126 Minn. 494 | Minn. | 1914
Plaintiff brought this action against defendant, a fraternal beneficiary association, to recover the amount of a benefit certificate issued to Babbi Osias Kulberg, and recovered a verdict. Defendant made the usual alternative motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial, and appealed from the order denying such motion.
The rules relating to pleading were not followed very closely by either party, and each sought to take advantage of the defects in the pleading of the other. The complaint did not correctly or truly set forth the contract with the association. The benefit certificate provided that the constitution and laws of the association, the application for membership, the medical examination, and the benefit certificate, taken together, constituted the contract. The certificate also provided, in effect, that no liability should exist against the association, unless Osias Kulberg paid all assessments within the time and in the manner required by the laws of the association, and that the amount payable at his death should be the sum of $2,000 less the amount, if any, to be deducted for his unexpired life expectancy as provided in the by-laws.
Plaintiff alleged in effect that the benefit certificate was an absolute and unconditional promise to pay the sum of $2,000 at the death of Osias Kulberg. At the trial he offered the certificate in evidence. Defendant objected on the ground that the contract set forth therein was not the contract alleged in the complaint. Without waiting for a ruling by the court, plaintiff withdrew the offer. He then proved the death of the insured and that proofs thereof had been
• The answer cannot be construed as admitting the contract alleged in the complaint. It contained a general denial of everything not admitted. It set forth a contract different from that stated in the complaint. It admitted the issuance of a certificate, but did not admit that such certificate was the certificate alleged in the complaint, nor that it contained the terms alleged in the complaint. It did not admit the existence of any contract except that alleged in the answer. In the face of the general denial and of the allegations of the answer as to the terms of the contract, it cannot be held that the defendant admitted the issuance of a certificate having the force and effect alleged in the complaint. It follows that plaintiff had not established his cause' of action when he rested. In view of admissions subsequently made, however, this ruling would not be cause for reversal in the absence of other errors. But the fact that the court assumed that plaintiff’s cause of action had been admitted had an important bearing upon the subsequent proceedings. Defendant in attempting to prove its defense offered the benefit certificate in evidence. Assuming that the cause of action alleged in the complaint had been admitted, plaintiff objected to the reception of the certificate and the court excluded it as not tending to prove any matter in controversy. This ruling was error. Plaintiff’s cause of action had not been admitted, and the certificate directly tended to prove the terms of the contract and that it was conditional as asserted in the answer.
Defendant sought to amend the answer by alleging that the contract provided that the amount payable thereunder should be determined by deducting the amount of the assessments for the unexpired life expectancy of Osias Kulberg from the maximum sum of $2,000 stated in the certificate. Defendant also sought to prove the length of such unexpired term of life expectancy and the amount of the assessments payable by the terms of the contract during such
Toward the close of the trial plaintiff admitted that the laws of the association required the payment of an assessment every month and provided that failure to pay such assessments within the month should render the contract void and of no effect. Defendant also made an admission which supplied the evidence lacking on the part of plaintiff. Defendant proved without contradiction that Osias Kulberg had paid no assessments whatever during the four years preceding his death. • For the purpose of showing that defendant had waived the making of such payments, plaintiff sought to prove that Osias Kulberg had tendered the assessments for April and May, 1908, and that defendant had refused to accept them. Defendant’s objection that such proof was inadmissible under the pleadings was waived by admissions made at the trial. Defendant seems to have claimed that members- of the local lodge were older than stated in their applications, and to have demanded from Kulberg and others an official certificate showing the date of birth. -They were unable to furnish such certificates. Apparently, for that reason, the members