DocketNumber: No. 979.
Citation Numbers: 188 S.W. 699, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 920
Judges: Hall
Filed Date: 5/10/1916
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This is an action by plaintiff in error, to recover the amount of a benefit certificate of insurance, issued by the defendant in error to Thomas Ross Cole. Plaintiff in error is the mother of Thos. Ross Cole, deceased, and the beneficiary named in’ the certificate.
Plaintiff in error alleges in her original petition that, in consideration of the payment of $1.15 per month, the defendant issued the certificate upon which the suit is based, whereby it insured the life of Thomas Ross Cole in the sum of $1,000, payable to plaintiff in error; that Thomas Ross Cole died in the city of Dallas, October 6, 1913, while said certificate was in full force and effect; that defendant had denied liability, waived proofs of death, and the signature of the certificate; and that neither plaintiff nor the insured had notice of the forfeiture of the certificate sued on. She tendered into court the amount of the monthly payments, per capita taxes, and additional assessments due and unpaid, and prayed for judgment for the full amount of the certificate. Defendant in error answered, alleging that the insured had failed to pay his dues and assessments, and by reason thereof the certificate was not in force at the time of his death and
“Sec. 329. Effect of Suspension. A member under suspension for any cause except when suspension is for a definite period as a matter of discipline, forfeits absolutely his right to participate in the benefit funds of the association, or the fraternal privileges of his tent. Suspension for discipline shall not affect the right of a member to participate in the benefit funds of the association, but shall deprive him of all fraternal privileges for the period of his suspension.
“Sec. 330. Suspension from Association, and Tent. A life benefit member failing to pay a monthly rate per capita tax, or additional assessments within the month, on the first day of which it is due, shall stand suspended, without notice from all rights of life benefit membership and from all the privileges and benefits of his tent.
“Sec. 331. Notice of Suspension to Supreme Record Keeper. A member suspended for failure to pay a monthly rate or additional assessments, must be reported by name to the Supreme Record Keeper, by the tent record keeper in his monthly report. The record keeper shall also report the name of each member so suspended to the tent at its next regular review.
“See. 332. Failure to P<yy Tent Dues. A member neglecting or refusing to pay his tent dues or any fine or special assessment, levied by the tent, for a period of thirty days after the same is due, shall be reported in open tent by the record keeper, provided that the record keeper shall, before making such report, notify such member to pay the amount due before the next regular review of the tent.
“Sec. 333. Suspension Declared. A member so reported shall at once be declared suspended by the commander from all rights and benefits of the association, and shall be notified by the record keeper of the action of the commander.”
It is affirmatively alleged that the application provides that a failure on the part of the insured to pay any monthly rate or assessment within the time provided by the bylaws, or failure to pay the dues fixed by said law, and in the manner and at the time provided thereby, or the by-laws of the tent, shall vitiate the certificate; that sections 315 and 330 of the by-laws provide, in substance, that on failure on the part of a member to pay a monthly rate within the month on the first day upon which it fell due he should be suspended without notice from all rights, privileges, and benefits of the order.
It is further alleged that at the time of the death of Oole he was under suspension for failure to pay his monthly rate to the association due for the month of July, and that he also failed to pay his monthly dues for the month of July, August, September, and October, 1914; that section 377 of the by-laws was in full force and effect, and provided that no benefits should be paid on account of the death or disability of any member under suspension for any cause at the time of his death, unless such suspension was for a definite time, as a matter of discipline, and that the said Oole was not suspended for a definite time as a matter of discipline.
The case was tried by the court without the aid of a jury on November 17, 1914, and judgment was rendered in favor of the defendant insurance company.
Plaintiff in error’s first, second, third, and fourth assignments complain of the court’s action in overruling her special exceptions to the pleadings of defendant in error. These assignments are without merit, and are overruled.
The fifth and seventh assignments of error complain of the admission in evidence of the testimony of the witnesses Young and Harvey. The evidence of these witnesses was to the effect that all delinquent members were duly notified by written notice in regular form, sent to them through the post office. The introduction of this testimony was objected to on the ground that the defendant, in its pleadings, had not alleged that it had ever given the insured any notice of his suspension, nor did he plead that the insured had been suspended, in accordance with the by-laws of the association. In its first supplemental petition the allegation is made that plaintiff had no notice that dues ánd assessments had not been paid, and that Thos. R. Cole had been suspended and his certificate forfeited. In view of the allegations contained in the plaintiff’s pleadings, it was not necessary for defendant to set up the fact of notice. Plaintiff alleges specifically the duty of the defendant to notify Thos. R. Cole, and negatives the fact that any such notice was given by the defendant, its officers or agents, to either Cole or plaintiff. It is an elementary rule of pleading that facts alleged by one party need not be alleged by the other. These assignments are overruled.
