Opinion by
The unusual manner in which this case was tried and in which the record for'the purposes of this appeal was made up, renders it impossible for this court to satisfactorily consider several important questions involved in the case. Of the many exhibits offered in the court below, not a single one is printed. The learned counsel for appellant seems to have been concerned with a single question raised by a state of facts not at all in dispute. The individuals named in the bill as it was filed in the court below, were members of an unincorporated association or society, under the joint title of “New Tripoli Grand Council No. 204, Junior O. U. A. M.” It is alleged that the father of the minor children represented by the guardian had been a member of that body and re*185tained bis standing therein until the time of bis death, having paid all dues or assessments lawfully demandable from him while he lived. The purpose of the bill was to recover certain death benefits which, it was alleged, the society was. lawfully obliged to pay but had refused to recognize that obligation. It appears to have been a conceded fact in the case, so accepted by the learned chancellor “that under the constitution and by-laws of said council and of the funeral benefit department, no death or funeral benefits could be paid where death was the result of intemperance.” It is also an admitted fact in the ease that the deceased member did actually die of alcoholism and that the proofs of death furnished by those representing him affirmatively so showed. Notwithstanding these facts, the learned counsel for the appellant seriously contends the society is estopped to defend on that ground because the habits of the deceased were well known to many, perhaps to all, of the individuals composing the small local council; and having, in the face of that knowledge, continued to accept and retain dues from the member, it is not now competent for them to make defense on the ground indicated. There are several answers to the proposition. The first one is, that notwithstanding the ragged condition of the record, it seems reasonably plain that the sum of money claimed, if payable at all, was to come from a larger organization spoken of as the funeral benefit department, and that the obligation of the local council was only to pay over to the representatives of a deceased member such sum as it should receive from the funeral department. In the case at bar no sum of money was received by the local council and hence, as they claim, their obligation to pay in no event arose. Conceding for the sake of argument, that the local council might have under its rules and by-laws expelled the deceased member during his lifetime because of his habits, it does not follow that their failure to enforce a drastic remedy, made for their protection, should work the- result of expunging from the constitution of *186the society a; provision forbidding the payment of a benefit to a member who died as the result of intemperance. The members of the council who knew of his habits might have cherished the hope that he would b.e able to successfully overcome his weakness. At all events, even if he continued to be addicted to drink but died as the result of an accident or other cause in no way connected with, or superinduced by his habits, the obligation to pay could not successfully be defended against. He took the chance that if he persisted in those habits until he brought about his own death because of them, there would be no obligation on the part of anybody to pay- a benefit because of his death. It is plain to us that the record presents no case of an estoppel which would deprive the defendants from protecting their society to the extent clearly required by obedience to the provisions of its written constitution.
The appeal is dismissed at the costs of the appellant and the record remitted to the court below with direction to enter a decree dismissing the bill.