77 P. 83 | Or. | 1904
after stating the facts in the foregoing terms, delivered the opinion of the court.
1. There being no bill of exceptions, the only question involved is whether the findings of fact support the judgment: Noland v. Bull, 24 Or. 479 (33 Pac. 983); Allen v. Leavens, 26 Or. 164 (37 Pac. 488, 26 L. R. A. 620, 46 Am. St. Rep. 613); Richardson v. Dunlap, 26 Or. 270 (38 Pac. 1).
The court found, in effect, that the defendant is a corporation, as alleged ; that it issued to F. T. Miller a certificate in which its by-laws were referred to as a part thereof; that in October and November, 1898, the defendant duly declared assessments on all its members on account of death losses, which were payable during the month next
In addition to the findings made by the court, the pleadings admit that Miller’s certificate provided that it should not be in force at any time when he should be suspended from the order; that, if he should not pay any assessment levied against him within the time prescribed, his certificate would become void, and so continue until
2. The facts admitted by the pleadings are tantamount to findings duly made: Fink v. Canyon Road Co. 5 Or. 301; Luse v. Isthmus Transit Ry. Co. 6 Or. 125 (25 Am. Rep. 506). But as they are only evidentiary, and do not necessarily support the judgment, they are stated merely to show the method prescribed for the reinstatement of a suspended member.
3. Do the findings of fact made by the court show that the defendant waived its right to insist upon a forfeiture of Miller’s membership in the order in consequence of his nonpayment of assessments? A waiver is an intentional relinquishment of a known right, implying an election to forego some advantage which one might, at his option, have insisted upon, and, to be effective as an estoppel, there must be, first, a knowledge of an existence of the right; and, second, an intention to relinquish it: Murray v. Heinze, 17 Mont. 353 (42 Pac. 1057, 43 Pac. 714); Supreme Lodge v. Quinn, 78 Miss. 525 (29 South. 826). Mr. Justice Bean, in Whigham v. Independent Foresters, 44 Or.
In the case at bar the court found that the money sent by Tupker was received by the defendant six days after Miller’s death. The defendant’s general agent must have known that Miller was in default at that time, but evidently did not know of his death, which fixed and determined the rights and obligations of the parties to this action : Stringham v. Mutual Ins. Co. 44 Or. 447 (75 Pac. 822). And as this agent was ignorant of Miller’s illness, a waiver of forfeiture cannot be inferred from the acceptance and retention of the money in the absence of such knowledge. If the court had found the ultimate fact that the defendant’s officers waived a forfeiture and continued to treat Miller as in good standing January 16, 1899, the decision upon the question of fact would probably have been sufficient; but the finding made is equivalent to a conclusion of law, based as it is upon the receipt and retention of the money, and, without further finding that the defendant’s officers knew of Miller’s ill health, is insufficient.
4. Though the clauses of the constitution and by-laws admitted by the pleadings seem to negative the right of a subordinate camp clerk to waive a forfeiture, the finding of the court that Tupker was the agent of the defendant cannot, in the absence of a bill of exceptions, be controverted, and it must therefore be assumed that evidence was introduced in support thereof. It will be remembered
Reversed.