Woodmen of the World v. Maynor

89 So. 750, 206 Ala. 176, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 152
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 9, 1921
Docket6 Div. 180.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 89 So. 750 (Woodmen of the World v. Maynor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodmen of the World v. Maynor, 89 So. 750, 206 Ala. 176, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 152 (Ala. 1921).

Opinion

MILLER, J.

The plaintiff, William E. Maynor, sues the defendant; Woodmen of the World, a corporation, for $1,000 on a policy whereby defendant insured the life of Eldridge W. Maynor, who died June 25, 1918, of which defendant has had notice, and avers the policy is the property of plaintiff. The first count, No. 2, is in Code form (No. 12), and count 3 is the same as count 2, except it also avers that the policy had been in effect more than two years before the death of said Maynor, and that there is a stipulation therein, when it has been in force more than two years before death of insured, the sum to be paid plaintiff is $1,000. There was judgment for plaintiff, and defendant appeals.

The insured, Eldridge W. Maynor was a school-teacher. While following this calling he joined the defendant company, which is a fraternal beneficiary society. He toolr out an insurance policy. His premium was 80 cents per month per $1,000. It was increased to 90 cents after the war commenced. The insured joined the United States army, went to France, and was hilled while there in an aeroplane accident. The monthly dues were paid the company by the father or wife *178 of insured until his death at the rate fixed for him as teacher. The insured did not notify defendant in writing that he had joined Ore United States army, and did not pay the additional assessment for soldiers required by the company. The local officer of the camp to which insured belonged knew he was a soldier, and had gone to France.

[1] The court overruled demurrers to pleas 3, 4, 5, 6, 9, and 10, and to 7 and 8 as amended. Let us look at a few of these pleas. Plea 2 avers that insured did not die on June 25, and denies that he is now dead. There was no demurrer to this plea. There was no motion to strike it from the file. It is contained in plea 1, the general issue. The plaintiff avers, and must prove, the death of the insured. That is one of the essential averments of the complaint. The plaintiff, instead of demurring or filing motion to strike this plea, replied to it, first, by averring that defendant’s authorized agent refused by letter payment of the policy because insured, after becoming a member of the association, engaged in aviation, and this made his certificate void, and that defendant thereby waived other grounds of defense; and replication 2 to said plea was to the effect that defendant accepted proof of death of insured, refused payment on other grounds, and is es-topped thereby from denying death of the insured. The defendant demurred to these two replications. The court overruled the demurrers. This was error,

[2, 3] The refusal to pay the policy on the ground alleged does not waive the ground that the insured is living. There may be separate and distinct pleas, setting up different defenses, and plaintiff cannot, on trial of the issue on one plea, take advantage of an averment or admission contained in another plea. The defendant, by the letter refusing to pay the policy because the insured, after joining the association, changed his occupation from teaching to aviation, would not estop it from pleading that the insured is not dead, but still living. Clements v. Cribbs & Covington, 19 Ala. 241.

There was rejoinder by defendant to these replications of plaintiff to plea 2 of defendant. The demurrers were sustained by the court. It is not necessary for us to set this rejoinder out, comment on it, or pursue this branch of the pleading further, as the plea, No. 2,'was unnecessary, and the replications to it by the plaintiff are defective.

[4, 5] Plea 3 avers that defendant is a mutual benefit society, and is due plaintiff the sum of, to wit, $100; that it has been ready, willing, and able to pay it before suit was filed; that plaintiff would not accept it, and gave defendant no opportunity to pay same before this action was commenced. Demurrers were overruled to this plea. This was error. The Code of 1907 fixes form No. 36 for plea of tender. The plea must aver the amount due, that it was tendered before the action was commenced, and that the money is now brought into court. If the tender was not made before the action was commenced, then the plea should aver the amount of money it brings into court, and should also aver and bring into court a sufficient sum to cover the court cost to date. The plea is not sufficient to show a cause of action did not exist when suit was commenced. Gardner v. Black, 98 Ala. 638, 12 South. 813; Christian & Daniel v. Niagara Fire Ins. Co., 101 Ala. 634, 14 South. 374, section 5334, Code 1907.

Pleas 4, 5, 6, and 7, as amended, each admit an indebtedness due plaintiff under the policy without waiving other pleas.

[6] Plea 9 is uncertain, whether in bar or in abatement. If in abatement, one fatal defect is its failure to be verified by affidavit; if in bar, it is defective for failing to aver no proof of death was received, and other facts to bar' the suit. It avers no satisfactory proof of death was received. It does not aver no proof of death was received. Section 5332, Code 1907.

Pleas 8 and 10 are similar in many respects. Each avers that the insured was a teacher when the policy was issued, and his monthly premium was paid on that occupation; that afterwards, one plea averred, he joined the army, and the other avers he became a balloonist: that the contract of insurance prohibited him from entering the army, or joining the aeronautics, without first giving the defendant written notice thereof, and paying monthly the additional assessment, as the contract and laws of the corporation required; that plaintiff did not give the written notice and pay the additional assessments, and the policy thereby under the agreement became null and void. The plaintiff replied to these pleas, from 5 to 10, that the clerk of the camp of defendant to which deceased belonged knew that he joined the army, and that he paid the dues demanded by the clerk; that defendant accepted said dues, and this was a waiver of the increased dues referred to in said pleas. The defendant rejoined that under the laws of the corporation, which are a part of the contract of insurance policy sued on, no officer or agent has authority or right to waive any of the conditions, that no officer or agent, by receiving the old assessment, and knowing of the change of occupation, could thereby waive the additional assessment and written notice of the change of occupation from teacher to soldier in the United States armj', or to occupation of balloonist, a more hazardous occupation, as the laws of the corporation forbid the waiver. The court sustained demurrers to this rejoinder. This was error.

[7] If the laws of the order prohibit the waiver, and the laws are a part of the contract, and the insured signed and made the contract, then he would be presumed to know *179 the contents of the contract, and the laws of the corporation, and the fraternal order would not be barred by the waiver. W. O. W. v. McHenry, 197 Ala. 541, 73 South. 97; Beiser v. Sov. Camp, 199 Ala. 41, 74 South. 235; Sov. Camp, W. O. W., v. Allen, 89 South. 58 ; 1 W. O. W. v. Alford, 89 South. 528. 2 Our Legislature has enacted the following law on this subject:

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Bluebook (online)
89 So. 750, 206 Ala. 176, 1921 Ala. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodmen-of-the-world-v-maynor-ala-1921.