The sixth assignment is that the court erred in overruling plaintiff’s objections to the testimony of Young, to the effect that Thos. R. Cole, when asked by the witness to pay his July assessment, said that he would not keep it up, or did not want to keep it up. The objection to this testimony is that such a declaration, made by the insured as to his intention of keeping up dues, was not admissible against the beneficiary. By statutory provision in this state the beneficiary in a mutual benefit life association has no vested interest in the contract of insurance until the death of the insured. Vernon’s Sayles’ Civil Statutes, art. 4832; Coleman v. Anderson, 98 Tex. 570, 86 S. W. 730. By the great weight of authority, the further rule is established that where the beneficiary in an insurance contract has no vested interest until after the death of the insured, declarations of the insured are admissible against the beneficiary to prove forfeiture. Callies v. Modern Woodmen, 98 Mo. App. 521, 72 S. W. 713; Fidelity Mutual Life Ass’n v. Winn, 96 Tenn. 224, 33 S. W. 1045; Bacon’s Benefit Societies and Life Insurance (3d ,Ed.) § 460, p. 1177; Niblack on Benefit Societies, §§ 212, 325; Cooley’s Briefs on Insurance, p. 2431, note. In the Callies Case, supra, the court said:
“The theory upon which the trial court sustained plaintiff’s objections to the deceased’s*701 declarations [naming them] was that such declarations could not bind these plaintiffs as beneficiaries. We think the theory unsound, and that error was committed. The weight of authority, as regards ordinary life insurance, is that the declarations of the party insured are not evidence against the person for whom the insurance is taken, and the rule is so stated in a remark in the course of a decision by the Supreme Court of this state. * * * But as to fraternal benefit insurance, where the beneficiary is named by the insured, and whom he may change at any time before death, a well-founded distinction exists, for there is no vested interest in the beneficiary in the certificate until it becomes fixed by death. * * * It is true that neither has the insured member himself1 an interest in the fund; * * * still he is the opposite party in the contract. He has made it from the motive of duty or affection, and he is interested in its being upheld. His declarations of things tending against the contract would likely not have been made if not true. They should be received in evidence. They should be regarded as in instances of contract, where the representative of the declarant is a party to the action, and so it has been decided.”
In the case of Eidelity Mutual Ass’n v. Winn, supra, the Supreme Court of Tennessee said:
“The assured in such a policy being the real party in interest, it follows that ‘no harm can possibly result from giving full effect to his admissions. He may be supposed to best know the extent of his own rights and to be least of all disposed to concede away that which actually belonged to him.’ * * * Under well-settled rules, his subsequent declarations against his interest were competent testimony, and plaintiff in error had the right to put them in evidence.”
The Supreme Court of Kentucky, in Knights of Maccabees of the World v. Shields, 156 Ky. 270, 160 S. W. 1046, 9 L. R. A. (N. S.) 853, discussed at some length the authorities pro and con, and concludes from a review thereof that the rule, excluding the declarations of the insured which tended to affect the rights of the beneficiary, should not be applied to policies issued by benefit or fraternal associations. We think the evidence was admissible, and the assignment is overruled.
The first proposition under the eighth assignment is that, the defendant in error not having pleaded the giving of notice to establish forfeiture, it was error to admit testimony tending to show that notice had been given. This question has already been disposed of by the statement above that the evidence was admissible under plaintiff’s plead"ings.
The second proposition under this assignment, which is based upon the admission of the testimony of the witness Young, showing what action was taken by the lodge and by witness as the record keeper thereof, toward suspending Thos. R. Cole under the provisions of the by-laws above stated, is not germane to the assignment because the objection made to the evidence did not include the question urged in the proposition.
The ninth assignment appellant alleges is based on the eighth paragraph of the plaintiff in error’s motion for new trial. Reference to the motion shows that it does not present the same question, and cannot be considered for the further reason that it is not a copy of the assignment in the motion for new trial. The rule is established in this state that, while a motion for new trial is not necessary in cases tried before the court without a jury, nevertheless, when a motion has been filed in such a case, the errors assigned in the court below must be the errors urged in this court. Edwards v. Youngblood, 160 S. W. 288; Bradshaw v. Kearby & Kearby, 168 S. W. 436; E. G. Rail Grain Co. v. Burks-Simmons Co., 171 S. W. 1043.
Appellant contends that the sections of the by-laws set out in the beginning of this opinion are confusing and susceptible of two constructions, and for that reason the rule announced in Goddard v. East Texas Fire Insurance Co., 67 Tex. 71, 1 S. W. 906, 60 Am. Rep. 1, to the effect that under such conditions an interpretation must be given the language which is most favorable to the beneficiary, should apply. Section 330 is clear in its provision that a life benefit member, who fails to pay any monthly rate within the month, on the first day of which it is due, shall be suspended without notice from all rights of life benefit membership. This provision is unequivocal,' and the evidence in the record is sufficient to sustain the judgment of the court based upon it. Even though we should admit that some of the sections quoted are obscure in their language, they had no bearing upon the issue of the case relating to the failure of the assured to pay his monthly rate.
The judgment is affirmed.