51 Or. 489 | Or. | 1908
This is an appeal by the defendant, the Supreme Court of the Independent Order of Foresters, a corporation organized as a fraternal society, from a judgment rendered against it in favor of the plaintiff, Marie Stewart Whigham, the beneficiary named in a fife insurance certificate issued by the defendant to her husband, William Whigham, now deceased. A former judgment in this action was reversed because no evidence had been offered to show that either Court Pacific, No. 1,247,
It satisfactorily appears that after Whigham was initiated the officers and members of Court Pacific knew
“Q. But you don’t know what the supreme court would have done in the event he had answered the questions truly ?
A: I am satisfied from the action they take in other cases.
Q. What?
A. I am convinced from the action they take in other cases they have sent back, they would have sent back the ■ application, and asked more details concerning it.”
Mrs. Whigham, the plaintiff, testified that about Christmas, 1900, she consulted with Dr. Fenton, who was then treating her husband, and informed the physician that Mr. Whigham had taken the Keeley treatment for alcoholism about 12 years before. Dr. Fenton as a witness denies this statement; but, giving to it the credence to which it is entitled on a motion for a judgment of non-suit, he must have known from the plaintiff’s narrative that her husband’s answer was false, wherein he stated that his habit in respect to the use of intoxicants during his life had been temperate. The evidence shows, however, that this knowledge was not acquired by the physician when he was employed by, or discharging any duty for the defendant. In the former opinion it is said:
“The subordinate court or lodge of a fraternal society, or an officer thereof, whose duty it is to perform some service for or on behalf of the supreme lodge, is generally regarded as an agent of the governing body, for the purpose of receiving members and collecting assessments and dues. * * If, with full knowledge of an applicant’s false answers or statements, a local lodge receives and admits him as a member, or if, after his admission, the officer whose duty it is to collect his assessments learns of the false statements, and thereafter receives the assessments and remits them to the supreme order, the society will, as a general rule, be held estopped from pleading the false statements or representations as a defense to an action on the benefit certificate. * * But, before there can be an estoppel or waiver, it must appear that the local court or society, or some officer thereof, charged with the performance of some act for the benefit of the supreme order, knew or had notice of the falsity of the answer or warranty contained in the application or examination paper at the time deceased was received as a member, or when his subsequent assessments were received and collected.”
As the defect in the testimony pointed out in the former opinion was not overcome at the last trial, errors were committed in denying the motion for a judgment of nonsuit and in refusing to charge the jury as requested. The judgment is reversed, and the cause will be remanded for such further proceedings as may be necessary, not in conflict with the views here expressed. Reversed.