delivered the opinion of the Court:
This was an action brought by William Blue, against the Bloomington Mutual Benefit Association, to recover a certain amount of. money claimed to be due on a life benefit certificate issued by the defendant in Octоber, 1883, to William B. Bailey, by which the association agreed, in consideration of certain payments to be made by Bailey, to pay to William Blue, upon the death of Bailey, an amount therein named. To the dеclaration on the certificate, the defendant filed four special pleas. In the first, it is averred that defendant is a corporation organized and doing business under an act of the legislature, apрroved June IS, 1883, in force July 1, 1883; that the plaintiff, Blue, is not a legatee or devisee of the said "William Pi. Bailey, and is not related to said Bailey, either by affinity or consanguinity, etc.; that the defendant, by virtue of the act under which it was organized and doing business, was only authorized to furnish life indemnity and pecuniary benefits to the widows, orphans, etc., of deceased members, by means- whereof said life benefit certificate was and now is null and void. The second plea is like the first, and contains the following additional averments: “The object for which it is formed, is to provide and equitably distribute, at minimum cost, a fund devoted to the relief of widows, orphans, heirs and devisees of deceased members.” It is also averred in this plea, that Blue was not a creditor of Bailey, and had no pecuniary interest in his life, and had no well founded expectation of pecuniary аdvantage to be derived from the continuance of the life of Bailey. This plea also contains a copy of the constitution and by-laws of defendant. In the third pica, the statute and defendant’s articlеs of incorporation are set up as a defence, and in the fourth plea, the articles of incorporation, and the fact that Blue had no pecuniary interest in the continuance of the lifе of Bailey, are interposed as a defence. To the pleas, the court sustained a general demurrer,' and the defendant abiding by the pleas, •judgment wa.s rendered in favor of the plaintiff for the amount сlaimed.
It is contended, first, that Blue had no insurable interest in the life of Bailey, and hence the contract was void; second, that it is rendered void by virtue of the statute under which defendant is organized and doing business.
It may be rеgarded as a plain proposition of law, that a wagering policy is void, and we think it also well settled that a policy taken out on the life of a third party by a beneficiary, in the continuance of whose life the beneficiary has no pecuniary interest, may be regarded as a wagering policy, and as such would be void. Had this policy been taken out by Blue on the life of Bailey, without his knowledge or consent, аnd had the premiums been paid by him, it would manifestly fall within what is known as a wagering policy, and would be void. Public policy forbids one person, who has no interest in the continuance of the life of another, from speсulating on that life by procuring a policy of insurance; but here it does not appear that Blue had any instrumentality whatever in procuring the policy on the life of Bailey, or that he ever paid any pоrtion of the premiums to procure the policy or to keep it in force, and hence the case of Insurance Co. v. Hogan,
In Lemon v. Phenix Mutual Life Co.
In Reeves v. Life Ins. Co.
In Fairchild v. New England Mutual Life Ins. Association,
In Langdon v. Union Mutual Life Co. 14 Fed. Rep. 272, it is said: “There is no case, to my knowledge, which holds, that a party may not insure his own life, and make the policy payable to any one he may select, though such person has no legal interest in his life. * * * Although this exact question has not been decided, the intimations of the сourts are uniformly in that direction.”
In Connecticut Mutual Life Ins Co. v. Schaffer,
There are other authorities holding the same doctrine, but we have referred to enough to show the current of authority on the question.
The first seсtion of the act under which the defendant is organized, in express terms' authorizes the organization of such associations for the purpose of furnishing life indemnity or pecuniary benefits to devisees or legatеes. If, as is plain from the language of the statute, a person may take out a policy on his own life, and devise such policy to a stranger, what principle of public policy would be violated by a provision in thé policy making it payable to a stranger, in lieu of doing the >same thing by will ? If the policy may be made payable to a stranger who has no insurable interest in the life of the insured, as it may be by statute, we perсeive no reason which will prevent the sable thing being done by a clause the insured may have inserted in the policy at the time the insurance is procured.
We have been cited to Mutual Benefit Associatiоn of Michigan v. Hoyt,
We now come to the second question: Section 1 of the act under which defendant is incorporated, is as follows : “That corporations, associations or societies, for the purpose of furnishing life indemnity or pecuniary benefits to the widows, orphans, heirs or relatives, by consanguinity or affinity, devisees or legatees, of deceased members, or accident or permanent disability indemnity to members thereof, and where members shall receive no money as profit, and where funds for the payment-of such benefits shall be securеd, in whole or in part, by assessment upon the surviving members, may be organized, subject to the conditions hereinafter provided.” It is contended that all persons not named in the act are prohibited from becoming bеneficiaries. It will be observed that the contract involved is not absolutely prohibited by statute. All that can properly be claimed is, that it was not expressly authorized by the statute. The defendant voluntarily issued the рolicy. It received the premium, and Bailey fully, so far as appears, performed all that his contract required him to do. So far as he is concerned, the contract is an executed one. Now, uрon the death of Bailey, when the defendant is called upon to perform its part of the contract, can it refuse, and defeat a recovery by claiming that the contract is ultra vires? We think the law on this quеstion is well settled that such a defence can not be made availing. Where the contract has been fully performed by the party contracting with the corporation, and the corporation has received the benefits from such contract, it can not invoke the doctrine of ultra vires to defeat an action brought against it on such contract. Bradley v. Ballard,
The judgment of the Appellate Court will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
