69 S.E. 764 | N.C. | 1910
Action tried on appeal from the judgment of a justice of the peace. The intestate of the plaintiff, who died 12 June, 1908, was a member (98) of the defendant lodge, which was duly incorporated by an act of the General Assembly of North Carolina (Private Laws, Extra Session 1908, ch. 25) and was by said act, section 2, declared "capable in law to sue and be sued, to plead and be impleaded, etc.," in all the courts of this State in "all and singular actions or matters or demands whatsoever."
The plaintiff seeks in this action to recover $36 sick benefits, to which her intestate was entitled under the rules and regulations prescribed by the defendant.
The defendant resists recovery upon the following grounds:
(1) That the application of the deceased for membership contained the following stipulation: "If admitted, I hereby promise and agree to abide by the laws, customs, and usages of the order, and especially of this lodge. And I further agree that I will only seek my remedy for all rights on account of such membership in the tribunals of the order"; and that the lodge itself was the customary tribunal to pass upon and to determine the rights of the members; and that it had, after the death of the intestate of the plaintiff, to wit, in August, 1908, refused to pay any sick benefits on the intestate's behalf.
(2) That the constitution of the Grand Lodge, under whose jurisdiction the defendant is declared to be, by an act incorporating it, contains the following:
"SEC. 110. Not payable to legal representatives. Benefits are rights personal to the member, his family and dependent relatives, and are not payable to the legal representative of a member's estate."
At the close of the evidence the defendant moved for nonsuit. The following issue was submitted to the jury: "Is the defendant indebted to the plaintiff; and if so, in what sum?" Under the charge of the judge and upon the evidence, the jury answered the issue, "$36." Judgment was rendered accordingly for the plaintiff, and defendant appealed to this Court. *77
It is contended by the defendant that the stipulation (99) contained in the application for membership in the defendant lodge by the deceased, that he would seek the remedy for all his rights on account of such membership in the tribunals of the order, precludes any resort to the established courts of the State for the enforcement of any right, however just or however plainly established by contract, unless the tribunals of the order deliberately refuse to act, or their action is fraudulently taken. The precise question was considered and determined by the Supreme Court of Illinois, in Benefit Assn. v.Robinson,
In 2 Bacon on Ben. Soc. and Life Ins., sec. 400a, p. 1016, the learned author, after quoting from many cases, says: "It seems to us that the reasoning of the Supreme Court of Illinois is most logical and in accordance with the principles of justice. It is certainly abhorrent to *78 a sense of justice that a corporation should be judge and jury when defendant, and should decide upon the validity of claims against itself, to the exclusion of the civil courts of any rights on the part of the claimant to have a review by the courts of such judgment."
Limiting the stipulation in the application to an agreement to submit to the decisions of the tribunals of the order upon all questions of a legislative or administrative nature, and to their judgment upon controversies of members with one another within the order, we think the stipulation can be invoked by a number to aid him in the enforcement or protection of the above matters the member had by such stipulation precluded himself from a resort to the court, in the absence of charges of fraud or misconduct. But where the question involved is the enforcement of a property right, such as is presented in this case, we hold that the courts can be invoked by a member to aid him in the enforcement or protection of such rights, without resorting, in the first instance, to the tribunal of the order. The Supreme Court of Maine, in Stephenson v. Ins. Co.,
The second question earnestly urged upon our consideration is that the personal representative of the deceased member cannot maintain the action to recover the sick benefits due the deceased, for the reason that the constitution of the grand lodge provides that the "benefits are rights personal to the member, his family and dependent relatives, and are not payable to the legal representative of a member's estate." There is no evidence found in the record that the deceased member, Kelly, had any "family or dependent relatives," and we will assume that he in fact had none. What, then becomes of the sick benefits accruing to him in his lifetime, but unpaid? The evidence is sufficient to establish the fact that he was entitled to them under the rules of the lodge, and having a right to them by reason of the contract, it was the obligation of the defendant *79
lodge to pay them and thus perform its contract. These sick benefits were not mere donations or gratuities, such as pensions (In re Smith,
In Benefit Society v. Clendinen, Admr.,
No error.
Cited: Williams v. Mfg. Co., post, 208; Nelson v. R. R.,