Murphy v. Independent Order of the Sons & Daughters of Jacob of America

77 Miss. 830 | Miss. | 1900

Wiiitpield, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Delia Murphy was not “nonfinancial” within the meaning of sec. 7, art. 5, and sec., 20 of same article, taken together, and construed strictly against forfeiture, for two reasons: first, she was not shown to be “three months in arrears,” as to fines; and second, she had not been “declared” nonfinancial. Two provisions of a similar order, strikingly like these, were construed not to work a forfeiture without a “declaration” to that end, in Scheufler v. Grand Lodge, 45 Minn., 261.

She was, then, being “financial” when the injury occurred, entitled to the sick benefit of one dollar per week, as provided in see. 1, art. 6, sec. 5, art. 6, and sec. 12, art. 10. Her lodge, was notified of her condition, but neglected her.

*835It is said that she did not herself pay assessments Nos. 20, 21, and 22'. There is no evidence at all satisfactory that she was ever notified of these assessments. The last clause of sec. 18, art. 10 expressly made it the duty of the worthy scribe of the subordinate lodge “to notify each member as to his arrears.” It is necessary that such notice should be given. This is in accordance with all the authorities. McCorkle v. Ins. Association, 71 Texas, 151; Supreme Lodge v. Johnson, 78 Ind., 110. A contract could, of course, be so framed as to dispense with it, but it is here required. •

It is said that the proof of death was not made by the proper officers, nor in the proper mode. The appellant did all she could. The officers required by the constitution to mate it out and forward it refused to do so. It cannot be that a wilful failure of these officers to do their duty in the matter can cause a forfeiture of appellant’s rights, she not being in fault. And it is so expressly held in Young v. Grand Council, 63 Minn., 506. That case property holds -that- the subordinate lodge is, as to this, the agent of the grand lodge, Asdrich doctrine is Avell settled. 1 Bacon on Ben. Societies, secs. 118, 144. It is there said that the- subordinate lodge is the agent of the grand lodge, and not of the plaintiff, in all that relates to the collecting of the assessments for death benefits, etc.

Finally, it is said that the subordinate.lodge did not pay the grand lodge, even if Delia Murphy can be regarded as not delinquent in not having paid the subordinate lodge, because not notified of assessments Nos. 20, 21 and 22, and that sec. 18, art. 7, is conclusiv-e, in this view, of nonliability. The hidden purpose of sec. 18 seems to be to make the subordinate lodge the agent of the assured in all things, and to provide that its negligence shall not bind the grand lodge as principal. We say “hidden,” because it is not clearly so expressed. But, as shoAA-n, the subordinate lodge, under the constitution and by-laAvs, taken as a whole, and the general laAv applicable to them and to the facts of this case, is the agent of the grand lodge as to the *836payment and collection of assessments. It was expressly held in Schunch v. Gegenseitizer Wittwen und Waisen Fond, 44 Wis., 375, that the grand lodge cannot escape liability on the failure of the subordinate lodge to do its duty in remitting to the grand lodge the assessment. Says the court: “The grove [the subordinate lodge] acts for and represents the defendant [the grand lodge] in making the contract with the member, unless we adopt as correct the idea that the member, by some one-sided arrangement, makes a contract with himself through his own agent. It seems to us that any such position as that the grove is the sole agent of the member in effecting the insurance or collecting the assessments, is untenable.”

It may be admitted in this case, as in that, that the provisions of the constitution and by-laws are difficult to reconcile with each other, being very inartificially drawn. But the grean supervening principles in the light of which they are to be construed, that as against forfeitures strict construction must be had, so as to prevent a forfeiture if reasonably possible, and that in dealing with these benevolent orders liberal construction in favor of the insured is to -be indulged applied here, satisfy us that the appellee is liable.

