172 Mo. App. 104 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1913
In this action plaintiff sought to recover on a certificate issued to her husband, a member of an association organized under the laws relating to benevolent associations, the association of which the husband was a member having afterwards transferred all its members to another association of like character, the latter assuming all the obligations of the former. The loss under the certificate in case of death was payable to plaintiff. Averring these facts and that all the dues, and assessments'levied under the constitution and by-laws of the association had been paid by her husband, she demands judgment for the amount of the certificate, $1000.
In and by the answer, after admitting the incorporation of the two concerns and that defendant had assumed the obligations of the association which had originally issued the certificate, the defendant pleads a release in which, in consideration of $100 paid plaintiff in compromise of all claims of plaintiff, it is averred that she had released and discharged defendant from all liability under the policy, defendant denying any liability on the contract.
On these pleadings the defendant moved for judgment. That motion was sustained and plaintiff has appealed.
'By her own receipt plaintiff acknowledged having received the check as money. As she retained the check until after the institution of the action by her, she cannot now claim that she did not receive money or money’s worth. There is no pretense that the cheek would not have been paid if presented; no pretense that she demanded cash, money. Such as it was, she received and retained it. That a fraud was perpetrated on her is not that a check and not money was given her, but that she executed a release for $100, induced to do so by fraud. She took the check as money at the time and in order to avail herself of the alleged fraud in obtaining the release from her she should have tendered back what she received, whether that was money or a check, prior to the institution of her action. That was decided by our court in Carroll v. United Railways Co., 157 Mo. App. 247,1. c. 289, 293 inclusive, 137 S. W. 303. See also Kingman-Moore Implement Co. v. Ellis, 125 Mo. App. 692,1. c. 695 et seq., and cases cited page 696,103 S. W. 127.
Counsel for appellant claim that the necessity for a tender of whatever was received prior to the institution of the action was avoided in the case at bar because the very fact that defendant pleaded the release shows that a tender would have been unnecessary. We considered that proposition in Carroll v. United Rail