78 N.Y.S. 237 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1902
The policy issued, by the defendant to the plaintiff provides that if at 'such date as the board of directors of the association may from time to time fix or determine for making an assessment, the death fund is insufficient to meet existing claims by death, an assessment shall then be made upon every member whose certificate is in force at the date of the last death assessed for, and said assessment shall be made at such rates, according to the age of each member, as may be established by the said board of directors. Said policy also provides that the constitution and by-laws of the defendant shall form part of the contract between the plaintiff and the defendant. Section 5 of article 11, of the constitution, provides that on the 1st days of February, May, August, and ETovember, or at such other period as the board of directors may determine, an assessment shall be made upon the entire membership in force at the date of the last audited death claim prior thereto, for such a sum as the executive committee may deem sufficient to meet the existing claims by death, the same to be apportioned among the members according to the age of each member as per the rates named in the certificate of membership. Attached to the policy is a table of rates. The plaintiff was forty-three years of age at the time the policy was issued to him. In 1898 when he was fifty-five years of age, an assessment was made upon him. This assessment was levied upon the plaintiff under the table of rates adopted by the board of directors of the defendant in 1899, but according to the rate for the age of fifty-five years, the plaintiff’s then attained age, instead of at the rate for his age when the policy was issued to him. The plaintiff refused to pay this assessment and thereupon the defendant cancelled the aforesaid policy and refused to recognize the plaintiff as one of its members. The plaintiff claims that the words “according to the age of each member ” mean the age of each member at the time he joined the association, while the defendant claims that such words mean the age of each member when the assessment is made.
My attention has not been called to any decision of any court in this State upon the question in controversy. This question,. however, has been before the courts of other States. In Haydel v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Assn., 104 Fed. Repr. 718, the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Eighth Circuit held that the right to increase the assessment was conferred upon the directors
In Barbot v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Assn., 100 Ga. 681, the right to increase the rate of assessment was sustained. It was claimed in that case that the same table of rates that wks printed upon the plaintiff’s certificate of membership limited the Tight of the association to increase the amount of the assessment. But the Supreme Court of Georgia after reviewing the entire question upon practically the same facts as those here involved, held that “ It was not the purpose of this assessment
In Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association v. Taylor, 99 Va. 208, the legality of the assessment of 1898 (to which the plaintiff in this case objects) was sustained by the Supreme Court of Virginia.
I am of the opinion that the assessment made in 1898 was authorized by the contract between the plaintiff and the defendant, 'and that the refusal of the plaintiff to pay said assessment authorized the defendant to cancel the plaintiff’s policy and to declare the same forfeited.
Judgment is ordered for the defendant dismissing the complaint with costs.
Complaint dismissed, with costs.