Supreme Commandery of United Order of Golden Cross of World v. Bernard
Supreme Commandery of United Order of Golden Cross of World v. Bernard
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court:
Many errors are assigned, among them the incapacity of the plaintiffs to maintain the suit; others are based upon the admission of the Stetson letter, above referred to, and of certain orál statements made by him; upon admitting into evidence Trainor’s letter of instruction to his executors; their written
While we are of the opinion that the executors are competent to maintain the suit, if the right to reinstatement after disconnection was not personal to Trainor, in view of the decision of ibis court in Berkley v. Harper, 3 App. D. C. 308, wherein the charter and by-laws of this appellant were before this court; and while we believe that the error, if any, in the admission of the evidence was not a material error, provided this suit could be maintained,—we have reached the conclusion that a correct determination of this appeal can be best reached by considering at the outset certain vital questions raised by the appellant’s exceptions to the court’s refusal to charge, as requested in its fifth prayer, and its charge, as requested in the appellees’ first prayer.
These prayers are as follows:
Appellant’s fifth prayer:
“The jury is instructed that if they find that Joseph Trainor was a member of the order, and was disconnected for nonpayment of dues or assessments, and failed to reinstate himself in thirty days, as provided by the by-laws of the order, then they are instructed that the right of reinstatement does not accrue to his personal representatives, and that this tender of .assessments by his personal representatives will not entitle his beneficiary to recover.”
Appellees’ first prayer:
“The plaintiffs pray the court to instruct the jury that if they believe from the evidence that Joseph Trainor, deceased, was the insured under the policy of insurance or benefit certificate offered in evidence in this case, and they shall further find that the said Joseph Trainor in his lifetime designated the plaintiffs, Richard Bernard and Alfred D. Bernard, executors, the beneficiaries under said policy or benefit certificate by a paper writing offered in evidence as a letter of instructions, wherein the said fund is specially designated and ordered distributed; and
The crux of the entire case is whether the right to reinstatement after disconnection was personal to Trainor or survived to those who legally represented him.
It appears from the record, as we have stated, that Trainor became ipso facto disconnected from the order by his failure to pay the assessment payable not later than midnight of November 30, 1902. By-law 17, sec. 3, of the order, provides that “a member who fails to pay this '(the monthly)’ assessment before midnight of the last day of the month in which it becomes due and payable shall ipso facto stand disconnected from his commandery and from the order, without sentence by the commandery.” Section 6 provides: " * * * The disconnection or expulsion of any member shall work an immediate forfeiture of all claims of said disconnected or expelled member and of the beneficiary under his benefit certificate to any participation in the benefit fund.” The benefit certificate issued to Trainor also provides that ''the suspension, disconnection, or expulsion of said member shall work an immediate forfeiture of all claims of said member on the benefit fund of this order, and also a forfeiture of the claims .of the beneficiaries named in this certificate.”
The parties, therefore, contracted expressly that a disconnection should follow failure to pay any assessment within a given time, and that such disconnection should work a forfeiture. That it is competent to so contract is established by a long line
While it is competent for the party for whose benefit the conditions of forfeiture and disconnection are incorporated into the contract, as evidenced by their by-laws and benefit certificate, to waive them, we search the record in vain in this case for any evidence showing that there had at any time been a waiver of the terms of the contract as embodied in the benefit certificate and the by-laws as to disconnection and forfeiture. Nowhere does it appear that the local officers of the commandery have waived, or ever attempted to waive, the provisions of the contract relative to disconnections; and much less is it shown that the appellant ever gave such authority to the local officers or agents, or had any knowledge that they exercised it. The rule as to the waiver of conditions contained in contracts, and especially of conditions in insurance policies, is authoritatively laid down by the United States Supreme Court in Northern Assur. Co. v. Grand View Bldg. Asso. 183 U. S. 308, 46 L. ed. 213, 22 Sup. Ct. Rep. 133, where it is stated, after an exhaustive review of the cases in the Federal, state, and English courts on the subject, “that where the waiver relied on is an act of an agent, it must be shown either that the agent had express authority from the company to make the waiver, or that the company subsequently, with knowledge of the facts, ratified the action of the agent.” The receipt of overdue assessments which are paid within the time provided for and prescribed by the by-laws is not evidence of a waiver of the disconnection, where a party has the absolute right, as in this case, to pay the overdue assessments within
“Persons who have been members of the order, but are disconnected for the nonpayment of dues or assessments, desiring again to obtain membership, can do so, within thirty days after their disconnection, on payment of the arrears for which they were disconnected and such a fine as the commandery may by by-laws provide.”
