DocketNumber: No. 6450.
Judges: Fly, Ply, Moursund
Filed Date: 11/10/1920
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This is a suit by the mother and wife of W. G. Little, deceased, to recover the sum of $2,000 insurance held by him in the fraternal association of Woodmen of the World. Appellant sought to evade payment of the insurance on the plea that de ceased had changed his occupation to a more hazardous one after he had been insured, without notifying the clerk of the local body of the change and paying the additional dues required by the laws of the association. Appellees in a supplemental petition pleaded notice and payment of the amounts requested by the clerk. The cause was submitted or, special issues, and upon the responses of the jury thereto judgment was rendered for appellees in the sum of $2,000, less amounts of $2.40 and $18.48, for additional dues and assessments.
The jury found that Mrs. L. A. Moss, acting as agent for W. G. Little, notified W. H. Grant, appellant's clerk and agent, at Devine, Tex., that said Little had changed his occupation from that of a restaurant keeper to that of miner; that Grant after receiving such information told Mrs. Moss what the dues were and she paid them to Grant; that W. G. Little did not know what the amount of the dues was, but relied upon the statement of Grant as to the true amount. The evidence amply sustains the responses of the jury. W. G. Little sent Mrs. Moss $5 and requested her to pay the amount of dues demanded and requested her to tell W. H. Grant that he was engaged in mining in Arizona; that he went down 600 feet under the ground and then walked half a mile under a mountain to his work. Mrs. Moss also testified that Grant had tried to get deceased the job in Arizona, and, it would seem, succeeded.
The first assignment is overruled. The petition is not subject to general demurrer, but states a cause of action. It fully shows that W. G. Little, on September 27, 1917, for a certain consideration, naming it, which he had faithfully paid to appellant, had insured his life in the sum of $2,000 for the benefit of appellees in equal sums. Other conditions were pleaded, as well as the death of the insured and proof of the same. All necessary allegations were made. Neither *Page 575
the case of Cooper v. W. O. W.,
The second, third, and fourth assignments attack the petition and supplemental petition on matters to which they are not open, and they are overruled. A good cause of action is stated in the pleadings.
As hereinbefore stated, the evidence fully justified the submission of the issues and the responses of the jury, and all of the remaining assignments of error are overruled.
The laws of appellant required notice to the clerk of the camp, of which the insured was a member, of a change to a more hazardous occupation, and that notice was given, and, of course, the notice was binding on appellant. It follows that, in receiving the same dues after obtaining the notice as before stated, it waived the payment of a greater sum and is estopped to claim a forfeiture. Appellant made the waiver, and not the agent. Sov. Camp, W. O. W., v. Putnam,
The judgment is affirmed.
MOURSUND, J., entered his disqualification in this case.