134 Mo. App. 501 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908
Appellant is a fraternal order and issues benefit certificates for the payment of annuities on the occurrence of death or certain disabilities. These respondents held a certificate which provided, among other things, that if Walter Puckett was partly disabled by the loss of an eye, respondents should receive an annuity of $300 for ten years, payable in quarterly installments of seventy-five dollars each. The insured accidentally lost the sight of his right eye on October 5, 1905. In March, 1906, appellant allowed his claim for an annuity under the policy, and in the month of-April paid him and his corespondent the first quarterly installment of the annuity for said year, to-wit, $75. It afterwards refused to pay other installments, and on March 5, 1908, this action was instituted to recover $2,925, as respondents’ total damages sustained by appellant’s breach of the contract of insurance. The answer admits appellant is a beneficial association existing under the laws of this State, and that it issued the certificate mentioned in the petition, whereby respondents became members of the beneficial department of a subordinate assembly in St. Louis, and entitled to all the privileges accorded to members by the order’s constitution and by-laws; admits appellant agreed to pay respondents, or the survivor, an annuity for ten years, payable quarterly, in the event that while members in good standing in the association, one of them should suffer complete and permanent loss of the sight of an eye; the payment to commence within ninety days from the date when proof, in due form, was furnished the association. The other averments of the petition were denied. At the trial these facts were admitted by appellant in open court: the constitution and by-laws of appellant were part of the contract of. indemnity; under section 5, article 7 of the by-laws, either of respondents was entitled to an annuity of $300, payable quarterly, in the event of the complete loss of one eye; appellant was a fraternal beneficial association, de
The question to be determined is presented in an unusual phase; for commonly it appears as a plea of former recovery asserted against a plaintiff’s right to maintain a second suit for damages for the breach of a contract, on the ground that the entire damages ought to have been recovered in the prior action; but the same principles and authorities must be resorted to for the rule of decision when parties insist, as these respondents do, they had the right to sue for total damages, both
Applying tfie foregoing autfiorities to tfie case at bar, we call attention to the form of tfie admission of appellant concerning its default in paying tfie breached annuities when they accrued. Appellant admitted it had paid one installment of annuity and “failed to pay tfie other installments because of misinformation from its physicians and other parties as to tfie nature and extent of the injury.” No more can be made of said admission than tfiat appellant omitted to make its payments because it was erroneously advised concerning tfie injury, which was far from being an absolute repudiation of tfie contract; for it is reasonable to conclude tfiat if tfie facts were made to appear, appellant would perform its agreement; as indeed it offered to do after it had learned the truth.
We apprehend total damages cannot be recovered except when this can be done consistently with tfie terms of tfie agreement, and without enlarging tfie rights of the aggrieved party beyond what both parties -may be supposed, in reason, to have contemplated when they came to their agreement. Tfie purpose of tfie rule, or tfie group of rules, with which we áre concerned, is to prevent a defendant from being put to tfie expense and annoyance of several actions to enforce rights arising from a single cause of action, when complete redress can be afforded in one suit. To realize this purpose, tfie obligee of a broken agreement will be barred of a second action for damages which fie might have obtained in tfie first one. [Wagner v. Jacoby, 26 Mo. 532; La Crosse Lumber Co. v. Ag., etc., Society, 59 Mo. App. 24. Sutherland, Damages (8 Ed.), sec. 106.] Tfie doctrine ought not to be extended further than is necessary to prevent tfie mischief to be obviated. Therefore another ground on which we put our decis
Inasmuch as appellant is willing for a decree to go in favor of respondents for the installments due at the time of the trial, together with interest; that it shall be adjudged appellant thereafter pay the installments as they fall due, and that respondents may have an execution for any installment if it remains unpaid for ten days after maturity, on filing an affidavit to that effect, such a decree may be entered.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.