44 So. 791 | Miss. | 1907
delivered the opinion of the court.
On the 5th day of October, 1894, Samuel Morgan became a member of the Independent Order of the Sons and Daughters of Jacob of America. This organization is a mutual benefit association. Samuel Morgan was about fifty-eight years old at the time he joined, and was illiterate, unable to read or write, or sign his name. The beneficiaries named in the insurance certificate issued by the order of the Sons and Daughters of Jacob of America at the time he joined the order are the appellants in this case, Lucy Morgan and others. Samuel Morgan was continually a member of this order from the time he joined in 1894 until the day of his death, which occurred on the 15th day of July, 1905, eleven years after he became a member of
The appellee hopes to win this suit upon this solitary fact; that is to say, escape liability because this assessment for June was not paid upon the first day of June, but upon the second day, and therefore, Samuel Morgan, under other by-laws which
The court cannot overlook the fact that associations of the character now before the court largely deal with the illiterate and ignorant. The by-laws consist of a multiplicity of rules and regulations in volume composing a small book. A correct interpretation of their meaning often puzzles the most astute, ís it, then, a matter of wonder that courts construe their contracts most favorable to the insured? This court has said in Murphy v. Independent Order, etc., 77 Miss., 830, 27 South. Rep., 624, 50 L. H. A. 111, that in dealing with these orders there shall be a liberal construction of the by-laws in favor of the insured, so as to prevent a forfeiture, if possible. This is but the announcement of the universal rule upon this subject by all the courts, the rectitude and wisdom of which is made manifest by this record, wherein this order is seeking to invalidate the insurance policy of Samuel Morgan, on which he has paid for eleven years, because the assessment was paid on the second day of June, instead of the first, just one day after the date the by-laws specified that it should be paid. In Thompson v. Knickerbocker Ins. Company, 104, U. S., 252, 26 L. Ed. 765, in the conclusion of the opinion, the court says: “Courts do not favor forfeitures, hut they cannot avoid enforcing them when the party by whose default they are incurred cannot show some good and stable ground in the conduct of the other party on which to base a reasonable excuse for the default. We do
Mutual benefit societies are subject to the same rules of law that govern other life insurance companies, except in so far as the rules of law appertaining to other life insurance societies may be lawfully modified by the objects and purposes of the organization of the society. No insurance corporation or society can, by contract or by virtue of its by-laws, exempt itself in advance from liability to estop itself from asserting a forfeiture of a policy of insurance, when there has been a breach of its conditions on the part of the insured and the conduct on its part has been affirmatively such as to induce the belief that the forfeiture has been waived. After the failure of Samuel Morgan to pay the June assessment the day it was due, if tlm lodge was to treat him as nonfinancial and suspended from the order, it was their duty, to decline to receive further assessments from him until he should have been reinstated according to sec. 3 of Art. VI; that is, until he should have personally appeared at a regular meeting of the lodge and paid in cash all dues, taxes, and assessments. If they considered him nonfinancial and suspended, he was a stranger to the order from the date he became so, and they had no right to accept his money under such circumstances as would lead him to believe that he was
It is argued by appellant that sec. 2 of Art. VI of the by-laws, which provides that a member shall be nonfinancial and suspended from the order on failure to pay any tax or assessment when due, is void, because it is harsh, unjust, and unreasonable. We are not called upon to determine this question. It is not essential to a decision of this ease. Neither is it necessary for us to decide whether or not this section, ipso ■facto, suspends a member from the order upon failure to pay any assessment or tax upon the day it falls due, because the appellees have estopped themselves to set up any claim under this section for the nonpayment of this tax on the day it was due, for the reason that they have accepted the June payment and the July payment as though there had been no default, and they have continued in every way to treat Samuel Morgan as a financial member, and have not in any way put him on notice that he was suspended. If it be considered that for a violation of sec. 2 of Art. VI, a member is ipso facto suspended from the order, it follows that the order from that time on must decline to receive his dues, except in the way provided in sec. 3, of the same article of the by-laws; that is, by requiring him to personally appear at a regular meeting of the lodge and pay
Mutual benefit orders can be estopped by their contract just as private individuals are estopped. Any clause in any order which contracts against the effect of acts on their part which would create an estoppel on the part of individuals is in contravention of the law and void. For eleven years Samuel Morgan had paid his dues, and the only claim of exemption from liability by the order is that towards the close of his life, instead of paying on the first day of June, he paid on the second day of June. We can imagine no more technical defense issuing from an order, the declared purposes of which are to promote benevolence, establish benefit funds, and render aid to the needy, sick, and distressed member, than the defense which is sought in this case. If the order seeks to avoid its liability by requiring of its members technical exactness in the payment of their dues, this court will exact of it technical exactness in its moral duties towards its membership, to the end that none may be misled in supposing that they are laying by something for the dependent ones left, when the hand that has earned the money wherewith to pay the dues to the lodge is cold and still. Forfeitures are hateful to the court. This court will never avoid an insurance'policy, acted upon in good faith by the insured, where the dues .have all been paid and the company is in no way prejudiced by any act of the insured, unless it be in the clearest case of a violation of good faith with the insurance company. Reversed and remanded.