27 Wash. 218 | Wash. | 1902
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The complaint states in substance that Walter Cade and Lydia L. Cade, the appellant, were married on the 11th day of August, 1896; that in 1898, during said coverture, said Walter Cade became a member of what is known as “Home Camp,” which is a lodge or camp subordinate to the respondent association, and thereupon took out a benefit certificate, Ho. 52,597, in the said Head Camp, Pacific Jurisdiction, Woodmen of the World, in the sum of $2,000, payable to his wife; that the certificate was delivered by him to his wife and left in her possession, and
The assignment of error is the action of the court in sustaining the demurrer to the second amended complaint. The contention of the appellant is that where a husband insures his life in a benefit society for the benefit of his wife, with whom he continues to live until his death, and the assessments and dues are paid by him with community money, he cannot deprive her of the insurance by a change of beneficiary without her consent, particularly when such change is in favor of mere volunteers, and especially when he delivers the policy or benefit certificate to her and makes her a gift of it; that in. such instance she becomes vested with such an interest in the same, or
The main question in this case is whether the beneficiary, in this instance the appellant, had such a vested interest in the policy as would prevent the insured from revoking it or naming a new beneficiary. We think that she had not, and an examination of the authorities cited by the appellant convinces us that such is the case. Grimbley v. Harrold, 125 Cal. 24 (57 Pac. 558, 73 Am. St. Rep. 19), the first case cited by appellant, has no bearing upon this case; for, while it was held that the beneficiary had such an interest, it was because there was a contract agreement to that effect between the assured and the beneficiary. The testimony in that case showed that the plaintiff and first named beneficiary, at the request of the assured, left her home in England and came to the state of California, where the assured resided, for the purpose of caring for him in sickness. He proposed to make some provision for her, saying, among other things, that he had some papers he wanted her to have. The court found that it was agreed between Shelton, the assured, and the plaintiff, that she should thereafter pay all his dues to said
In Maynard v. Vanderwerker, 24 N. Y. Supp. 932, it was held that where a person became a member of a mutual benefit association under an agreement with the person named in the certificate as a beneficiary that the beneficiary was to pay all the assessments, and they were so paid, the beneficiary acquired a vested interest in the certificate, and the member could not afterwards make another designation. But even this last case was against the great weight of authority, as we shall hereafter see.
Supreme Council v. McGinness, 59 Ohio St. 531 (53 N. E. 54), comes nearer announcing the rule sustaining the appellant’s contention than any other cited, although this case was decided more on the technical ground that the relationship of the brother, who was the claimant under the last certificate, standing alone, would be wholly insufficient, not falling within the provisions of the charter which designated the classes of persons to be benefited, and it was held that the relation of brother, standing alone, would be wholly insufficient, as not falling within the term “family,” that the member would be without power to select as a beneficiary one not so designated, and the corporation equally without power to accumulate a fund for a person other than the classes so named.
All that is decided in Adams v. Grand Lodge, 105 Cal. 321 (38 Pac. 914, 45 Am. St. Rep. 45), is that where a certificate of insurance in a mutual benefit association, made payable to a firm to which insured is indebted, is intended by all parties to be for the benefit of the firm, the firm will, as against the heirs of the insured, be entitled to the proceeds of the certificate, though the nominal beneficiary died before the insured. A reading of this case shows conclusively that it does not bear upon the questions under discussion here.
We are unable to see that Hoeft v. Supreme Lodge, 113 Cal. 91 (45 Pac. 185, 33 L. R. A. 174), sustains in any way the appellant’s contention. In that case the insured procured a certificate to be issued in the name of his first wife, the mother of the children who are parties to the litigation, and upon her death a certificate was issued in favor of the children. In the course of time he married again, and thereafter surrendered the certificate in favor of them, and caused a certificate to be issued in favor of his second wife. In that case, as this, it was averred that the change was accomplished with fraudulent representa-, tions, undue influence, and duress practiced and exercised upon their father by his wife, the plaintiff in the case.
“The specific averments to support this charge are to the last degree meager and inconclusive, but passing that, under an assumption of their sufficiency we come to consider whether a cause of action is stated. Defendants do not plead any contract with their deceased father, or any special equities which would deprive him of the right to malee a change, but stand upon the ground that they may contest because the change was procured by fraud. But if it was a fraud, did they have a right to complain? Clearly they had not, unless either by contract or in law they had some vested interest or right in the certificate which had formerly been taken out in their favor. They claim no such vested interest by contract. If it exists at all, then, it exists by operation of law. But such rights are either constitutional or statutory, and we are referred to no law which secures to them a right of action for such a cause. If they had a vested right in the certificate as such, then the insured himself, of his own volition, and without the fraudulent- contrivance of a third person, could not substitute a new beneficiary. But this is not, and cannot be claimed, for the contract is between the order and the insured. The beneficiary’s interest is the mere expectancy of an incompleted gift which is revocable at the will of the insured, and which does not and cannot become vested as a right until fixed by his death.”
