of-security-moctapp-1920.