34 Ind. App. 295 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1904
The appellant Rebecca B. Bunyan, as administratrix of the estate of her deceased husband, James R. Bunyan, commenced this action against the National Union, an incorporated, fraternal beneficiary association oi’ganized under the laws of the state of Ohio, and Catherine E. Reed, Helen M. Ostrander, George B. Bunyan, Walter W. Bunyan, James R. Runyan, Jr., and George B. Bunyan as executor of the will of William Bunyan, deceased.
The purpose ®f the action was to' enforce a claim upon a benefit fund of $3,000, which was promised to be paid to her said husband as beneficiary under the benefit certificate issued by the said National Union upon the life of William Bunyan, who was a brother of the said James R. Bunyan, deceased. Aside from the National Union, the other defendants were made parties to answer as to their interests, if any, in the said fund of $3,000. The National Union, by a proper pleading, admitted its liability to pay the sum of $3,000, but showed that conflicting claims were being made by other parties to the suit with reference to said fund, and that it could not with safety to itself pay. the fund to either of the claimants,' and asked to be allowed to pay the $3,000 into court, and be discharged from further liability on account thereof, and leave to the court the matter of determining to whom the money should be distributed. Afterward, and before the trial of the cause, the said National Union paid the full $3,000 .into court, and was discharged from further liability. The defendants, other than Reed and Ostrander, filed a cross-complaint, setting up their claim to the fund in dispute, and the defendants Reed and Ostrander also filed a cross-complaint, setting up their claim to the fund. The demurrer filed by appellees Reed and Ostrander to each paragraph o>f appellants’ complaint was overruled. The cross-complaint of appellees Reed and Ostrander was held insufficient. Various answers were filed by which the issues were closed, and the cause was sub
We do not thinlc it necessary to make any further statement here of the issues, because we are convinced that the judgment of the trial court must be reversed upon the cross-errors assigned by appellees Reed and Ostrander. We regard each paragraph of appellants’ complaint as wholly insufficient for the relief demanded, and as showing upon its face that the fund in question legally belongs with the appellees Reed and Ostrander. The two paragraphs of complaint are not materially different. They aver that the National Union is a fraternal, beneficiary association incorporated under the laws of the state of Ohio in 1881, and engaged in the business of insuring the lives of its members by issuing to them benefit certificates, promising to pay death benefits to be realized from assessments upon the members; that prior to February 20, 1886, a subordinate council, called “Kendallville Council, No. 192,” was established at Kendallville, Noble county, Indiana, which council is still in existence, and that agencies of this character are the means by which the said National Union transacts its business; that one William Bunyan, prior to February 20, 1886, became a member of said Kendallville council and of the National Union, and at his death was a member thereof in good standing; that on said last-mentioned date the National Union executed to William Bunyan a benefit certificate for $5,000, payable to his wife, Cornelia Bunyan, as beneficiary, which certificate remained in force until February 23, 1901. Cornelia Bunyan died December 21, 1900, and the said William Bunyan thereafter until his death remained unmarried, childless, and having no living parents; that it was one of the laws of said National Union that members might, at any time, surrender their benefit certificates, and cause new ones to be issued payable to different beneficiaries than those origin
It is-further averred that in July, 1901, James R. sold and conveyed to William his interest in the firm property and_ business, and in connection with such sale there was had between the partners a settlement of the partnership affairs; that no part of the $3,000 indebtedness, and
It is further averred that the appellees Reed and Os
In Richmond v. Johnson, supra, Charles II. Richmond was the holder of a benefit certificate in which his wife was named as the beneficiary. She died shortly before her husband. Upon the death of the husband the question arose as to whether the money due under the certificate should be paid to the administrator of the deceased wife, or be distributed under the rules and regulations of the association. The court said: “Here is.not an ordinary contract of insurance, made between an insurance company and another person, the rights of the parties to be determined exclusively by the policy. The rights of Charles II. Richmond, and of anyone claiming through him, depended, not on the certificate only, but rather on his membership in the association; and such rights were defined and controlled by its constitution and by-laws. So far as the provisions of the constitution and by-laws are shown by the admitted statements of the complaint, and by the certificate, the members are the beneficiaries entitled to the benefit of the fund, provided ‘with the right to hold, dispose of, and fully control said
The-supremo court of Texas in Splawn v. Chew, supra, in holding that a beneficiary took no vested interest,in a benefit certificate of the kind we are here considering, said: “Every one insured by reason of membership in such a company is charged with a knowledge of its constitution and by-laws, bound by their requirements and entitled to' the rights and privileges conferred by them. May, Insurance, §552; Gales v. Insurance Co. [1865], 18 Iowa 425. The present order did not issue policies as do ordinary insurance companies, but delivered to the insured a benefit certificate, which, together with the positive regulations of the order, evidenced the contract between the member and the company so far as the insurance was concerned. * * * The provision of Article III, §2, of its by-laws is as follows: ‘Applicants shall enter upon their application the name or names of the members of their family or those dependent upon them, to whom they desire their benefit paid, and the same shall be entered in the benefit certificate by the supreme secretary, subject to such future disposal of the benefit among their dependents as they thereafter direct.’ The clear import of the section is to place the certificate entirely under control of the member, so far as the selection of the beneficiaries is concerned. He may direct at any time that the money shall be paid to persons different from those named or contemplated in the certificate, provided they are
The judgment is reversed upon the cross-errors assigned by appellees Reed and Ostrander with instruction to the trial court to sustain the demurrer of appellees Reed and Ostrander to each paragraph of the complaint, and for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.