Since the writing of the above the United States supreme court has, in the case of Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias v. Josephine Withers, 177 U. S., 260, decided the exact point here involved, as we have. That opinion, delivered by Justice Brown, is so luminous and cogent in its reasoning that we quote, to adopt, the following:

“There seems to have been an attempt on the part of the defendant to invest Mr. Chadwick with the power and authority' of an agent, and at the same time to repudiate his agency. But the refusal to acknowledge him as agent does not make him the less so, if the principal assume to control his conduct. It is as if a creditor should instruct his debtor to pay his claim to *837a third person, and at the same time declare that such third person was not his agent to receive the money. It would scarcely be contended, however, that such payment would not be a good discharge of the debt, though the third person never accounted to the creditor, much less that it would not be a good payment as of a certain day, though the remittance, through the fault of the person receiving it, did not reach the creditor until the following day.
“The position of the secretary must be determined by his actual power and authority, and not by the name which the defendant chooses to give him. To invest him with the duties of an agent, and to deny his agency, is a mere juggling'with words. Defendant cannot thus play fast and loose with its own subordinates. Upon its theory the policy holders had absolutely no protection. They were bound to make their monthly payments to the secretary of the section, who was bound to remit them to the board of control, but they could not compel him to remit, and were thus completely at his mercy. If he chose to play into the hands of the company, it was possible for him, by delaying his remittance until after the end of the month, to cause a suspension of every certificate within his jurisdiction, and in case such remittance was not made within thirty days from such suspension (sec. 6), apparently to make it necessary under see. 4 for each policy holder to regain his membership by making a new application, surrendering his forfeited certificate, making payment of the required membership fee, undergoing a new medical examination, and paying a premium determined by his age at date of the last application. In other words, by the .failure of the secretary, over whom he had no control, to remit within thirty days, every member of the section might lose his rights under his certificate and stand in the position of one making a new application, with a forfeiture of all premiums previously paid. It could not thus clothe the secretaries of the sections with the powers of agents by authorizing them to receive monthly payments and instructing them *838to account for and remit them to the supreme lodge at Chicago, and in the same breath deny that they were agents at all. The very definition of an agent given by Bouvier, as ‘one who undertakes to transact some business, or manage some affair for another, by the authority and on account of the latter, and to render an account of it/ presupposes that the acts done by the agent shall be done in the interest of the principal, and that he shall receive his instructions from him. In this case the agent received his instructions from the supreme lodge, and his actions were, at. least, as much for the convenience of the lodge as for that of the insured. If the supreme lodge intrusted Chadwick with a certain authority, it stands in no position to deny that he was its agent within the scope of that authority.
“The reports are by no means barren of cases turning upon the proper construction of this so-called “agency clause,” under which the defendant seeks to shift its responsibility upon the insured for the neglect of Chadwick to remit on the proper day. In some jurisdictions it is held to be practically void and of no effect; in others, it is looked upon as a species of wild animal, lying in wait and ready to spring upon the unwary policy holder, and in all, it is eyed with suspicion and construed with great strictness. We think it should not be given effect when manifestly contrary to the facts of the case, or opposed to the interests of justice. Wherever the ageny clause is inconsistent with the other clauses of the policy conferring power and authority upon the agent, he is treated as the agent of the company rather than of the policy holder. The object of the clause in most cases is to transfer the responsibility for his acts from the party to • whom it properly belongs to one who generally has no knowledge of its existence. It is usually introduced into policies in connection' with the application, and for the purpose of making the agent of the company tile agent of the party making the application, with respect to the statements therein contained.
