Supreme Lodge & Chicago Lodge 932 v. Goldberger

72 Ill. App. 320 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1897

Mr. Justice Sears

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This action was brought by defendants in error against the Supreme Lodge Knights of Honor and Chicago Lodge Ho. 932, Knights of Honor, plaintiffs in error, upon a certificate or policy of life insurance. Ho summons was ever issued or served on either of the defendants and no appearance was ever entered by Chicago Lodge Ho. 932, Knights of Honor, one of the plaintiffs in error. The declaration as originally filed, is against the Supreme Lodge Knights of Honor and Chicago Lodge Ho. 932, Knights of Honor, and alleges that the Supreme Lodge Knights of Honor issued a benefit certificate on the life of Eugene Beresh for $2,000, payable to defendants in error upon satisfactory evidence of the death of Beresh, and alleges that Beresh died on December 28, 1893. A demurrer was interposed to this declaration by the Supreme Lodge Knights of Honor, which was confessed, and afterward an amended" declaration was filed alleging that the Supreme Lodge Knights of Honor issued the benefit certificate; that it maintained a branch or subordinate lodge known as Chicago Lodge Ho. 932, Knights of Honor, and described the benefit certificate as in the original declaration. To this declaration the Supreme Lodge Knights of Honor filed a plea of non assumpsit. On the trial the declaration was amended by inserting a copy of the benefit certificate, the plea standing to the declaration as amended. The trial resulted in verdict and judgment against plaintiffs in error.

It is contended by counsel for plaintiffs in error that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the verdict. There was a sharp conflict in the evidence as to death, but there was enough, if credited, to sustain the finding of the jury that it was the assured who died in December, 1893, at the Cook County Hospital. The records of the county hospital showed the death of a patient named Eugene Beresh upon December 28, 1893. A witness, O’Keefe, testified positively that he had known the assured in the year 1888; that witness and the assured had worked together for one of the street car companies; that in December, 1893, the assured was brought to the county hospital, where witness was then a patient; that witness conversed with the assured at the hospital, and that during such conversation recognition was mutual, each remembering the other as a former, acquaintance; that they talked of the relatives of each, the assured inquiring as to witness’ mother, and witness inquiring as to the wife and children of assured. The witness further testified to the death of assured on the 28th of that December, and that he saw him after death, and placed screens about the bed upon which the dead body was laid.

The receipt and testimony of an undertaker tended to show that the body of the patient. Beresh, was removed from the county hospital to a medical college. There was other evidence of a less positive and less reliable nature tending to identify a dead body discovered at the same medical college as the body of the assured.

We think that the evidence was sufficient to warrant the finding of the jury as to the death of the assured.

It is contended that the evidence fails to show that such proofs of death as were required, were made by defendants in error, before bringing suit upon the policy. It is true that the evidence is scant as to what proofs of death were made by defendants in error before bringing their suit, and, if upon all the facts disclosed it could be said that the furnishing of such proofs by defendants in error was an essential before suit, there might be grave doubt of its sufficiency. But the following letters appear in the evidence, written by an officer of plaintiff in error the Supreme Lodge, who is known as the “Supreme Reporter” of such lodge:

“ St. Louis, Mo., July 21, 1894.

V. I. Ohrenstein, Esq., Chicago, Ill.:

Your favor of the 19th inst., with reference to the death of Eugene Beresh, is received. I can not send the papers . for proofs to you. They must be sent to the lodge, as the law requires. When the blanks have been filled and forwarded by the lodge we will then have the affidavits to which you refer to aid the establishment of death and identity.

It has been claimed this man has been seen by various persons since the date of his alleged death. It is our desire to pay all claims as soon as we have proofs of the death and identity of the member.

(Signed) B. F. Nelson.”

"“St. Louis, Mo., July 28, 1894.

V. I. Ohrenstein:

With reference to the case of E. Beresh, I have forwarded blanks to the lodge, by whom they will be properly prepared and returned to me.

(Signed) B. F. Nelson.”

By these letters the Supreme Lodge distinctly declined to furnish necessary blanks for proofs of death to the representative of defendants in error, and in effect thereby relieved defendants in error from all obligation in that behalf, and voluntarily cast upon its subordinate lodge the burden of supplying the required prqofs. When such burden is upon the subordinate lodge, the Supreme Lodge can .not set up as a defense the failure of the subordinate lodge to act. 4 Joyce on Insurance, Sec. 3310; Sup. Council, etc., v. Boyle, 37 N. E. Rep. 1105.

The refusal of one instruction tendered by plaintiffs in error is complained of, viz., the fifth. The abstract proposition therein contained is sufficiently stated in more proper form, as applied to the facts of the case, in instruction number four which was given.

But there is error assigned in that although one defendant, viz., the Chicago Lodge, had never been served with summons and had never appeared, yet the judgment runs against both.

This error was undoubtedly a matter of oversight, and would, beyond question, have been corrected in the trial court had the attention of the learned judge who presided there been called to the discrepancy. The judgment is a unit, and because of this error must be reversed ; but, inasmuch as the evidence supports the verdict as to the plaintiff in error which was in court, viz., the Supreme Lodge Knights of Honor, the Circuit Court is directed to enter judgment upon the verdict against the Supreme Lodge Knights of Honor. Reversed and remanded with instructions.

Presiding Justice Adams took no part in this decision.