177 N.Y. 100 | NY | 1904
This is an action brought to recover on a certificate of membership issued by the defendant, a fraternal or mutual benefit organization. The certificate stated that the plaintiff would be entitled to receive one assessment on the members of the order not exceeding two thousand dollars as a benefit to his wife upon satisfactory proof of his death. It contained this further provision: "In case of Permanent or Total Disability, or upon attaining the age of seventy years, he will be entitled to receive one-half of said endowment, as provided in the laws of the Order." When the plaintiff joined the order the endowment laws provided (§ 13, art. 4): "A member who by reason of a disability *103 incurred after admission to Endowment membership becomes unable to direct or perform the kind of business or labor which he has always followed, and by which alone he can thereafter earn a livelihood shall be deemed entitled to disability benefits." In 1895 this provision was amended so as to read (§ 188): "Any member holding a benefit certificate who shall become totallyand permanently disabled from any cause, not the result of his own illegal act, to perform or direct any kind of labor or business * * * shall be entitled to receive from the disability fund, annually, one-tenth part of the sum for which his benefit certificate is issued." The plaintiff was a farmer and a part of the time operated a portable saw mill. In 1895, after the adoption of the amendment referred to, his right arm was almost severed by a saw. As a result of this injury the arm became practically useless. The plaintiff testified that he was unable to do any work on the farm or at the saw mill. At the close of the evidence each party requested the direction of a verdict. The court granted the application of the plaintiff and directed a verdict in his favor for one thousand dollars and interest, half the amount payable under the certificate in case of death.
As the appellant did not request the cause to be submitted to the jury he assented to the determination by the court of any question of fact that the evidence presented. The evidence warranted the finding that the plaintiff was permanently disabled within the terms of the by-laws as they stood at the time he joined the order. The language of the by-law is quite similar to that construed in the case of Neill v. Order of UnitedFriends (
We have quite recently reiterated the doctrine that a general power reserved either by statute or by the constitution of a society to amend its by-laws does not authorize an amendment impairing the vested rights of the members. (Parish v. N YProduce Exchange,
The case of Hutchinson v. Supreme Tent K. of M. (68 Hun, 355) is not in point. There the learned court held that the plaintiff could not recover at all under the endowment laws as they existed at the time he joined the order. The claim was made to rest solely on the amended by-laws and, of course, claiming under the amended by-laws, the plaintiff was subject to the provisions of the amendment which changed the payment of the benefit from a gross sum to annual installments.
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
PARKER, Ch. J., BARTLETT, MARTIN, VANN and WERNER, JJ., concur; HAIGHT, J., dissents.
Judgment affirmed.