115 Mo. 588 | Mo. | 1893
This is an appeal from a judgment of the. circuit court of St. Louis for $2,000 and interest, in favor of the plaintiff against the United Masonic Benefit Association of Missouri, successor of the Masonic Mutual Benefit Society of Missouri, on a certificate of membership, number 2499, issued by said society on the second day of January, 1883, to William Reiehenbach, the deceased husband of the plaintiff, for her benefit, by the terms of which, under the by-laws ■of the association, she was to become entitled to that amount upon the death of her said husband. “Upon condition, however, that if the said William Reichenbach shall fail to pay any assessment when the same becomes due and payable by him according to the the by-laws of this society and the terms of this certificate, then this contract and agreement shall be null and void and of no effect whatever, and the said Wm. Reiehenbach and the beneficiary therein shall forfeit all rights accruing under this certificate.”
The certificate was issued by the society and accepted by the holder and beneficiary upon the following express conditions and agreements also therein set out:“ First. That the same is issued and accepted, subject to the provisions of the articles .of association and by-laws. Second. A printed or written notice ' directed to the address of *eaeh member as it may appear at the time on the books of the society and deposited in the postoffice or delivered by an agent of the society shall be deemed sufficient notice. Third. Due notice must be given to the society by each member of his change of residence or postoffice address when such change occurs.”
■ It appeared from the evidence that on the eleventh of July, 1888, an assessment for death losses was duly made under the by-laws of the association upon the members to which certificate number 2499 belonged; that notices of this assessment were made out and authenticated .by the proper officers of the association, and in the form required by the by-laws, for all the members of the class to which this certificate belonged; that they were addressed to such members severally according to their postoffice address as it appeared upon the boohs of the association, in which books the name and postoffice address of the said William Reichenbach appeared; that such notices and the envelopes in which they were contained were compared and checked with the list in the book in a double form for the purpose of avoiding errors; and on the twentieth day of August, 1888, were duly stamped and posted in the United States postoffice at St. Louis.
The by-laws in respect of such notices provided that: “At the close of every month, or as soon as shall be deemed advisable, the secretary shall send by mail, to the post-office address of each member of the association in which death or deaths have occurred during the month, a notice or notices giving the name of the deceased .member or members, and the lodge to which he or they belonged, and the assessment due from each member to whom such notice is sent; or the secretary may employ a member of the «association, in any town or city where members reside, who shall serve such notice or notices, either personally or by mail, or by giving verbal notice of such assessment; which notice or notices, sent, served or given, shall be deemed and taken to be lawful and sufficient notice for the payment of the assessments sa called for and required; and any
“Section 5. Any member having forfeited his membership, as above provided in section 2, may be reinstated and restored to membership only upon such payments, terms, and conditions, as may be adopted and prescribed by the executive committee.”
Under the by-laws, and by the terms of the notice, this assessment became due and payable on the ninth of September, 1888. That day, however, being a Sunday, the custom of the association permitted the assessment to be paid on the Monday following, to-wit, on the tenth of September, 1888. The assessment was not paid, and on the eleventh day of September, 1888, the said William Reichenbach died.
It further appeared from the evidence that Mr. Deems, the secretary of the association, on the Thursday or Friday before Reichenbach’s death called his attention to the assessment, asked him if he had received his notice, and offered, if he was not prepared, to pay it for him to save his membership. To which he replied that “he had received his notice” and “would attend to it himself.”
To meet this evidence for the defense, the plaintiff introduced evidence over the defendant’s objection, tending to prove that the officers of the association had
The defendant then asked the court to instruct the jury to return a verdict for the defendant, which the court refused to give, as also another instruction which it is not necessary to notice, and submitted the case to the jury on the following instruction for the defendant (the plaintiff asking none):
“The court instructs the jury that if they find from the evidence that an assessment for death benefits was properly made by the defendant association, designated as number 745-745-!-, and that notice of such assessment was sent August 20, 1888, to William Reichenbach by letter mailed to his address as it appeared on the books of the association, and that William Reichenbach failed to pay such assessment on or before Monday, September 10th, his membership in the association became thereby forfeited and the plaintiff cannot recover.”
The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for $2,300, and from the judgment rendered thereon the defendant appealed to the St. Louis court of appeals. Pending the appeal in -that court the assets of the defendant under the insurance laws of the state passed into the hands of the superintendent of the insurance ■department, who was substituted as appellant therein, .and the cause certified to this court under the constitutional amendment.
On the undisputed facts in the case as shown in the foregoing statement, the court committed error in refusing to instruct the jury to return a verdict for the
“When the evidenee is of that character that the trial judge would have a plain duty to perform in setting aside the verdict as unsupported by the evidence, it is his duty and prerogative to interfere before submission to the jury and direct a verdict for the defendant.” Jackson v. Hardin, 83 Mo. 175; Powell v. Railroad, 76 Mo. 80.
Conceding that the admission of the deceased that he had received notice of the assessment as testified to by Deems, was incompetent evidence (Niblack on Mutual Benefit Societies, sec. 377; Supreme Lodge v. Schmidt, 98 Ind. 374; Fraternal Ins. Co. v. Applegate, 7 Ohio St. 292; Ins. Co. v. Morris, 3 Lea. (Tenn.) 101; Ins. Co. v. Haney, 10 Kan. 525; Lazensky v. Supreme Lodge, 31 Fed. Rep. 592), yet by the very terms of the
It was the plain duty of the trial judge in this case to have directed a verdict for the defendant before submission' to the jury, and having refused to do so after-wards when his attention was again called to the fact by the motion for a new trial, that there was no evidence to sustain the verdict, the same ought to have been set aside; which, however, be refused to do, and for these errors the judgment must be reversed.