96 P. 485 | Kan. | 1908
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This action was brought by the National Council of the Knights and Ladies of Security to determine which of two claimants was entitled to receive the benefits due upon a certificate issued by the society upon the life of a member, Charles E. Shepard, now deceased. When Charles E. Shepard became a member of the society his wife, Mell B. Shepard, was named in the certificate as his sole beneficiary. Oh the first day of March, 1904, she died, and no other beneficiary was ever provided for in the certificate or otherwise designated. In August, 1906, while a resident of the state of Texas, Charles E. Shepard died intestate, leaving a father, three sisters and two brothers surviving him, but no children or direct heirs to inherit his property. In the following October the defendant, James H. Boice, was appointed by the probate court of Cherokee county as administrator of the estate of the deceased, and demand was made upon the plaintiff company for the payment of the benefits provided for in the certificate. R. C. Shepard, the father of the deceased, also entered a claim for the payment of the benefits. The plaintiff company paid into court the amount of the certificate, less a stipulated fee for the creation of a, reserve fund, and asked for a judgment of the court decreeing which of - the two claimants was entitled to the payment of the money. The court found in favor of R. C. Shepard, awarding him $960.42, and against the administrator, James H. Boice, who prosecutes this proceeding in error.
“It is inconsistent with the theory upon which benefit societies are organized that the proceeds of a benefit certificate should be considered assets of the member’s estate. Otherwise, it would become liable for his debts and the costs of administration, something not within the contemplation and purpose for which such orders are established. -The insured member himself has no interest in the fund; he possesses simply a power of appointment, which, if not exercised, becomes inoperative.” (Page 288.)
The legislature made specific provision for fraternal beneficiary societies like the one in question, and provided that death benefits must go to families, heirs, blood relatives, affianced husband or wife of a member or a person dependent upon -a member: (Gen. Stat. • 1901, § 3569.) The laws of the society are in keeping with this provision, but the society could not, if it would, pay benefits to persons not within the class designated by the statute. (Gillam v. Dale, 69 Kan. 362, 76 Pac. 861.) But it is claimed that “An act relating to insurance,” enacted in 1905, operates as a repeal of that statute and of the rules of the society affecting the naming or changing of beneficiaries. It provides:
“Section 1. That in all cases of the death of the beneficiary in any insurance policy before the death of the insured, and thereafter the insured dies without*311 having named another beneficiary and without having disposed of said insurance by will, then said insurance shall go to the estate of the insured, the same as other property not exempt.
“Sec. 2. All acts and parts of acts in conflict herewith are hereby repealed.” (Laws 1905, ch. 271.)
This statute manifestly relates to insurance proper and has no application to fraternal benefit societies. The legislature has placed insurance and mutual benefit societies in distinct classes, has provided different schemes for the organization and control of insurance companies and fraternal benefit societies, and has enacted separate codes of rules and regulations appropriate to the nature and purpose of each. The line between the systems has been not only clearly marked out but it is expressly provided that fraternal benefit societies shall be exempt from the provisions of other insurance laws. That the two plans are dissimilar in scope and purpose, and that the rules governing insurance are not applicable to mutual benefits, has been pointed out in earlier decisions. (Bankers’ Union v. Crawford, 67 Kan. 449, 73 Pac. 79, 100 Am. St. Rep. 465; Miller v. National Council, 69 Kan. 234, 79 Pac. 830; Gillam v. Dale, 69 Kan. 362, 76 Pac. 861; Kemper v. Modern Woodmen, 70 Kan. 119, 78 Pac. 452; Pilcher v. Puckett, 77 Kan. 284, 94 Pac. 132.)
These distinctions, as well as the terms employed by the legislature, make it manifest that chapter 271 of the Laws of 1905 was not intended to apply to fraternal beneficiary societies. It speaks of insurance and riot of mutual benefits; of insurance policies and not of benefit certificates. It treats insurance as soriiething in which the insured has an interest and over which he has control, while a member of a beneficiary society has no interest in the fund and no control, except the power to appoint a beneficiary within certain limitations. It assumes that the insured may dispose of insurance by will, whereas a member of a beneficiary society has no such power over the benefits to be paid under his cer
There is nothing substantial in the objections to the method of the society in coming into court and obtaining a decision as to who was entitled to the benefits under the certificate, nor do we find any error in the record. The judgment is affirmed.