Therefore every member who had not been disconnected for
While there is some conflict of authority on this point, the weight of authority is to the effect that such right of reinstatement does not survive, but, in these fraternal and beneficial orders, is personal to the members. The penalty of disconnection is probably the most effective aid to enforce the payment of assessments. The payment of these assessments is absolutely essential to the existence of the order. As was said in Modern Woodmen v. Tevis, 54 C. C. A. 293, 117 Fed. 369: “Fraternal insurance is temporary insurance,—insurance from the maturity of one assessment to the maturity of another,—and stipulations to insure promptitude in the payment of the assessments constitute both the substance and the essence of contracts for it.” It will be pertinent to refer to a few of the cases sustaining the proposition that this right of reinstatement does not survive to the representative of. the deceased member. Yoe v. Benjamin C. Howard Masonic Mut. Benev. Asso. 63 Md. 86, the opinion in which was written by the late chief justice of this court, says:
“The obligation to pay the death assessment is personal to the member, and it must, according to the terms of the article referred to, be paid in his lifetime, for if he dies before payment
Carlson v. Supreme Council A. L. of H. 115 Cal. 466, 35 L. R. A. 643, 47 Pac. 375, is a case very similar to the one now under consideration. The insured failed to pay a certain assessment, and for such failure, under the by-laws, stood suspended. He had the right, as in this case, to be reinstated within a certain time by payment of past-due assessments. He died before the expiration of the time when, if living, he could have paid the assessments and been reinstated. The beneficiary tendered the assessments due the association, but they were refused upon the ground that a dead man could not be reinstated. It. was urged that, as the insured died within the time within which he was entitled to pay the back assessments and be restored to-membership, this right of reinstatement passed to his legal representative, notwithstanding his disconnection. The court, however, held that the forfeiture took place as soon as there was failure to pay the assessment, and that, though, had he survived, he;
“Where a member had been suspended for nonpayment of an assessment and he had neglected during his lifetime to secure his reinstatement in accordance with the terms of his certificate by paying arrearages while in good health and within a certain time, his restoration to membership cannot be effected after his death by payment by another person, within the time limited, of the sum due from him at the time of his death.”
To the same effect are the cases of Supreme Lodge K. of H. v. Jones (Ind. App.) 69 N. E. 718, and Maginnis v. New Orleans Cotton Exch. Mut. Aid Asso. 43 La. Ann. 1136, 10 So. 180.
The case of Dennis v. Massachusetts Ben. Asso. 120 N. Y. 469, 9 L. R. A. 189, 17 Am. St. Rep. 660, 24 N. E. 843, cited by the appellees in support of their contention that the right to reinstatement survives, is not in point, and may be reconciled with the cases holding to the contrary. The opinion in that case expressly states:
“If the certificate in question had provided without qualification that for a failure to pay an assessment within thirty days after the mailing of a notice thereof by the defendant it should ‘lapse and be void,’ its invalidity would be established beyond dispute.”
Eurthermore, the facts are quite different from those in the case at bar.
We conclude that the right to reinstatement was personal to Trainor and did not survive to his legal .representatives, and that, therefore, there was error in the judgment rendered by the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia in the premises, and that the judgment should be reversed, with costs, and the cause remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. And it is so ordered. Reversed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- SUPREME COMMANDERY OF THE UNITED ORDER OF THE GOLDEN CROSS OF THE WORLD v. BERNARD
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Fraternal Life Insurance; Fraternal Beneficial Associations; Insurance; Forfeiture; Reinstatement; Waiver. 1. Where upon the death of his wife, the beneficiary named in a certificate of fraternal life insurance, the insured directed the issuance of a new certificate to his wife’s executor as beneficiary, and the association neglected to issue such new certificate, and after the death of the insured his executors procured an assignment from the executor and next of kin of the wife, such executors may maintain a suit on the benefit certificate against the association. (Following Berkeley v. Sarper, 3 App. D. 0. 308.) 2. Where the by-laws of a fraternal beneficial association provide that forfeiture and disconnection of a member will result from the nonpayment of an assessment, and also that a disconnected member may be reinstated by payment by him, within thirty days, of his arrearages and such fine as may be provided for by the by-laws, the right of' reinstatement is personal to the member, and does not survive to his. personal representatives or beneficiaries; and if the member dies after his disconnection, and within such period of thirty days, there-can be no recovery on the benefit certificate. 3. Where the waiver of the payment, within the required time, of a premium or assessment, relied on by the plaintiff in an action against an insurance company on a policy or certificate of insurance, was the-act of an agent, it must be shown either that the agent had express authority from the company to make the waiver, or that the company subsequently, with knowledge of the facts, ratified the action of the agent. 4. Where the by-laws of a fraternal benefit association provide for the forfeiture of a benefit and disconnection of the member on failure to pay an assessment, and for reinstatement, upon payment of the same within thirty days, the receipt by the company of overdue assessments paid within the thirty days is not evidence of a waiver of the disconnection; nor is a failure on the part of the collecting officer or other agent of a local order of the association, though acting as agent for the parent order, to notify the latter of the disconnection of the member, where that disconnection has been overcome by the payment of the overdue assessment.