50 Mo. App. 472 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1892
— This is a suit on a beneficiary certificate executed and delivered by defendant, an incorporated fraternal benefit association, to1 William BL Harvey, to pay his wife, the plaintiff, at his death,. $2,000, on condition - that the said Harvey complied with all the laws, rules and requirements of said order. The answer claimed that the said Harvey had failed to-pay an assessment of $1 due by him. on January 28, 1890, and that, on the first day of February thereafter, he died, whereby his benefit certificate became suspended, and whereby he forfeited all claim to the-11 beneficiary fund.” The replication pleaded in avoidance of the forfeiture that it was the custom and practice of the defendant’s subordinate lodge and officers to receive of deceased and others of its members payment of assessments after due, and not to-insist on forfeiture, etc. There was a trial by the court, and judgment for defendant, from which plaintiff appeals.
It is unquestionably the well-settled law in this state that where a policy of insurance requires prompt payment of the premium, or the policy will be forfeited, this condition may be waived by the habit of the insurer in receiving the premium after it is due. Hanley v. Life Ass’n Am., 69 Mo. 380; 4 Mo. App. 253. The plaintiff, in support of the ground of her appeal, cites to us the cases of Nat. Mut. Ben. Ass’n v. Jones, 84 Ky. 110, and Stylow v. Ins. Co., 69 Wis. 224.
In the Kentucky case the officers of the insurance •company who were authorized to receive and receipt for the amount of all assessments made against its members, after the deceased was in default in the payment of the assessment for which the forfeiture was claimed, did unconditionally accept payment, and thereafter the company appropriated and used it, and never offered to return it until after the death of the deceased. It is analogous in principle to that where the landlord, knowing the forfeiture of a lease, receives after-accrued rent; it is an implied acknowledgment of the continuance of the lease, and, of itself, must necessarily operate as a waiver of the forfeiture. Moore v. City, 45 Mo. 202. In the Wisconsin case, the insurance company made an assessment against the deceased after he had made default for a prior assessment, for the non-payment of which it was claimed there was a forfeiture of all rights under the certificate of insurance sued on.. It is clear that these cases, in their essential features, present not the slightest resemblance to the ■case at bar. In those cases there was, after the occurrence of the act for which the forfeiture was claimed, a distinct recognition by the insurer that the insured was still one of its members. The insurer, in such case, upon every just principle, ought to be estopped to •claim a forfeiture of the membership of the insured or his rights as such. A waiver of strict performance in such case was necessarily implied. .
In the case here, the deceased, at the time of his death, was in default. The offer of payment, or, for that matter, the payment of the assessment by another, after his death, could avail the plaintiff nothing, since the constitution of the defendant, which is part of the
The beneficiary certificate, being ipso facto suspended by the non-payment of the assessment, could not be renewed after the death of the assured. The defendant undoubtedly has the right to invoke in its. defense that clause of the contract which provides that-any member, suspended 'from any cause whatever, forfeits all claim to the beneficiary fund during suspension, unless, as has already been stated, the fact, that the financier of the subordinate lodge had been in the habit of receiving payment by deceased and others of previous monthly assessments after the twenty-eighth of the month, in some way operated as an estoppel or waiver.
The members of a fraternal beneficial association are conclusively presumed to know its laws. Coleman v. Knights of Honor, 18 Mo. App. 189; Grand Lodge v. Elsner, 26 Mo. App. 108; Bacon on Benefit Societies, sec. 81. An officer of any such association cannot waive the requirements of its laws which are essential elements of the contract, because he is a special agent, and his authority is known to the members dealing with him. The rule, we think, fairly deducible from all the authorities is that he has no-authority to waive any of its laws which relate to the substance of a contract between an individual member and his associates in their associate capacity. Lyon v. Supreme Assembly, 26 N. E. Rep. (Mass.) 236; Brotherhood’s Case, 31 Beav. 365-375; Burbank v. Ass’n, 144 Mass. 437; 11 N. E. Rep. 691; McCoy v. Church, 152. Mass. 272; 25 N. E. Rep. 289; Baxter v. Ins. Co., 1 Allen, 294; Evans v. Ins. Co., 9 Allen, 329; Hale v. Ins. Co., 6 Gray, 169; 66 Am. Dec. 410; Brewer v. Chelsea,
The provision in the contract in respect to the time when payments of assessments were to be made was a condition for the benefit of the defendant, the performance of which it could dispense with — waive. But there must be knowledge of the essential facts, or else there can be no intention to relinquish. If no knowledge, then there could be no assent to or acquiescence in the irregular and unauthorized receipt of the payments of the -assessments against deceased. The evidence in this case utterly fails to prove that the defendant had any knowledge of the agent’s irregular and unauthorized acts. The reports of the financier to the grand receiver show nothing of this kind. There is then no such waiver as between these parties as will constitute the ground work of an estoppel. We do not think that the fact that the financier of the subordinate lodge upon several prior occasions accepted the payment of the assessments after due, the deceased being in good health at the time, continued the contract in force after the default on January 28. It was at most a mere personal indulgence, a mere matter of grace on the part of the financier, and the most that can be
The case may seem at first glance as one of considerable hardship in view of the practice and habits of the financier of the subordinate lodge in receiving payment of assessments after default ¡by members, yet we cannot see that the grand lodge was cognizant of such practice or habit or in any way authorized or ratified the same, and, therefore, the case must be regarded as if there had been no such practice or habit on the part of the financier. Unless the constitution and by-laws of the order in respect to the payments of assessments are rigidly upheld and enforced, the insurance annex of the order, which is one of its most commendable features, cannot be maintained. The very existence of the order depends very greatly upon this. The beneficent objects and purposes of the ’order cannot be accomplished except by strict observance of the requirements of the constitution and by-laws of the order by the members of the subordinate lodges.
We can discover no ground of error in the record before us which calls for any interference by us, so the _ judgment must be affirmed.