Westfall v. Bedford Lodge No. 91
Westfall v. Bedford Lodge No. 91
Opinion of the Court
R. B. Westfall became a member of Bedford Lodge No. 91, I. O. O. F., October 17, 1902. He died March 21, 1910. Article 61 of its constitution provided that: “Every member of this lodge who has been a contributing member thereof for six months, shall if he be by sickness or accident disabled or prevented from follow
Section 1: “If a member of the third degree, $4.00 per week for twenty-six weeks; $3.00 per week for thirteen weeks; .$2.00 per week for thirteen weeks and one dollar per week thereafter during the continuance of the illness.”
Section 3: “On the death of a brother of this lodge who was while living entitled to benefits, $60 shall be appropriated to defray his funeral expenses, which shall immediately be paid over to some relative authorized to receive the same.”
“Good standing” is defined by section 6 to be: “Not three months in arrears for, dues, fines or assessments, and thirty days shall .have elapsed after full payment of all dues and fines to date for such payment, and the member shall be clear from all penal charges on the books of the lodge.”
Unless suspended as hereinafter explained, plaintiff was entitled to benefits and funeral expenses, and to recover the same is the object of this action.
The dues payable to defendant amounted to one dollar every three months, and decedent, while delinquent from October 1, 1908, to January 1, 1909, was taken sick with pneumonia, and, under article 58 of the constitution, was not entitled to benefits during sickness originating while in arrears. That article reads: “Whenever a member shall become indebted to the lodge for three months or more of dues, he shall, by reason of such indebtedness, without notice
On May 31, 1909, dues to October 1st of that year were remitted from Ames, Iowa, where decedent then lived, to the defendant at Bedford, and the check was marked “paid” by the bank at Ames June 3d. It is fair to assume that the dues reached defendant June 1st or 2d.
Two questions of fact arise: (1) Did decedent recover from his illness, which commenced in May, 1909; and (2) if he did, did the sickness resulting in his death originate within thirty days after the payment of the dues, as stated above?
The testimony of but two witnesses bears on these issues. The plaintiff, -who is the widow of the decedent, testified as follows: “Q. Now, did he recover from that sickness? A. The doctor said so. Q. What did you say? A. We all thought so. . . . Q. And so far as you know and your medical advice extended, he recovered from that sickness ? A. Tes, sir. Q. When did he recover and go to work ? A. He never got able to go to work. He was going to work on the following Monday, and he took sick on Sunday again. Q. Well, what is the date that he recovered from his first sickness and got' able to go to work, as he supposed ? Give the court that date. A. I never thought of anything like this coming up and never -paid any attention. . . He must have recovered about the 1st of June, I should think. He recovered from pneumonia the latter part of Juné, I think. He took a new attack in about two weeks after he had recovered from the first
On cross-examination she continued: “I don’t know just what time he was taken sick. I could not say, because I'never thought of anything like this coming up. I never paid any attention to it. From, the time he first took sick, about June 2, 1909, he was never able to work. . . . He wasn’t, able to work; but before Monday came he took sick with this other disease, and never was able to work. Practically during all the time from June 2, -1909, up until his death he was entitled to benefits from the lodge, as claimed in the petition.”
Upon being recalled, she testified that: “After June 2d he recovered from his pneumonia, about the 4th of July. He went home about the Ith of July, and was up and around, and the doctor thought he would, be able to go to work the following Monday. After recovering from the pneumonia, he took a new complication of diseases, and from that he died — lingered and died.”
The other witness was the father of plaintiff, who testified that he knew of decedent’s illness, and further: “I went up there and stayed until he got up and around. He got up and around about the middle of June, I think. . . . I think I went up there about the 10th of June. Q. Did he recover from that illness? A. He got up and around, and the doctor told him he could go to work. . . He was going to work, and got up and around and could go a couple of blocks, and we concluded that he was well enough, and we could come home. I concluded he had recovered from this attack of pneumonia. The doctor said he had, and all he wanted was a little rest. After that, in two or three weeks, he had a relapse, and was in a worse fix than he was the first time. This last sickness proved fatal, and he died. The doctor said it was nervous prostration and stomach trouble. That was a different disease than what I found him afflicted with in the first instance.”
Belying upon tbe evidence, as we must, the conclusion necessarily follows that the sickness of decedent which resulted in death began more than thirty days after the payment of arrears. From that time he was sick thirty-six weeks, and under the schedule of the lodge was entitled to benefits amounting to $134 and $60 as funeral expenses. Of this, $35 has been paid, leaving $159 to which plaintiff, as widow of decedent, is entitled. — Reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.