133 Iowa 375 | Iowa | 1906
This action was begun at law to recover the amounts-of two beneficiary certificates issued by the de
The appellee denies the alleged delinquency. It is alleged on her part that, after assessment No. 4 was eálled, said member did pay the amount called for to the proper officer of the local lodge or society. On this contention the evidence is by no means clear. There are several circumstances tending to show that such payment was made, and while other circumstances point to the opposite conclusion, yet, in view of the fact that the burden of showing the suspension of the member or forfeiture of the benefit is upon the defendant, and that the trial court 'had the witnesses in person before it, we are slow to reverse its conclusion from a reading of the printed record. It is not necessary, however, that we dispose of the case upon this particular issue. Joseph Bambousek, upon entering the defendant association, placed in its hands the amount of one advance assessment. He was not liable upon assessment No. 3; for, as we have seen, that assessment was expressly limited to the members holding certificates July 1, 1900. Hence assessment No. 4 was the only one on which said member was or could be made
We do not stop to discuss the various stipulations of the certificate or the several provisions of the laws and rules of the association, for the reason that in two very recent cases this court has had occasion to construe similar benefit contracts, and in each case has reached a'conclusion opposed to the position of the appellant herein. See Hetzel v. Knights and Ladies of Golden Precept, 129 Iowa, 655; Arrison v. Mystic Toilers, 129 Iowa, 303. These cases are directly in point with the one at bar, and, as we are not prepared to overrule them, the right of the plaintiff to recóver herein cannot be denied.