147 Mo. App. 155 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
(after gtating the factg).— Cases involving the liability of companieg organized to carry , on buginegg on what ig called benefit or benevolent ingurance, have been go frequently before the appellate courtg of the country, that it ig unneceggary to get out with great particularity the regtrictiong and Iimita-tiong thrown around their memberg by the congtitution, by-lawg and certificates of membership issued by them. With the idea that these organizations were benevolent, charitable and non-profit sharing, our lawmakers have been exceedingly liberal toward them, and have exempted them from practically all the laws of our State, governing old-line or regular insurance companies, and while by the laws relating to these latter, both by letter as well as construction, hardly any defense is open or available to an old-line, regular insurance company, and they are rarely before our courts as defendants, the benevolent or fraternal, as well as assessment companies, are constantly in court with exceedingly technical defenses, the doctrine of representations and warranties, in all its rigors of interpretation being available to them. This, however, is a matter entirely under control of our Legislature, which has seen fit to adopt it as the policy of the State, and with which the courts, beyond enforcing and interpreting the law as enacted, have no concern. We make these observations because of the fact that none of the defenses herein set up by this defendant would be available, in favor of an old-line, regular life insurance company. Fortunately for the members of these benevolent associations, the determination of the fact of the defenses set up is left to the juries of the land. While it may be conceded in this case that the evidence of the defendant tended to show that the deceased was frequently intoxicated, and while, the evidence is without contradiction that he was killed in a fight which the evidence strongly tends to prove was brought on by himself, and while there is a
In Connecticut Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Schwenk, 94 U. S. 593, a case in which it appeared that the plaintiff in making proof of death had stated the age of the deceased differently from that stated by the deceased himself in his application for membership, it further
The questions of whether the deceased was intoxicated at the time he met his death, or whether he was intemperate between the time of his connection with the defendant corporation and his death, were fully submitted to the jury on instructions of which appellant has no right to complain. The testimony in the case would justify the finding either way and by their verdict, the jury found against the defendant. In saying this, however, we do not wish to be understood as holding that the instruction marked “D,” which the court gave at the instance of plaintiff, is a correct defi
There is one error connected with the case that we cannot pass over in silence, and that consists in the admission of the testimony offered on the part of the plaintiff, to the effect that at no time had the deceased been tried by the local camp for intemperance or any other offense. This evidence was improperly admitted, but we are not prepared to say that its admission was so material and so important as to seriously and materially damage the defendant. Under the facts in the case, we' cannot hold that its admission was reversible error. Our conclusion upon the whole case is that the verdict and judgment of the lower court are