*839“It was formerly beM in New York (Rohrback v. Germania Fire Ins. Co., 62 N. Y., 47, and Alexander v. Germania Fire Ins. Co., 66 N. Y., 464) that, where the insured had contracted that the person who had procured the insurance should be deemed his agent, he must abide by his agreement, and where such person had, through fault or mistake, misstated in the application to the company the declarations of the assured, the latter must suffer for the error or -wrong, but in a subsequent case (Whited v. Germania Fire Ins. Co., 76 N. Y, 415) this doctrine was held to be limited to such acts as the agent performed in connection with the original application, and that in a renewal of the policy such party was treated as the agent of the defendant, for whose acts it was bound, and that it was within his power to make a valid waiver of the conditions of the policy. Said the court in its opinion: ‘That he was the agent of the defendant it would be fatuous to deny, were it not for a clause in the policy [the agency clause] upon which the defendant builds. . . . But if the insured is to be now bound as having thus contracted, there must be mutuality in the contract. No man can serve two masters. If the procurer of the insurance is to be deemed the agent of the insured . . . he may not be taken into the service of the insurer as its agent, or if he is so taken, the insurer must be bound by his acts and words, when he stands iai its place and moves and speaks as one having authority from it; and pro hoc vice, at least, he does then rightfully put off his agency for the insured and put on that for the insurer. . . . Nor will it hold the plaintiff so strictly to the contract he made as to permit the defendant to ignore it and take his agent as its agent, and yet make him suffer for all the shortcomings of that person while acting between Lhem and while under authority from the defendant to act for it.’ So in Sprague v. Holland Purchase Ins. Co., 69 N. Y., 128, the insured signed a blank form of application, which was filled up by the company’s agent without any knowledge or dictation of the insured. There wore *840false statements therein, occasioned by the mistake or inadvertence of the agent. The policy contained the agency clause, as well as the condition that the application must be made out by the defendant’s authorized agent, and it was held, using the language of the court in the White case, that the latter clause Wallowed down’ the former, and that there was no warranty binding upon the plaintiff.
“In Partridge v. Commercial Fire Ins. Co., 17 Hun, 95, it was said of the agency clause: 'This is a provision which deserves the condemnation of courts whenever it is relied upon to work out a fraud, as it is in this ease. The policy might as well say that the president of the company should be deemed the agent of the assured. . . . Such a clause is no part of a contract. It is an attempt to reverse the law of agency, and to declare that a party is not bound by his agent’s acts. Whether one is an agent of another is a question of mixed law and fact, depending on the authority given expressly or impliedly When a contract is, in fact, made through the agent of a party, the acts of that agent in that respect are binding on the principal."
“In Nassauer v. Susquehanna Ins., Co., 109 Pa., 509, under a by-law providing that 'in all cases the person forwarding applications shall be deemed the agent of the applicant,’ it was held, under the circumstances of the case, that the agent of the company soliciting insurance was not the agent of the applicant, and that such by-law was not binding upon-him.. Although the insured is supposed to know at his peril the conditions of the policy, that will not bind him to a provision which is not true, and one which the company had no right to insert therein. 'We do not assent,’ said the court, 'to the proposition that the offer [that the agent made his own valuation of the property] was incompetent, because Laubach was the agent of the assured in filling up the application and forwarding it to the company. He was not the agent of the assured. The latter ’had not employed him for any purpose. He was the agent of the defendant company, and as such called upon the assured *841and solicited a policy, and, having obtained his consent, proceeded to fill up the application for him to sign. As to all these preliminary matters the person soliciting the insurance is the agent of the company.’ The court, speaking of the agency clause, observed: 'This court, in the case above cited [Columbia Ins. Co. v. Cooper, 50 Pa. St., 331], characterized a somewhat similar provision as a “cunning condition.” The court might have gone further and designated it as a dishonest condition. It was the assertion of a falsehood, and an attempt to put that falsehood into the mouth of the assured. It formed no part of the contract of insurance. That contract consists of the application and the policy issued in pursuance thereof. In point of fact, the assured does not see the policy until after it is executed and delivered to him. In many instances it is laid away by him and never read, especially as to the elaborate conditions in fine print. Grant that it is his duty to read it, his neglect to do so can bind him only for what the company had a right to insert therein. He was not bound to suppose that- the company would falsely assert, either by direct language in the policy or by reference, to a by-law, that a man was his agent who had never been his agent, but who was, on the contrary, the agent of the company. Notwithstanding this was a mutual company, the assured did not become a -member thereof until after the insurance was effected. Hence a by-law of the company of which he had no knowledge, and by which he was bound, could not affect him in matters occurring before the granting of the policy. And even the by-law of a mutual company which declares that black is white does not necessarily make it so.’ Similar cases are those of Eilenberger v. Ins. Co., 89 Pa. St., 464; Susquehanna Ins. Co. v. Cusick, 109 Pa. St., 157, and Kister v. Ins. Co., 128 Pa. St., 553.
“The case of Lycoming, etc., Ins. Co. v. Ward, 90 Ill., 545, resembles the case under consideration. In that case it was held that, where the assured contracts with one as the agent *842of tlie insurer, believing him to be such, and does not employ such supposed agent to act for him in obtaining insurance, such person has no power to act for or bind the insured, though the policy may provide that the person procuring the insurance shall be deemed the agent of the insured, and not of the company. Plaintiff paid the premium to the person with whom she contracted for the insurance, and of whom she obtained the policy. It was held that such person, assuming to be the agent of the company, the payment was binding upon the company, whether he paid the money over or not. In that case the person to whom the money was paid was not in reality an agent of the company, although plaintiff believed him to be such, but only a street insurance broker, who represented himself to be the agent of the company. Said the court: ‘Under such circumstances who should bear the loss arising from the fraud committed by the street broker? Should it fall upon the plaintiff, who was an innocent party in the transaction, or should it fall upon the company, who alone enabled Puschman to successfully consummate the contract of insurance by placing in his hands the policy for delivery? The street broker was not the agent of the plaintiff for any purpose. If the evidence be true, he had no authority to act for her or bind her in any manner whatever by what he might do in the premises, and while lie may not have been, in fact, the agent of the company, still the company, by placing the policy in the hands of the street broker for delivery, is estopped from claiming that the payment made to him upon delivery of the policy is not binding upon the company.’ In Indiana it is also held that a recital in the policy that the broker obtaining an insurance is the agent of the insured is n<Jt conclusive upon that subject. Indiana Ins. Co. v. Hartwell, 100 Ind., 566. In North British, etc., Ins. Co. v. Crutchfield, 108 Ind., 518, the agency clause was held to be absolutely void as applied to a local agent, upon whose counter signature the validity of the policy, by its terms, was made to depend.
*843“In Boetcher v. Hawkeye Ins. Co., 47 Iowa, 253, it was bold that, if the assured had the right to believe the soliciting agent of the company, the insertion of a clause in the policy providing that he was the agent of the assured constituted a fraud upon the latter, of which the company could not take advantage.
“Speaking of the agency clause in Continental Ins. Co. v. Pearce, 39 Kan., 396, it said : 'This is but a form of words to attempt to create on paper an agency which in fact never existed. It is an attempt of the company not to restrict the powers of its own agent, but- an effort to do away with that relation altogether by mere words, and to make him in the same manner the agent of the assured, when in fact such relation never existed. We do not believe the entire nature and order of this well established relation can be so completely subverted by this ingenious device of words. The real fact, as it existed, cannot be hidden in this manner, much less can it be destroyed, and something that did not in reality exist be placed in its stead. The substance is superior to the mere drapery of words with whieh one party ’wishes to bring into existence and clothe an unreal authority.’ See, also, Kausal v. Minnesota, etc., Ins. Association, 31 Minn., 17, in which the act of an. insurance agent in making out an incorrect application -was held chargeable to the insurer, and not to the insured, notwithstanding the insertion of an agency clause in the policy.