It is claimed by the appellant that special equities exist in this case which a court of equity will take cognizance of. The only equity, however, that is pleaded, is the fact that the first beneficiary named was the wife of the assured. That fact would not appeal any stronger to a .court of equity than would the rights of the children of a deceased wife, who was the first beneficiary of the assured, especially when, as in this case, the beneficiaries under the last certificate were the father and mother of the assured,
Neither do we think the quotation cited by appellant from 1 Bacon on Benefit Societies and Life Insurance, § 289, sustains her contention, but that on the contrary it rather opposes it. That author says :
“The distinctions between the beneficiary orders, or societies, and the regular life insurance companies nowhere appear more plainly than when we consider the rights of the beneficiary named in the certificate or policy. This is because of the fundamental differences in the contracts of these two classes of organizations which we are about to discuss in this place. In a policy of life insurance the undertaking is with the assured and the stipulated sum is payable to him upon the contingency named, — the ending of the life of the insured. Owing to the form of the contract the rights of the person to whom the insurance is to be paid become at once vested when the policy is delivered and cannot be altered or affected except by his consent. The member of a beneficiary organization, on the other hand, as we have seen, has no property interest in the benefit, but only the naked power of designating some one to receive it. This designated recipient also has no property, nor vested rights, in the benefit, because his interest is contingent and uncertain, the power of the member to revoke the appointment and substitute a new beneficiary being specially reserved by the laws of the society, which laws enter into and form a part of the contract.”
Without especially reviewing the other cases cited by appellant, all of which we have examined, we think.that .none of them are in point. There is a class of cases holding that the beneficiary cannot be changed after the death of the assured; but that holding, of course, is upon a different principle from the one involved here, and the question of the power of revocation is not involved in such
“If this was properly in evidence there could be no question about the right of the member to so control the benefit that the interest of the beneficiary named in the certificate would be only one of expectancy, and even if it was not in evidence it will be presumed that he had full right to control the benefit until the contrary is made to appear.”
After discussing- the authorities pro and con on the question, this court adopts the rule announced by the supreme court of Indiana in Presbyterian Mutual Assurance Fund v. Allen, 106 Ind. 593 (7 N. E. 317), where it is said:
“The weight of authority, as will appear from an examination of the cases cited, is in favor -of the general doctrine that beneficiaries may be changed in cases where policies like the one before us are issued by such associations as the present, and that in this respect such policies are not governed by the general rule which governs ordinary insurance contracts.”
Much more is said by the court in support of the same doctrine. The authorities are outspoken and overwhelming to the effect that the beneficiary has no vested right in the certificate and that the assured may change it at will.
In Masonic Mutual Benefit Society v. Burkhart, 110 Ind. 189 (10 N. E. 79), it was held that a beneficiary acquires no vested rights to the benefits which are to accrue upon the death of a member of a mutual benefit and
“It would seem to follow, as a necessary corollary from the doctrine, that the certificate is a contract between the society and the member, and not between the member and the beneficiary, that the society and the member can modify or change their contract in any way satisfactory to themselves,”—
holding that it was only an expectancy that the beneficiary owned in the certificate prior to the death of the assured, and that it was immaterial whether or not the requirements of the by-laws upon the subject of changing the beneficiary were complied with; that the member and the society had the right to waive a compliance and agree upon any new beneficiary in any manner satisfactory to both those parties, — citing Bacon on Benefit Societies, § 308; Splawn v. Chew, 60 Tex. 532; Martin v. Stubbings, 126 Ill. 387 (18 N. E. 657, 9 Am. St. Rep. 620), and National Mutual Aid Society v. Lupold, 101 Pa. St. 111.
In Moan v. Normile, 56 N. Y. Supp. 339, it was held that a member of a beneficial association, whose certificate was made payable to his wife and was in her possession,
It will be borne in mind that all the cases above mentioned are cases where, as in this instance, the wife was the first beneficiary and a new beneficiary had been appointed by the assured, so that the equities which are claimed by the wife in the case at bar apply as well in the cases cited; the circumstances in all the cases, of course, being more or less different. But the only equitable circumstance pleaded and contended for in this case is the fact that the first beneficiary was the wife of the assured.
So far as the allegation in the complaint of fraud is concerned, it is not definite enough to be maintained'; no circumstances being pleaded to support the conclusion pleaded. It is a mere general averment without setting forth any facts upon which the averment is predicated. 9 Enc. Pl. & Pr., 686, 687. In addition to this, if there was no vested right in the appellant, no fraud could be perpetrated upon her by changing the beneficiary. Hoeft v. Supreme Lodge, 113 Cal. 91 (45 Pac. 185, 33 L. R. A. 174).
The fact that the beneficiary paid the assessments from community property does not deprive the assured of the right to change this certificate to a new beneficiary, and would not deprive him of it under the authorities, even if the beneficiary had paid the assessments herself. In Masonic, etc., Ass’n v. Tolles, 70 Conn. 537 (40 Atl. 448), it
It is insisted by the appellant that the statement in the complaint that the insured gave the certificate to her with the intent that it should be hers absolutely brings the case within the rule announced in cases where contracts were made between the insured and the beneficiary. But, even conceding that intent in a civil action could be pleaded as it is here, it falls far short of an allegation of a contract, and amounts to nothing more than an intent that is expressed in a will by the testator. In such instance it must be the intent that the property shall go where it is devised; but it will not be questioned that the testator has a right at any time to revoke the will and make new devisees.
We think that, under the overwhelming weight of authority, the judgment in this case must be affirmed.
Reavis, C. J., and White, Mount, Anders, Fullerton and Hadley, JJ., concur.