14 N.Y.S. 272 | City of New York Municipal Court | 1891
The plaintiff became a member of the Coachman’s Benevolent Association, a corporation, in February, 1870, which is admitted by defendant as follows: “It is admitted that the plaintiff has paid to the defendant $120.50 in dues, being dues for twenty years and one month, at the rate of 50 cents per month, and ending in March, 1890.” This action was begun on. March 13, 1890, to recover $700, being sick benefits at the rate of $10 per week from November 4, 1888, at which time plaintiff claims that he was sick and disabled, and so reported to the association on that day. The defense was that the claim had been compromised by the payment of $70 as settlement of a disputed claim, and that plaintiff was not a member in good standing. The by-laws of the association provide as follows: “Art. 7. Benefits. Sec. 2. Any person in arrears for three months’ dues ($1.50) on the books shall not be entitled to benefits until three months after such arrears shall have been paid.” “See. 4. Every member in good standing on the books, in case of sickness or disability to labor, shall be entitled and receive ten dollars per week during continuance of such a sickness or disability, unless the same be brought on by improper conduct.” The evidence, in reference to the payment of the dues, of the secretary and the books of the association, was that plaintiff was always in good standing up to April 7, 1889, upon which day he paid $2, and that that made his standing good up to May 27, 1889, and that he was three months in arrears on August 27, 1889, and he continued in arrear until December 1, 1889, when he was six months and four days in arrear, but that he
Ehrlich, C. J., concurs in result. Kewburgher, J., concurs.