The plaintiff has judgment against an unincorporated beneficial association for money which represented “sick benefits.” The plaintiff was expelled from the society on August fourteenth, and the ground thereof, as stated to him, was “ on account of suing.” This action was not begun until the following December, although the plaintiff had retained an attorney before the said August fourteenth. The point is made that the plaintiff could not maintain this action because he did not exhanst his remedies within the association. An article of the constitution and general laws provides that “ á member shall not resort to the civil courts for redress for an alleged injury until he has exhausted every means of appeal in the order,” and the penalty prescribed for non-compliance is expulsion from the order.
In Railway Conductors' Benefit Assn. v. Robinson (147 Ill. 138) the court say : “ That it is competent for members of societies of this character to so contract that their rights as members shall depend upon the determination of some tribunal of their own choice, and that such determination shall be conclusive may be conceded. But where the designated tribunal is the society itself,- one of the parties to the controversy, or, what is substantially the same thing, the board of directors, which is its official and organic representative, the courts will hesitate, and even refuse, to treat its decisions as final and conclusive unless the language of the contract is such as to preclude any other construction. The judicial mind is so strongly against the propriety of allowing' one of the parties, or its especial representative, to be judge or arbitrator in its own case, that
It is urged that the plaintiff failed in his case because he did not obtain the certificate of the physician of the order, or that physician’s approval of the certificate of another physician. The reason for this requirement is undoubtedly the protection of the association against undue payments of sick benefits. The- provision provides that sick benefits will be allowed only from the day upon which' notice has been properly transmitted, and that such notice shall be accompanied by a certificate, which shall be renewed every week while drawing sick benefits. The plaintiff sent the notice, and on the next day visited Dr. Shea, the physician of the order, who sent, plaintiff to his own physician, Dr. Snyder, who had theretofore treated him. He did so and obtained a certificate, and later he asked for another and continued to do so every week. Dr. Snyder sometimes put him off, but did give another certificate later. . When Dr. Snyder went to Europe the plaintiff was treated by Dr. Mayer, an assistant of Dr. Snyder. Dr. Mayer was asked by the plaintiff for certificates, and gave one the first week and later another. The plaintiff took the first certificate made by. Dr. Mayer to Dr. Shea, and asked him to sign it, as he had not received any money, and the
It is urged that the service of a subpoena duces tecum upon the financial secretary of the defendant to produce the final certificate handed in by the plaintiff did not justify the reception of oral evidence of its contents. The record shows that the secretary appeared in court, and that the learned counsel answered that “ they did not have it.” I hardly think that the appellant, in view of that answer, can rely upon the technical difference between a subpoena duces tecum and a notice to produce. But in any event it appears in the record that the plaintiff without objection had theretofore stated that he had received a final certificate “ to show you are all right; able to work; ” that he gave it to the official physician of the defendant, and it also appeared that the plaintiff had been under treatment during the period in question. How the oral testimony as to the contents of the certificate did not materially differ from the evi
The j ndgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.
Goodrich, P. J., Bartlett, Woodward and Hirsohberg, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.