66 Neb. 213 | Neb. | 1902
Daniel A. and Elizabeth P. Scoyill brought this action in the district court for Hamilton county against the Royal-Highlanders to recover upon a benefit certificate issued by the defendant to Olive M. Scovill,' in which the plaintiffs were named as beneficiaries. The trial court instructed the jury to return a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs, upon whiclx judgment was rendered, to review which, the defendant has brought en;or to this court.
The defendant is a mutual fraternal association organized under the laws of this state, with its principal place of business or head office in the city of Aurora, Nebraska. Like most of the mutual fraternal insurance associations, the defendant organization is founded upon the' lodge system; having a supreme or executive castle, with subordinate lodges, located at different places throughout the country. In addition to the fraternal, benevolent and social features which the association inculcates, it. also undertakes, under certain conditions, to provide indemnity in case of disability or death of its members. One of the subordinate or tributary castles is located at Aurora, which is known as Helen Castle, No. 68, of the Royal Highlanders. Olive M. Scovill, previous to her marriage to George H. Decker, became a member of this tributary castle, and on January 26, 1899, there was issued to her by the defendant a benefit certificate whereby the defendant agreed in case of her death to pay a certain sum to the ■beneficiaries named in the certificate. The certificate provided that in case of death occurring after one or before two years from the date of the certificate, the sum of $500 should be paid to the beneficiaries. . The certificate also contained a condition as follows: “The payment of all or any part of this certificate is conditioned under the provisions that the owner thereof shall have in every particular complied with the edicts,' rules and regulations
In the view we have taken of the case, the question as to Mr. Scovill’s knowledge of the condition of his daughter’s health seems entirely immaterial. In making the payment he acted as the agent of the insured, and his knowledge of her condition does not seem to us to have any special bearing upon her right to be reinstated. Her right to become reinstated depends upon the edicts and regulations of the supreme castle. One of the edicts provides that “any member suspended for non-payment of monthly payments or dues maybe reinstated, if in good health and not engaged in any of the prohibited occupations, by the payment of all arrearages of every kind within 60 days of suspension.” It would seem, therefore, that the right of the insured to become reinstated depended upon two conditions: First, she must have been in good health at the time; and second, the payment of all arrearages within the time limited. By the plain and clear meaning of the
It is insisted, however, hy the plaintiffs, that the acceptance of the assessments by Mr. Glover was a waiver of the condition of good health. We can not agree with this contention. The members of a mutual benefit association are conclusively presumed to know its rules and regulations, and the assured, therefore, must have known that her good health was a condition precedent to her right to reinstatement. She was not acting, therefore, in good faith to the lodge, in tendering the payment of her dues, in view of the condition of her health. This fact alone, in our opinion, would be sufficient to defeat her right of recovery. We do not doubt the general rule that the provisions in a policy of insurance which are made for the benefit of the company can be waived by the company, but such conditions can be waived only by officers of the company having authority to do so. Granting that Mr. Glover had the rights of the secretary of the lodge, it nowhere appears that he had authority to waive any of the provisions of a contract entered into between a member and the supreme lodge. In the case of Field v. National Council,
We think, under the facts proved, the court should have directed a verdict for the defendant. We therefore recommend that the judgment of the district court be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.
By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
64 Nebr., 226.