Hoeffner v. Grand Lodge of the German Order

41 Mo. App. 359 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1890

Rombauer, P. J.

This is an action by the widow of á member of a benevolent society to recover the death benefit, payable upon the decease of a member to his widow. The petition states that the member’s death occurred in December, 1887, but that the society declined to pay the plaintiff anything as a death benefit, although she made'due proofs of death. The answer denies that the plaintiff ’ s husband was a member of the society at the date of his death. The- answer then states that the plaintiff’s husband was tried, found guilty and expelled from the society, by his lodge, for simulating sickness in order to obtain sick benefits; *363that this offense, under the laws of the society, was punishable by expulsion, and that such expulsion took place in May, 1886, and that the deceased was not at any time thereafter a member of the society.

The reply denies the new matter set out in the answer, and adds that the deceased was, at the date of his trial and anterior thereto, insane, and irresponsible for his conduct; that this fact was well known to the officers and members of his lodge, and that such insanity continued to the date of his death. The cause was tried by the court without a jury, and the trial resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff, the court declaring that, on the pleadings and evidence, the judgment must be in favor of the plaintiff.

The defendant assigns numerous errors, all having reference to the controlling proposition that the court erred in not giving to the finding of the lodge a conclusive effect, in determining the rightfulness of the member’s expulsion.

We may state, at the outset, that the power of the society to expel a member for simulating sickness is conceded by the plaintiff, and it is also conceded that by such expulsion, if brought about in strict conformity with the laws of the society, the member and his beneficiary forfeit all further claim on the society. To what extent the finding of these societies, in proceedings against their own members,, are conclusive upon the courts, is the only question presented for our consideration.

“When the charter of a society provides for an offense, directs the-mode of proceeding, and authorizes the society on conviction of a member to expel him, this expulsion, if the proceedings are not irregular, is conclusive and cannot be inquired into collaterally by mandamus, action or any other mode. The courts 'have jurisdiction to keep such tribunals in the line of order, and to prevent abuses, but they do not inquire *364into the merits of what has passed in rem judicatum, in a regular course of proceeding.” Niblack on Benevolent Societies, 48.

This statement, although not very definite and precise, is perhaps as satisfactory a statement as, owing to the inherent difficulties of the subject, can be made. In the leading case of Black and White-Smiths' Society v. Van Dyke, 2 Whart. 309, Gibson, C. J., referring to the effect of such trials, says the member “stands convicted by the sentence of a tribunal of his own choice, which, like an award of arbitrators, concludes him,” and this view has met with approval in other states. Anacosta Tribe v. Murbach, 13 Md. 91; Osceola Tribe v. Schmidt, 57 Md. 98; Schmidt v. Abraham Lincoln Lodge, 84 Ky. 490. But the award of arbitrators has no conclusive effect, unless it is made within the terms of the submission. Hence, in Society v. Commonwealth, 52 Pa. St. 125, it was held that the rightfulness of the expulsion cannot be questioned in the courts except in cases of irregularity of proceedings, and in Sherry's Appeal, 116 Pa. St. 391, which was decided by an almost evenly divided court, Justice Green in an able dissenting opinion holds that, “in proceedings against corporators, within the corporation, whether for suspension or expulsion, the procedure itself must be in conformity with the organic law of the corporation; the cause must be sufficient, the trial and proceedings .must be regular, and the proof must be at least adequate in the judgment of the corporation.”

We think that the courts in dealing with these benevolent societies should keep the following propositions in view: They are organizations whose members are not versed in the nice technicalities of the law, but are governed by a code of their own, which they deem sufficient to insure practical justice in the management of their affairs. They have a right to expect a strict compliance with their rules on part of their members, *365as such compliance is essential to the successful continuance of the society. On the other hand, their members have a right to exact a substantial compliance on the part of the society with all such rules, by which their money interests in the society are affected, and a forfeiture of their membership is brought about. This of course does not exclude the question of waiver either by the society or by the member, but, in the absence of such waiver, the terms of their constitution and laws form the contract binding on both.

Now, the constitution and laws of the defendant order do not give it a general jurisdiction to try offenses against its rules, nor do they anywhere provide that the decision of the lodge, or that of the grand lodge upon appeal, shall be final or conclusive on the member. They do provide for the trial of certain offenses, but they further provide that “the same shall be brought to the knowledge of the lodge, to a trial and a -judgment only in the manner prescribed in the following sections.” Among the sections referred to, is one providing for a committee of investigation composed in a certain manner; and it appeared in evidence that the committee in the present instance was not thus composed. This requirement the member could waive, and, as there was some .evidence that the plaintiff’s husband had waived it, the court could not have withdrawn the question of waiver from its own consideration by peremptory instruction. There was also some evidence that the member had waived another provision, which required that the report of the committee should be read at two successive meetings, and voted on at the third. A vote of two-thi-rds of all of the members present at that meeting was required to carry into effect a recommendation for permanent suspension or expulsion. These provisions are prescribed by paragraph 6. The rules then contain the following provision :

*366“ Sec. 7. At all votes which, are prescribed in the foregoing paragraphs, the parties must retire from the lodge room, and thereafter no further debates shall be allowed. In case the motion of the. committee is not affirmed, any member is entitled to move a lesser penalty. All such votes shall be taken in writing, ‘ yes ’ or ‘no’ for or against the pending motion.”

