Winters Mut. Aid Ass'n v. Corum

297 S.W. 238, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 538
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 15, 1927
DocketNo. 7130.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 297 S.W. 238 (Winters Mut. Aid Ass'n v. Corum) 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
Winters Mut. Aid Ass'n v. Corum, 297 S.W. 238, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 538 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

BAUGH, J.

Appellant is a local insurance organization in Runnels county, with headquarters at Winters, Tex., operated through a nonpaid board of directors and a paid secretary, upon a mutual aid assessment plan. B. F. Corum sued upon a certificate of membership issued by'appellant to his wife, in which he was named the beneficiary. The association defended on the ground that it had made an assessment against Mrs. Corum on June 5, 1926, which she had not paid within the 15 days allowed therefor, and that such delinquency at the time of her death on July 4, 1926, had forfeited her insurance.

A certificate of membership was issued to each member, which, with the constitution and by-laws of the association, constituted the policy of insurance. The certificate bound the association to pay to the beneficiary $1 for each member in good standing at the time of the death of the insured, but in no event to exceed $1,000. It also provided that the insured agreed “to pay all assessments that may be levied by the directors of this association of $1, as needed, upon the death” of a member, and “within 15 days from the date of call for same, * * * and failure to pay such calls or dues within the time herein specified shall forfeit all claims as a member of this association.” Said certificate further provided:

“And in giving notice of any assessment it shall not be necessary for the association to do more than mail a written or printed notice stamped and addressed to such member at his or her last known post office address.”

The only issue submitted to the jury was whether or not notice of the assessment in question had been properly mailed to Mrs. Oorum on or about June 4 or 5, 1926. The jury found that it had not, and the court rendered judgment for appellee for $1,000, interest, and costs.

The first and principal contention urged by appellant is that the evidence was insufficient to support the finding of the jury on this issue. This contention is not sustained. The material evidence on this question was substantially as follows:

R. L. Stokes, secretary of appellant, testified that he printed notices of 'the assessment or “call” himself on postcards; that he then turned these over to J. O. Meredith, assistant secretary, who addressed these cards to all members of the association on the “addresso-graph”; that he (Stokes) then assorted them for mailing; that he distinctly remembered that a call addressed to Mrs. Oorum, at Ball-inger, was amongst these cards; that he placed Mrs. Corum’s card in the stack going “south” to Ballinger, and put a rubber band around them; and that he then gave them to Meredith to b.e mailed. Meredith testified that he knew Mrs. Corum’s name was on the stencil on which the addresses of all members appeared, and that he placed in the post office at Winters on June 4,1926, the stack of cards handed him by Stokes, but did not know whether a notice addressed to Mrs. Cor-um was included therein or not.

B. F. Corum, appellee, testified in substance that he lived in Ballinger, Tex., and had had the same mail box in the post office there for some 30 years; that said box was opened by a combination known only to himself and the postal authorities, up until a short time prior to Mrs. Corum’s death, when he showed his son this combination; that he went daily to the post office to get his own mail; that he never received for himself nor for his wife any notice of the June 5th assessment, designated as assessment No. 23; that he had received and paid promptly all previous assessments against his .wife from No. 6 to No. 22; that his wife had been desperately ill for eight months prior to her death; that the first notice he received of assessment No. 23 was on July 2,1926, in which he was advised by Stokes that Mrs. Corum was delinquent, and that a health certificate would be required before she could be reinstated; that he immediately sent Stokes a check in payment of said assessment, but same was rejected and returned to him.

The testimony of Meredith, assistant secretary, was of little or no probative value on the question of whether or not a notice properly addressed to Mrs. Corum was included in the package of cards he placed in the post office at Winters. The positive evidence on this issue is therefore really confined to Stokes’ testimony that he had a.distinct recollection that the individual notice addressed to Mrs. Corum was in the stack of cards, totaling 1,000 or more, sent out on that date; the testimony of Mr. Corum to the effect that he had a private post office box at Ballinger from which he got his mail daily in person, and that he received no such notice; and the testimony of the postmaster at Ballinger that it was improbable that such a notice, if mailed at Winters, would have been lost.

Both Stokes and Corum were interested witnesses, and the jury could believe or disbelieve either of them. They could properly have taken into consideration the improbability that .Stokes would have remembered a particular notice to a particular individual, when he was hurriedly sending out on a form postcard the same notice to 1,000 or more other persons at the same time) and also the improbability that such a notice, if mailed, would have been lost in the'United States mails, and from such facts and circumstances could have concluded that such a notice was never mailed to Mrs. Corum. They could have accepted as true the testimony of Cor-um, and rejected that of Stokes and Meredith altogether. Such was their prerogative; and *240 in tlie instant case they exercised it in Cor-um’s favor. We think the evidence was sufficient to sustain their finding on this issue.

Ajipellant’s second contention is, in effect, that the court erred in the submission of the issue he did submit, and in not submitting the question of whether or not Mrs. Corum had paid said' assessment No. 23. There was no error in this. It was not controverted that Mrs. Corum had not paid said assessment, and the submission of that question was not necessary. It is not denied that she was on June 5, 1926, a member of said association in good standing, a holder of a certificate, and entitled to all the benefits thereof. Her membership was recognized by the association, and continued unless she withdrew or forfeited her rights thereunder. Having asserted a forfeiture, it was incumbent upon the association to show it. To do so it must have shown that assessment No. 23 had been duly levied by its board -of directors as prescribed both in the certificate and in the by-laws of said association; that notice thereof had been given, as prescribed, to such member; and that such member had failed to pay the assessment. Of necessity, notice of an assessment made upon the membership by the board of directors must be given the members before they could be held liable thereon, and the method prescribed for giving such notice must be pursued. 32 C. J. 1218, 1223 ; Mutual Reserve Fund Life Ass’n v. Hamlin, 139 U. S. 297, 11 S. Ct. 614, 35 L. Ed. 167. And as stated in 14 R. C. L. 985:

“Where notice is required in order to establish a forfeiture for nonpayment of premiums, the burden is on the insurer to show that required notice was given.

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Bluebook (online)
297 S.W. 238, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winters-mut-aid-assn-v-corum-texapp-1927.