Court Opinion

ID: 7895081
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 21:52:00.269406+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:32:02.593858
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Johnston, C. J. :
On March 17, 1880, John C. Estes united with the Foresters of America, and also became a member of what is known in that order as the “endowment fund." The endowment certificate first issued to him was for $1000, and his wife and heirs were designated as beneficiaries. This relationship was continued for about fifteen years, and until about May 9, 1895, when, under the laws of the order, he surrendered the first certificate and obtained a new one for the same amount, in which W. EL Hollis, a stepson, was named as beneficiary. All assessments for the endowment fund were paid until Estes’s death, which occurred on July 27, 1901. Payment of the promised benefit was refused by the order because of the claim that Estes was not in good standing as a member of the order when he died. In the action brought by Hollis to recover the benefit the order alleged that Estes had not paid the assessments and taxes levied by the order for several months preceding his death, and because of non-compliance with requirements in this respect he was not in good standing ; that therefore no liability arose on the certificate issued to him. As already stated, every assessment made for the__endowment fund was paid, but the gen*73eral dues payable to the subordinate court, and amounting to eight dollars per year, were not actually paid after March 31, 1901. The plaintiff below pleaded and proved, as an excuse for the non-payment of the dues for the three months preceding the death of Estes, that there was a well-established custom in the Salina court, or lodge, to which Estes belonged, of paying these dues quarterly, and at anytime during the quarter; and, further, that Estes tried to pay the dues to the local financial secretary, whose duty it was to receive them, and that officer refused to receive them.
It appears that the organization is composed of the supreme court of America, the grand court of the state, and the subordinate courts throughout the state, and that these three are one and the same association, deriving their power and authority from the supreme court of the order. The financial secretary of the local court is not only an officer of that court but he acts for the association as well. He collects and forwards the assessments from the endowment fund to the supreme secretary, and he is the officer to whom all other dues and assessments are to be paid.
In the. early part of 1901 there was a lack of interest in the Salina court; the meetings were poorly attended, and it became a question with the members of that court whether they could maintain the organization. Correspondence was had with the superior officers, and on May 4, 1901, the executive committee of the grand court attempted to dissolve Salina court, and to forfeit its charter, rituals and effects to the grand court. After that time E. S. Swanson, the financial secretary, was in doubt as to whether he could collect dues and assessments, and when the general dues for Estes were offered to him he declined to receive them, stating that he did not know whether *74Salina court “would go on or not.” Under the laws of the order there are two ways by which a subordinate court can be suspended and dissolved : First, by a vote of its members and a report of its action to the grand court; and, second, by action of the grand court, upon charges preferred for neglect to hold meetings, misconduct, or non-compliance with the rules of the order, but such action cannot be taken until the subordinate court has had notice of the charges and suitable opportunity has been given to answer them.
It is not contended that the members of the Salina court voted to dissolve the court, and there was no attempt to show that charges were preferred against the court, or that any notice was given of any contemplated action against the court by the grand court or the executive council. Until suspension and dissolution Swanson could, and should, have received the dues and assessments from members. He did receive the assessments for the endowment fund until July, 1901, and his remittances were received and acknowledged by the supreme secretary. Not only was he recognized as an officer of the association by the supreme officers, but he still retained the seal of the court, and, with the knowledge of the supreme secretary, was exercising some of the functions of his office. It is true that the general dues were not paid for the quarter preceding the death of Estes, but that was not because of the fault of either the insured or the beneficiary. Hollis offered to pay the dues to the financial secretary, and he refused to receive them. An offer made in good faith and so declined is equivalent to payment.
A forfeiture of the benefits cannot be justly based on any of the objections pleaded by the association. There can be no objection to the payment of assess*75ments for the endowment fund, as all were paid monthly in advance, and the last one which the association returned was kept until two months after the death of Estes, and after steps had been taken to collect the benefit.
The objection that the general dues were not paid monthly in advance, as the by-laws provided, is without force, since the association did not follow its own by-laws in respect to the payment of such dues. It was the undisputed testimony that a custom had been followed for a considerable time of paying the general dues quarterly and at any time during the quarter. It is well settled that an insurance association of this character will not be permitted to assert a forfeiture because assessments were not paid at specified times, where, by the adoption of a custom, or the course of its conduct, it has led the insured members honestly to believe that the assessments will be received after the appointed day. (Insurance Co. v. Eggleston, 96 U. S. 572, 24 L. Ed. 841; Sweetser v. The Odd Fellows Mutual Aid Association of Indiana, 117 Ind. 97, 19 N. E. 722; Insurance Co. v. French, 30 Ohio St. 240, 27 Am. Rep. 443; Stylow v. The Wisconsin Odd Fellows Mut. Life Ins. Co., 69 Wis. 224, 34 N. W. 151, 2 Am. St. Rep. 738; Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Amerman, 119 Ill. 329, 10 N. E. 225; De Frece v. N. L. Ins. Co., 136 N. Y. 144, 32 N. E. 556; McCorkle v. Ins. Association, 71 Tex. 149, 8 S. W. 516; Home Protection of North Alabama v. Avery, 85 Ala. 348, 5 South. 143, 7 Am. St. Rep. 54; Woodmen Circle v. Stretton, 68 Kan. 403, 75 Pac. 472; Nibl. Mut. Ben. Soc. §332; 2 Bacon, Ben. Soc. Life Ins. §§361, 431.)
No error was committed in the rulings on the testimony, nor in charging the jury.
At the close of the trial the association undertook to inject into the case the issue that Hollis had no in*76surable interest in the life of Estes. The matter was raised by request for an instruction, and had not been made an issue by the pleadings. The contract which was pleaded was valid upon its face. The insurance had been procured by Estes on his own life for the benefit of his stepson, Hollis. Apart from the relation of affinity, however, there may have been dependence, or other condition, to warrant the insurance. The insurance not having been procured by Hollis, it was not necessary for him to aver that he had any interest in the life of the insured. If the insurer relied on such defense it devolved upon it to plead and prove it. (Mass. Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Kellog, 82 Ill. 614; Brennan v. Prudential Ins. Co., 148 Pa. St. 199, 23 Atl. 901; Kennedy v. N. Y. Life Ins. Co., 10 La. Ann. 809; Nibl. Mut. Ben. Soc., 2d ed., § 322; 4 Joyce,. Ins. § 3673.) The question not having been put in issue by the pleadings, the court rightly refused to submit it to the jury.
The judgment of the district court will be affirmed.
Smith, Cunningham, Mason, Atkinson, JJ., concurring.