70 N.Y.S. 437 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
The defendant, the mutual benefit association, is a corporation duly constituted and created under chapter 496 of the Laws of 1879, having its principal place of business at Niagara Falls, and having certain branch and grand councils in this State, among others Branch No. 106, located in the city of New York. This action was brought to recover upon a benefit certificate issued by the association to one John Brophy, a member of said branch.
It appears that said John Brophy obtained originally a benefit certificate in the sum of $2,000, payable to his wife. She died and thereafter he obtained a new certificate in which his daughter, Honora Dalton, was named as sole beneficiary. This certificate is dated June 19, 1894, and is signed by the supreme recorder, the supreme president, and countersigned by the president and recording secretary; it was delivered to Honora Dalton and was in her possession from July or August, 1894, until about August, 1900, when she forwarded the same to Mr. Joseph Cameron, supreme recorder, at Hornellsville, N. Y., at his request, for inspection.
After the second certificate had been issued it is claimed that John Brophy represented to the secretary of the branch of which he was a member that the Honora Dalton certificate was lost, and that upon such representation a new certificate was issued, intended to be a duplicate of the lost document and only for the purpose of replacing it, naming Nora Dalton as the beneficiary. Mrs. Dalton had no notice of the issuing of the duplicate certificate and she then had in her possession the certificate so represented to have been lost. Upon the surrender of the duplicate a new certificate was issued,
We have reached the conclusion that the order releasing the original defendant from liability should not have been granted, under the circumstances of this case, as made to appear by the moving and opposing affidavits. A serious question is raised as to the validity of the certificate issued by the defendant association in which . the plaintiff, her brother and sister are named as beneficiaries, owing to the alleged irregularity of the proceeding by which the Honora Dalton certificate was surrendered and the “Norá” Dalton certificate was issued and as to the form of the last certificate issued upon the surrender of the “Nora” Dalton certificate. It is not claimed but that Honora and Nora Dalton are the same person, but the appellant contends that the acts of the parties subsequent to the issuing of her original certificate were irregular and void, and that by reason of the fraud or bad faith of the officers of the defendant association charged with the duty of issuing benefit certificates under the rules and regulations of the association, or their gross loches, or both, her original certificate remains in full force and virtue, and that if the defendant has by such acts become liable upon the certificate sued upon, it
It is apparent that, in any event, the appellant will require for the presentation of the issues raised by her the record books and other documentary evidence in the hands of the defendant association, and if the order as made and entered is affirmed, she will be obliged to bring them into court by subpoena, at a great inconvenience and expense. It appears that the office- of the supreme council is at Niagara Falls, and at the time of the transactions involved the supreme recorder lived and had his office at Hornellsville, N. Y., in the county of Steuben. It is absolutely necessary that the defendant Dalton should have all the records and documents relating to the transactions- involved, and we think it would be unjust to permit the supreme council to subject her to such inconvenience and expense, in view of the plain fact that the complications have arisen, in part, at least, by reason of its defective records and the failure of its officers to obey the letter and spirit of its rules and regulations as to the issuing, surrender and reissuing of benefit certificates, whatever the outcome may be.
These considerations lead- us to the conclusion that the order should be modified by striking ■ out the provision by which the Supreme Council of the Catholic Mutual Benefit Association is discharged from liability to the plaintiff or Honora Dalton on payment of the sum of $2,000 to the chamberlain of the city of .New York, and substituting Honora Dalton as defendant in the action in place of the said association, and inserting a provision bringing in Honora Dalton as an additional party defendant, and as so modified that 'it be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements to appellant.
Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, Ingraham and McLaughlin, JJ"., concurred.
Order modified as directed in opinion, and as modified affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements to appellant.