99 Ark. 204 | Ark. | 1911
Appellant, Mosaic Templars- of America, is a fraternal insurance order or society organized and maintained by negroes, having supreme and subordinate chapters or temples. This is an action by the beneficiaries under a policy or benefit certificate in the sum of $150 issued to Anna Anderson, one of the members of said society. The by-laws provided for payment, by each member, -of the sum of twenty-five cents annually to the subordinate chapter or temple payable at the first meeting in each year, and the further sum of seventy-five cents quarterly as endowment dues on each policy of $150 payable on or before the tenth day of the first month of each quarter, and also what is called a State tax in the sum of twenty-five cents. Anna Anderson died on December 21, 1908, and the endowment dues for that quarter had become due and payable on December 10. She had paid this amount to the local scribe on December 15, and the amount was forwarded to the national scribe, together with .the dues of fourteen other members, on December 22, 1908, which was the next day after the death of Anna Anderson. The national scribe credited the amount so paid to said members, including Anna Anderson, but, when the -proofs of death came to his hands, the national scribe refunded this particular payment to the scribe of the subordinate chapter and refused payment of the policy, on the ground that Anna Anderson had forfeited her membership by failing to pay her endowment dues within the time provided by the by-laws. There was evidence tending to show, and the circuit court found, that, though the by-laws provided for payment of the endowment dues to the national scribe, the custom prevailed for the payments to be made to the local s-cribe, and such payments were accepted by the national scribe. By this -course of conduct the terms of the by-laws were abrogated, and the local scribe was constituted as the agent of the national organization for the purpose of collecting those assess-merits or dues. The national scribe accepted and retained the endowment dues paid by Anna Anderson, though he must have known they were paid after the ioth of December. It is true that he did not know, at the time the amount came to his hands, that-Anna Anderson was dead, but he must have known that the payment was made after December io, for no question was raised at the time he received the money as to the time it had been paid. If the local scribe was constituted, according to this custom, as the agent of the national organization for the purpose of collecting the dues and received the payment from Anna Anderson, the failure to send the name in to the national scribe until after her death did not work a forfeiture of the policy. United Brothers of Friendship v. Haymon, 67 Ark. 506. We are therefore of the opinion that there was sufficient evidence to sustain the finding of the circuit judge, and that under the law applicable to those facts the appellant is responsible for the amount of the policy. Judgment affirmed.