“In Planters’, etc., Ins. Co. v, Myers, 55 Miss., 479, an agency clause in a policy of insurance was held to be void, as involving a legal contradiction. The applicant made truthful answers to certain interrogatories propounded by the agent, who stated certain things that were not true. They were held not to be binding upon the insured. Speaking of the agency clause, it is said: 'The verbiage of this condition is not candid. It seems to. have been used with studied design to obscure the real purpose. It is a snare, set in an obscure place, well calculated *844to escape notice. It is not written or printed on the face of tbe policy. It is not so much as alluded to in the application; nor is the agent, in his printed instructions, enjoined to inform those with whom he treats of it. Its inevitable effect is to greatly weaken the indemnity on which the assured relied. Tt is inconsistent with the acts and conduct of the insurance companies in sending abroad all over the land their agents and representatives to canvass for risks. It is an effort by covenant to get the benefits and profits which these agents bi’ing them, and at the same time repudiate the relation they sustain to them, and to set up that relationship with the assured, and that, too, without their knowledge and consent. It is not a limitation or restriction of power, but the dissolution of the relationship with themselves and the establishment of it between other parties.’
“The case of Schunch v. Gegenseitiger Wittwen und Waisen Fond. 44 Wis., 369, is almost precisely like the instant case. The constitution of the defendant corporation, whose governing body or directory was elected by the several “groves” (corresponding to the sections in this case) of the United Ancient Order of Druids, declared that every member whose assessment was not paid by his grove to the directory within thirty days after demand made, forfeited his claim to have a certain sum in the nature of life insurance paid to his widow or heirs after his death. It was held that in view of all the provisions of such constitution, the benevolent object of the corporation, and the fact that the several groves are, at least, as much its agents to collect and pay over the dues of their members as they are agents of the latter, in case of a member whose dues have been fully paid to his grove at the time of his death, the amount of insurance might be recovered, notwithstanding a default of the grove in paying over such dues to the defendant.
“The agency clause was also once before this court in the case of Grace v. American Central Ins. Co., 109 U. S., 278, in which a clause in the policy that the person procuring the *845insurance to be taken should be deemed the agent of tha assured and not of the company, was held to import nothing move than that the person obtaining the insurance was to be deemed the agent of the insured in the matters immediately connected with the procurement, of the policy, and that where his employment did not extend beyond the procurement of the insurance, his agency ceased upon the execution of the policy, and subsequent notice to him of its termination by the company was not notice to the insured.
“In the following eases the officers of the subordinate lodge, or conclave, were treated as the agents of the supreme conclave ■in the matter of granting extensions óf time for the payment of assessments: Whiteside v. Supreme Conclave, 82 Fed. Rep., 275, and Knights of Pythias v. Bridges, 39 S. W. Rep. (Tex.), 333.
“The decisive consideration is this: Chadwick was the agent of the defendant, and of the defendant only, after the receipt of the money from Withers. Under sec. 10 he then became responsible for it to the board of control. In rendering his monthly accounts and paying over the money he acted solely for the defendant. From the time he paid the money to Chadwick the insured had no control over him, and was not interested in its disposition. Unless we are to hold tire insured responsible for a default of this agent, which he could not possibly prevent,.we are bound to say that his payment to this agent discharged his full obligation to the defendant. That it should have the power of declaring that the default of Chadwick, by so much as one day [and it did not exceed, four days in this case], to pay over this money, should cause a forfeiture of every certificate within his jurisdiction, is a practical injustice too gross to be tolerated.
“Without indorsing everything that is said in the cases above cited, we should be running counter to an overwhelming weight of authority were we to hold that the agency clause should be given full effect, regardless of other clauses in the certificate *846or by-laws, indicative of an intention to make the officers of subordinate lodges agents of the supreme or central authority. We should rather seek to avoid as far as possible any injustice arising from a too literal interpretation, and only give the clause such effect as is consistent with the other by-laws and with the manifest equities of the case. We are, therefore, of opinion that in this case the secretary of the section was in reality the agent of the supreme lodge from the time he received the monthly payments, and that the insured was not responsible for his failure to remit immediately after the tenth of the month.’’

Reversed, and decree here for appellant.

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