Court Opinion

ID: 4896853
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-02 23:59:18.123534+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:12:46.326553
License: Public Domain

HENRY, Associate Justice.
—The original petition in this cause was filed by the appellee on the 27th day of May, 1889, upon a benefit certificate which she made part of her petition and which she alleged was issued by appellant upon the life of her husband.
The benefit certificate reads that “Upon condition that the statements made by said member in his petition for membership and the statements made by him to the medical examiner be made a part of this contract, and upon condition that said member complies with the laws, rules, and regulations now governing this order or that may hereafter be enacted for its government, and is in good standing at the time of his death, the said Supreme Lodge hereby agrees to pay out of the widows and orphans benefit fund to his wife, Ella S. Fortson, the sum of $2000, in accordance with and under the laws governing this order, upon satisfactory evidence of the death of said member and the surrender of this certificate.”
The original petition charged that said Washington P. Fortson, having in all things complied with the rules ancj, regulations of said order, died on the 31st day of March, 1889; that due and proper notice was immediately given of the death of the said Fortson by the persons required to do so by the rules of the order, and that demand was made for the sum due, in manner and form and within the time prescribed by the rules of the order.
Subsequently plaintiff filed a trial amendment in which she alleged that immediately upon the death of her husband she informed the subordinate lodge at Jefferson of the fact; that the subordinate lodge reported the death to the supreme lodge and that the last named body refused to recognize said claim. That at that time the body of said Fortson had not been found and it then seemed would never be found, but that on the 1st day of August, after the institution of this suit, his remains were discovered floating in Red River, and that fact was duly reported by the subordinate to the supreme lodge and demand of payment was again made, which was again refused.
The" defendant answered by excepting to the plaintiff’s pleadings, because they failed to show that satisfactory proof of the death of Fortson had been made either to the subordinate or supreme lodge, and because the petition showed that it had been prematurely filed.
The defendant also pleaded a general denial, and specially alleged that the plaintiff had not furnished defendant with proof of the death of her husband as required by the rules of the order, which are alleged to be that at least three of the members of the local lodge should sign a certificate that they and each of them had viewed the remains of the deceased and knew that said Fortson was dead.
*478Upon the trial neither the benefit certificate nor the rules and regulations of the order referred to in the pleadings were introduced in evidence. USTo evidence of the substance or contents of either was given.
The failure to introduce the certificate requires a reversal of the cause, as it leaves the judgment unsupported by the evidence.
Error is assigned upon several charges given by the court which, in the absence of evidence as to what the rules and regulations of defendant were .affecting the contract sued upon, we can not revise.
The judgment is reversed and the cause is reman tied.

Reversed and remanded.

Delivered December 9, 1890.