This case illustrates the necessity of more skill and greater care in framing the ■ rules by which the affairs of mutual benefit societies are to be governed. When a beneficiary sues upon a certificate, he or she is entitled to the application of principles of law, unless such application is prevented by the rules, which are adverse to the beneficial results contemplated in the formation of such societies, and even to their continued existence.
The appellee is the widow of H. H. Loomis. He made an application for membership in the appellant association as follows:
“ Division Ohio Central B. B.
Bovember 11, 1880.
To Board of Directors, Bailway Passenger and Freight Conductors’ Mutual Aid and Benefit Association of the United
States and Canada, Chicago, Ill.:
Gentlemen: The undersigned entertaining a favorable opinion of your association, is desirous of becoming a member of the same, and, if admitted, agrees to comply with the constitution and by-laws, rules and regulations thereof. I am not at present laboring under any disability which disqualifies me from following the avocation of a "passenger or freight train conductor, and according to the best of my knowledge and belief, I am eligible to membership under the constitution and bylaws of your association.
My age is fifty-three, my residence, Basil, Ohio.
Bespectfully,
H. H. Loomis.
Becommended by
F. H. Pease, W. W. Straight.
We, the undersigned, members in good standing of the Railway Passenger and Freight Conductors’ Mutual Aid and Benefit Association', certify that H. H. Loomis, whose name is signed to the written application for membership, is a person of good moral character and free from physical disability, and that he is-at present-, has for a period of twelve months been employed .as conductor of a passenger or freight train in the United States or Canada.
' Given under our hands this eleventh day of November, 1880.
2268
F. H. Pease,
1017
W. W. Straight.
November 16, 1880.”
And a certificate was issued to him as follows:
“No. 2268. Railway Passenger and Freight Conductors’. Mutual Aid and Benefit Association for the United States and Canada, organized under the laws of the State of Illinois, charter granted December, 1871.
Chicago, Nov. 16, 1880.
This is to certify that H. H. Loomis, residence, Basil, Ohio, is a member of the Railway Passenger and Freight Conductors’ Mutual Aid and Benefit Association.
Given under our hands and the-seal of the association affixed.
J. G. Sherman, President.
0. Huntington, Sec’y & Treas.”
On the morning, of the 10th day of July, 1883, he fell from a second story window of a hotel in Macon, Georgia, and from the injury received, died on the evening of that day.
That, if he was then a member in good standing, the appellant ought to have made an assessment upon surviving members, which would have produced §2,500, that the appellant ought to have paid to appellee, is not questioned. It is-therefore unnecessary to set out the documentary evidence showing the constitution and by-laws of the association by which that duty is imposed. If he was in good standing, his death intestate, and that she is his widow, were the only things to be proved by parol, in order to show that the contingency upon which the duty arose had happened, and that she was the person to whom that duty was owing. This parol proof did not take the case out of the category of actions upon written contracts, the limitation of which is ten and not five years. Memory v. Niepert, 131 Ill. 623; 2 Taylor on Ev. 1015; Larned v. Johns, 9 Allen, 419.
This disposes of the first point argued by appellant. The next three points are in effect but one, viz.: That Loomis was not a member in good standing at the time he died. If the fact be so, the point is good, but the burden of proving it is ■upon the appellant. The certificate is prima facie evidence to the contrary. One of the by-laws contains these words: “Members of this association neglecting or refusing to pay assessment for the period of thirty days from date of such assessment shall cease to be a member,” etc. That this provision is self-executing, we think is true. Hansen v. Supreme Lodge, 40 Ill. App. 216.
But the proper construction of it is, that the thirty days begin to run only from the date that notice is given to the member, of the assessment.
The constitution and by-laws being silent on the subject of notice, and containing nothing dispensing with notice, the general rule of law governs, that notice is necessary where the act of one party gives rise to the duty of the other. The assessment, if made, was the act of the association. Before it can complain of neglect or refusal by a member to pay, he must be given notice. Chase v. S. & C. R. R. Co., 38 Ill. 215. And wherever the law requiresnotiee, and does not describe the manner, it must be personal. Wachtel v. Noah, 34 N. Y. 28.
There is testimony tending to show that notice was mailed to Loomis in time to put him in default if he had received the notice, but nothing showing to any reasonable degree of certainty that he received it. A witness states that the notice was in an envelope with a receipt sent for a prior assessment; the appellee states that she received that receipt and no notice came with it. The appellant was unable to prove sufficiently, notice to Loomis, and is therefore without defense upon that point. He was, for aught this record shows, a member in good standing when he died. The last point relied upon is based upon a clause of the constitution relating to the board of directors, as follows:
“ They shall decide all points of dispute and questions of doubt that may arise, and their decision shall be final.”
Preceding that is a clause, “ to them shall all claims against the association be referred, and upon the approval of a majority of said board, with that of the president, the same shall be paid by the secretary and treasurer.’/ If these two clauses are to be read together, the power of the board extends to the rejection hut not to the allowance of claims. They may forbid, but can not direct, the opening of its treasury. We can not concur in the judgment of the United States Circuit Court of this district (Rood v. this appellant, 31 Fed. Rep. 62), that a beneficiary under a certificate issued by the association is dependent upon the will of the board, however honestly they may act, whether he or she shall be-paid. It may well be that among the members themselves the decision of the board they elected, upon questions affecting them, is final; but if a stranger had let rooms, sold furniture or supplied stationery to them, it would not he contended that they could defeat his claim for compensation. The death of Loomis severed his relations with the association. The appellee had no voice in it. Her interests were adverse to the interests of all the surviving members, though they might perhaps feel that the denial of her claim might be a bad precedent for their own beneficiaries. That an organization may be such that the obligations shall be purely mora!, without redress by law, may be; bub the language by which that result is effected must be more explicit than that which is quoted.
Whether the declaration is in the right form is a question not made below, where, if necessary, it might have been amended, and therefore it can not be made here. Citizens Gaslight Co. v. Granger, 118 Ill. 266.
It is unnecessary to review the pleadings, traveling off to sur-rejoinders, the twenty-one reasons assigned for a new trial and the twenty-nine errors assigned. We have in substance followed the argument in the brief of appellant.
The judgment of the Circuit Court .in favor of the appellee is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.