It appeared, without contradiction, that the vote taken on the expulsion of plaintiff’s husband was taken by casting white and black balls, and not in writing ; and there was no evidence, whatever, that the member had waived this requirement, as he was neither present when the vote was taken, nor, as far as the record shows, ever informed of how the vote was taken. The judge of the trial court put his ruling, icy which he set aside the judgment of the lodge, on the ground that no proper vote was ever taken on the expulsion of the plaintiff’s' husband, and that there was no evidence, whatever, that he had ever waived the requirement of a written vote ; and this ruling was unquestionably correct, and leads to an affirmance of the judgment.

The defendant’s counsel argues extensively that the phrase, “all such votes,” refers only to a vote upon a motion for a lesser penalty, but such a construction is narrow, opposed to the spirit .of the entire law, and at best designed to subject the laws of these societies to a strict technical test, which the defendant’s counsel is anxious to avoid in all other respects.

As above seen the rules of the society provide that a judgment shall ‘be rendered only in the manner prescribed in the foregoing sections. This provision is, therefore, jurisdictional, and we need not rest our decision on the sole ground that the manner of voting is of the substance of every election. We held in Mulroy v. Supreme Counsel Knights of Honor, 28 Mo. App. 463, that, where a society expels a member for cause unauthorized, its judgment is void; and the same *367result must follow, where it expels him in a mode not only unauthorized, but expressly prohibited, by its rules. We are as little justified in setting aside provisions in favor of the member, as we would be in setting aside those in favor of the society. If we can set aside the requirement of a written vote, we might, by parity of reasoning, set aside the requirements of a two-third vote,, which the rules require, and make the judgments of these societies depend for their validity, not upon what they have deemed essential requisites in their constitution and laws, but what we, ourselves, may deem essential. ,

A point is made that it does not clearly appear that the member exhausted his remedies by appeal to the grand lodge. Under the view we take, this question is immaterial. If the judgment was void, its affirmance on appeal could not validate it. Where a member seeks reinstatement by mandamus he must show that he has exhausted his remedies within the order, but where a judgment of expulsion is void, and the member treats it as such, he continues a member and need not seek reinstatement. Mulroy v. Knights of Honor, supra.

It was in evidence in this case that all dries to the society were tendered when payable, between the date of the alleged expulsion, and the date of the member’s death. There was no evidence that other duties were required of the member, which he failed to perform. Had the amount of these dues been shown, it would have been the duty of the court to deduct their aggregate from the amount of recovery in this case, but, as they were not shown, it cannot even be claimed that the judgment is excessive.

Some other questions are raised by the record, which, in view of the probability of their recurrence in other cases, we deem proper to notice briefly. The answer sets up the fact, that the plaintiff’s husband was insane, while his trial and expulsion took place. *368Upon the trial of the cause the plaintiff offered to show that her husband was actually sick and not shamming sickness prior to his expulsion, and that, prior to his trial and at the date of his trial and expulsion, he was actually insane. The court ruled out all this evidence. It was decided by Judge Blodgett in the case of Hawkshaw v. Supreme Lodge, 25 Cent. Law J. 129, that insanity is no excuse for the non-payment of assessments in a benevolent society, any more than it' would furnish an excuse for the non-payment of premiums on a policy of insurance. It was decided in Hellenberg v. District No. 1, 94 N. Y. 580, that, when the member, on account of his insanity, fails to ’make a designation, and his benefit lapses on account of such failure, the courts cannot change the contract by providing a beneficiary. The ruling in these cases was unquestionably correct, as the contract is made by the parties, and the court can make no contract for them. It was also decided in Pfeiffer v. Weishaupt, 13 Daly. 161, that a trial of, and judgment against, ah insane member of one of these societies is not necessarily void, as, under the laws of New York, a judgment may be recovered against a lunatic without suing him by committee. In this state an insane person, who is under guardianship, must be sued by service upon his guardian,, and must defend by guardian, and a judgment recovered against him in any other manner is void; hence the ruling in Pfeiffer v. Weishaupt, supra, could have application to such cases only, where the insane member is not under guardianship. However this may be, one thing seems to be clear, and that is that no questions of waiver can arise in case of an insane person, who is served and appears personally to the action, since not even a guardian ad litem could make any admissions binding on him. Collins v. Trotter, 81 Mo. 275. It is, therefore, essential that, where a judgment of forfeiture is invoked by the society against one of its members, who *369is shown to have been insane at the date when snch judgment was obtained, the court should see that every step taken in the proceeding was in strict conformity with the requirements of the rules of the society, in order to uphold the forfeiture. In that view of the case, evidence of the insanity of the deceased member at the date of the trial was clearly competent, as it was evidence tending to negative the possibility of a waiver, and the court, in rejecting the evidence, made concessions in favor of the defendant, which the defendant was not entitled to.

In the present state of the record, this ruling does not affect the result either way, as the judgment of the trial court must be upheld on the ground first herein-above stated’.

All the judges concurring,

the judgment is affirmed.