Parsons v. Grand Lodge of Ancient Order of United Workmen
108 Iowa 6 | Iowa | 1899
Deemer, J.- — I.
*81*7On the fifteenth day of October, 1892, the defendant, a mutual benefit association, issued a certificate of membership to Prank IT. Parsons, in which Ada II. Parsons, who then bore the relationship to him of wife, was named as beneficiary. Thereafter, and on the thirteenth day of December, 1893, the assured directed and requested the defendant to change the beneficiary, and in this direction *8said: “And now authorize and direct such payment to be made to Mrs. Esther H. Parsons, bearing relation to myself of wife.” Thereupon, and on the twenty-eighth day of the last-mentioned month, the company issued a new certificate to Parsons, in which the benficiary was named as “Esther H. Parsons, his wife.” At the time these certificates' were issued, the law (Acts Twenty-first General Assembly, chapter 65, section 7) provided that im certificate should be issued to any person unless the beneficiary thereunder should be the husband, wife, relative, legal representative, heir, or legatee of the insured. The constitution of the association also provided that no certificate should be issued or made payable to any person not a member of the family or heir of the assured, and that, when a change of beneficiary was desired, the beneficiary under the new certificate must be a legal member of the family, or an heir at law of the member. Defendant contends that the evidence tended to show that the marriage between the assured and Esther IT. Parsons was null and void because of prior marriage of the assured. As the allegations of the answer pleading prior marriage were denied by operation of law, the burden was on defendant to show that plaintiff was not the wife of the assured. The confession and avoidance contained in the reply did not obviate the necessity of such proof. Code, section 3577; Day v. Insurance Co. 75 Iowa, 694; Nichols v. Railroad Co. 94 Iowa, 202; Schulte v. Coulthurst, 94 Iowa, 418. To prove the prior marriage, defendant 2 introduced the direction first made by the assured to pay the amount to which he might be entitled to Ada H. Parsons, whom he described as his wife; a letter of the assured, in which he said there had been a mistake in his original certificate, and that it should read payable to Esther H., instead of Ada H.; letters in which he stated that Esther II. Parsons was his lawful wife, and that Mrs. Esther II. Parsons had only been his wife since December 2, 1893 ; and a statement made by him to an agent of the association, some *9time before tbe second certificate was issued, to the effect that he had procured a divorce from Ada Parsons in Chicago. The only other evidence bearing on the question is that of plaintiff, in which she says she was not related to the assured in any other way than wife. We have already seen 3 that the admissions in the reply cannot be considered. Whether or not they might have had probative force had they been introduced in evidence, we have no occasion to determine. Conceding, then, for the purpose of this case, that statements, oral and written, made by the assured prior to the time of the issuance of the certificate in question, are admissible in evidence, and that proof of a void marriage would defeat plaintiff’s right of recovery, we find that the same kind of evidence adduced to sustain these propositions establishes the fact that the assured was divorced from his first wife prior to the time he received the second certificate of membership, and that he was married to plaintiff some time in December of the year 1893. The law also 4 raises a presumption in favor of innocence, and that there was no legal impediment to the contracting of the second marriage. Blanchard v. Lambert, 43 Iowa, 228, and cases cited; Leach v. Hall, 95 Iowa, 611. The case is not like one in which the former wife is making a claim to her husband’s property, as were Gilman v. Sheets, 18 Iowa, 499; Ellis v. Ellis, 58 Iowa, 120; and Barnes v. Barnes, 90 Iowa, 282. The trial court was right in holding that the invalidity of the second marriage was not established.
5 II. The petition alleges that due notice of death of the deceased was presented to the proper officers of the defendant. This is denied in the answer. To sustain the allegation, the plaintiff introduced a let-tea’ written by her attorney to the grand recorder of the defendant at Waterloo, Iowa, in which the association wras informed of Parsons death, and asked what was needed by way of proofs. To this the recorder responded by saying that Parsons had been suspended for nonpayment of dues and other delin*10quencies, and further stating that, if the attorney “understood tbe laws of Iowa governing this class of insurance, you (he) would -undoubtedly hesitate to- have taken any action in the case without further evidence.” Undoubtedly, this amounted to a waiver of proofs of death. Grattan v. Insurance Co., 80 N. Y. 281;Shaw v. Insurance Co., 69 N. Y. 286; Bloom v. Insurance Co. 94 Iowa, 359; George Dee & Sons Co. v. Key City Fire Ins. Go., 104 Iowa, 167, and 6 cases cited. But, as a waiver was not pleaded, it cannot be relied upon. McCoy v. Insurance Co., 107 Iowa, 80; Heusinkveld v. Insurance Co., 96 Iowa, 224; Heusinkveld v. Insurance Co. 95 Iowa, 504; Eiseman v. Insurance Co., 74 Iowa, 11; Zinch v. Insurance Co., 60 Iowa, 266; Welsh v. Insurance Co., 71 Iowa, 337. The 7 statute (McClain’s Code 1888, section 1734) provides that the assured shall give the - “company or association notice in writing of such loss, accompanied by an affidavit stating the facts as to how the loss occurred, so far as they were within his knowledge.” This section applies to mutual benefit associations as well as to fire and life insurance companies. Cook v. Association, 74 Iowa, 746; Christie v. Investment Co. 82 Iowa, 360. And the statutory notice includes an affidavit showing the facts regarding the death. Von Genechtin v. Insurance Co. 75 Iowa, 546; Wilhelmi v. Insurance Co. 86 Iowa, 326. So that an allegation that due notice was given necessarily implies that proofs of death were furnished. And, in face of a denial, proof of the giving of the statutory notice is required. As there was no such evidence, the court erred in directing a verdict for plaintiff. The case of Welsh v. Insurance Co., supra, is quite in point on this last proposition. For the error pointed out, the judgment of the district court is reversed.
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