Sovereign Camp Woodmen of the World v. Key

Smith, J.

On tbe 15tb day of June, 1914, the appellant, Sovereign Camp of tbe Woodmen of tbe World, issued its beneficiary certificate for a thousand dollars to H. C. Key, of Arkadelphia, Clark County, Arkansas, naming as beneficiary in said certificate appellee, Mrs. Albey Key, tbe mother of tbe insured. In bis application Key stated tbat be was a machinist, which occupation was and is classed as an ordinary or preferred occupation, and required payment of tbe ordinary or preferred rate. Key paid this rate until tbe time of bis death.

About August 1, 1917, Key removed to Malvern, Arkansas, where be entered tbe employment of tbe Arkansas Light & Power Company at its electric current generating plant as engineer, in which capacity be worked about a year. He then entered tbe United States army, where be served until discharged in June or July, 1919, and on bis discharge be returned to tbe employment of tbe Arkansas Light & Power Company, where be again worked as engineer for two months and until the time of bis death.

On tbe night of September 16, 1919, Key was found dead at said electric current generating plant. No one saw him die, but tbe body was found lying in the water at tbe bottom of tbe condenser pit, and those who attempted to remove tbe body received electric shocks in coming in contact with tbe water. Tbe body was burned and blistered.

Tbe constitution and by-laws of tbe order in force during all tbe time Key was a member contained tbe following sections and parts of sections:

“Section 43. Persons engaged in the following occupations, towit:

“(a) Sailors on seas, electric linemen, employees in electric current generating plants and enlisted men in the army and navy during war, may be admitted to membership if accepted by the sovereign physician, but their certificates shall not execeed two thousand dollars each and their rates of assessment shall be 30 cents for each one thousand dollars of their beneficiary certificate in addition to the regular rate while so engaged in such hazardous occupation.

“(b) If a member engages in any of the occupations or business mentioned in this section, he shall within thirty days notify the clerk of his camp of such change of occupation, and while so engaged in such occupation shall pay on each assessment thirty cents for each one thousand dollars of his beneficiary certificate in addition to the regular rate. Any such member failing to notify the clerk and to make such payments as above provided shall stand suspended, and his beneficiary certificate be null and void. ’ ’

“Section 69 (a). No officer, employee or agent of the sovereign camp, or of any camp, has the power, right or authority to waive any of the conditions upon which beneficiary certificates are issued, or to change, vary or waive any of the provisions of this constitution or these laws, nor shall any custom on the part of any camp or any number of camps with or without the knowledge of any sovereign officer have the effect of so changing, modifying, waiving or foregoing such laws or requirements. Each and every beneficiary certificate is issued only upon the conditions stated in and subject to the constitution and laws then in force or thereafter enacted.

“(b) The constitution and laws of the sovereign camp of the Woodmen of the World now in force, or which may hereafter be enacted, by-laws of the camp now in force, or which may be hereafter enacted, the application and certificate shall constitute a part of the beneficiary contract between the order and the member.”

The testimony shows that one Waldrop was the local clerk of the appellant order, and that he served in that capacity for about ten years and during- all the time Key was a member. After Key changed bis occupation, Wal-drop was notified of that fact by Key’s father on an occasion when he' paid dues for his son. Later the same information was conveyed to Waldrop by the insured’s sister when she paid dues for her brother. It was shown to have been the custom of the local clerk, when notified that a member had changed his occupation, to communicate that information to the sovereign clerk of the head camp, so as to learn what amount to increase or decrease the rate' to be paid by the member, giving the notice, and, after receiving this direction from the clerk of the head camp, to notify the member of any change in assessment.

Section 112 of the by-laws provided the time and manner in which the local clerk should make remittances of dues collected by him, and that, “ accompanying such remittances, the clerk shall also forward such detailed statement, of the standing of the members in the camp as shall be required for the information of the sovereign clerk, upon blanks furnished for that purpose.”

No notice of change in assessment was given by the local clerk, and the insured continued to remit from Mal-vern,’where he was employed, to his sister in Arkadel-phia, where she and Waldrop both lived, and the sister paid the dues with the remittances thus received.

The cause was submitted under an instruction which told the jury to find against the company if the finding of fact was made that the sister of Key, when paying dues, had notified Waldrop that Key was engaged in an electrical current generating plant. There was a finding and judgment against the company, from which is this appeal.

It will be observed that the appellant here was the appellant in the case of Sovereign Camp of Woodmen of the World v. Newsom, 142 Ark. 132, and that certain excerpts from the constitution and by-laws of the order herein set out appeared also in the statement of facts in the Newsom case. !

Tlie principles announced in that case control here. The local clerk is the agent of the order. It is to him, and through him only, that the member may communicate with the ruling officials of the order. The member complied with his duty when he advised the local clerk of his change of occupation.

In the Newsom case the court said: ‘£ Since the clerk of the local camp must be regarded as the agent of the sovereign camp in the matter of collecting assessments and reporting the standing of the members to the sovereign clerk, the knowledge of the agent acquired in the discharge of his duties was the knowledge of appellant (the company).”

In the Newsom case the facts were that the insured had arranged with his bank to pay dues upon presentation of proper receipt, and, pursuant to this custom, the bank would have paid the particular dues in question, had receipt therefor been presented. This arrangement was made for the convenience of the local clerk. Presentation of the receipt to the bank was not made, and the dues were not paid, and the member became delinquent. The contention was made that the local clerk was acting as the agent of the insured in collecting the dues through the bank, and that, in so far as the clerk was acting f.or the order, or could act for it, he had no duty to perform except to receive the money and to receipt for it and forward it. The court, however, held against that contention, and in doing so said: “Having reached the conclusion that the clerk of the local camp’was the agent of appellant and acting within the scope of his authority in making collections, remittances and reports to the sovereign clerk, it is manifest that appellant is estopped by the conduct of the local clerk from claiming a forfeiture of Newsom’s policy or certificate under the undisputed facts above set forth.”

Upon the authority of that case, and of the cases therein cited, we hold that the appellant is estopped, in view of the jury’s finding, to assert that the insured did not pay proper amounts of dues. This is true because it was Waldrop’s duty to report tlie information be bad received to tbe bead camp and to revise bis collection of assessments to conform to any change made therein as tbe result of bis report, and bis knowledge is imputed to tbe bead camp.

As opposing this view, counsel call to our attention section 20 of act 462 of tbe Acts of 1917 ( C. & M. Digest, § 6095), which reads as follows: “Tbe constitution and laws of tbe society may provide that no subordinate body, nor any of its subordinate officers or members, shall have tbe power or authority to waive any of tbe provisions of tbe law and constitution of tbe society, and tbe same shall be binding .on tbe society and each and every member thereof and on all beneficiaries of members.” .

This question was also raised in tbe Newsom case, the statute being first called to tbe attention of tbe court on the petition for rehearing. We there said: “Therefore, what we said in tbe original opinion concerning tbe authority of a subordinate body and its subordinate officers to waive any of tbe provisions of tbe laws and constitution of tbe society is retracted, and we now bold, in view of this statute, that it was not within tbe -power of tbe local clerk of appellant to waive tbe payment of tbe March dues on or before tbe first day of April as required by tbe law and constitution of appellant.”

But tbe decision of the court was not changed. Tbe difference between waiver and estoppel was pointed out, ahd the court held that, while tbe subordinate officers would have no power or authority, in view of tbe statute, to waive any of tbe provisions of tbe law and constitution of tbe society, tbe insurer, notwithstanding tbe statute, stood charged with tbe knowledge of any of its officers acquired in tbe discharge of their duties. And what the court there said is equally applicable here.

Judgment affirmed.