9 Ga. App. 71 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1911
Rosa Barnard brought suit upon a policy of insurance for an endowment of- $350. Upon the trial the jury returned a verdict in her favor for that amount and for damages and attorney’s fees. The defendant made a motion for a new trial, which the trial judge overruled, though he required the damages and attorney’s fees to be written off by the plaintiff. The policy •or endowment certificate upon which the plaintiff predicated her right to recover was as follows:
NNo. 9,729.
$350.00.
“Knights of Pythias, Georgia. Endowment Policy.”
*73 “This policy witnesseth, that the Grand Lodge Ivnights of Pythias of Georgia, under the jurisdiction of the Supreme Lodge Ivnights of Pythias of N. and S. A., E., A., A., and A., upon faith of the representation made by brother J. H. Barnard in his application and the medical certificate for membership into said order, which said application and medical certificate are hereby referred to and expressly made a part of this agreement, and under the .following expressed conditions, stipulations and agreements now-existing or that may hereafter be enacted by the. Grand Lodge, will pay to Bosa B. Barnard, wife, heirs or legal representatives of such heir or heirs, at the death of brother knight J. II. Barnard, a member in good standing in Progressive Lodge No. 97 located at Savannah, Georgia, an endowment of not less than $50,. nor more than $350, being the total amount due under this policy; provided that the said brother knight J. H. Barnard shall have complied with all the laws and regulations of the grand and subordinate lodges and the conditions hereinafter expressed, viz.: .
“First. That the said brother knight shall be a member in good standing in his lodge at the time of his death, and the records of the endowment bureau shall sustain the same.
“ Second. That this policy shall not be assigned, transferred, nor hypothecated to any person, persons, or interests before the death of the said brother knight.
“Third. That this policy shall not be assigned, transferred nor hypothecated after the death of the said brother knight, by his widow, heirs, or legal representatives of such heir or heirs, without the consent of the Grand Lodge.
“Fourth. That [if] this policy shall have been assigned* transferred or hypothecated by the said brother knight prior to his death, or by his widow, heirs, or legal representatives of such heir or heirs after the death of the said brother knight, without the consent of the Grand Lodge, then this policy shall become void, and all the rights and benefits arising from the same shall cease and terminate forever.
“Fifth. Any person obtaining admission in the order by false statement, concealment, or evasion of facts regarding personal or family history or present condition of health, forfeits all benefits herein provided.
“Sixth. Any person living in a state of concubinage shall not*74 be entitled to any of the benefits herein mentioned, and under no condition whatever shall any benefits herein be paid on any claim or to any claimants arising under these sections to any members laboring under the disabilities aforesaid.
“ Seventh. That upon the faithful compliance with the foregoing stipulations and laws of the endowment bureau and subordinate lodge, and upon the satisfactory proof of the death of the said brother knight, the endowment bureau will pay, as above expressed, according to the following tabulated statement, an endowment not less than fifty dollars nor more than three hundred and fifty dollars, viz.: First year membership, $50.00; second year, $100.00; third year, $150.00; fourth year, $200.00; fifth year, $250.00; sixth year, $300.00; after six years, $350.00.
“In witness whereof, the Grand Lodge of Georgia has caused its seal to be affixed and this to be signed by its Grand Chancellor at Macon, this the fifth day of May, A. D. 1903, and the Pythian period the X. C. D. Creswill, Grand Chancellor. [Seal.] Attest: F. M. Cohen, G. S. and T. of Endowment. B. W. Warren, G. K. of E. & S.”
The defendant demurred to the petition generally, and also upon the ground that the facts alleged in the petition did not entitle the plaintiff to recover damages and attorney’s fees. We think that the court correctly overruled the general demurrer; and it is not necessary to consider the special demurrer, since the court required the plaintiff to write off her recovery for these items.
In the court below the defendant denied liability upon the following grounds: (1) It denied that the plaintiff was a beneficiary of the policy. (2) It denied that the representations upon which the policy was obtained were truthfully and faithfully made at the time that the policy was issued, and denied that Barnard had continued faithfully to comply with the stipulations and laws of the endowment bureau and subordinate lodge. (3) It denied that Barnard was at the time of his death a member in good standing in the order, or of Progressive Lodge No. 97, of which he had been a member. (4) It denied that the proofs of the death of Barnard conformed to the requirements of the endowment bureau and the subordinate lodge. (5) It denied that its refusal to pay the amount under the policy was in bad faith. By way of an affirmative defense the defendant set up that the plaintiff had three marriage certificates
Upon the trial the issues were narrowed to one leading issue of fact: Who had the superior right to be considered the wife of the deceased ? Eeallv no point can be made to the effect that the evidence is insufficient to show that Barnard was in good standing, in the general acceptation of the term, as a member of Progressive Lodge No. 97, and that he had paid all dues and assessments. The proofs of death were made in substantial compliance with the requirements of the order, and it was proved that the plaintiff was married under the formalities of law to the deceased. Whether the proof that Barnard’s second marriage is sufficient or not is immaterial, because Barnard married the plaintiff after Nancy, his alleged second wife, had died. As to the first marriage: We think there is sufficient evidence to authorize the jury to find that James H. Barnard at the time that he married the plaintiff was authorized to presume that his first wife was dead, and there is no evidence
Granting that the plaintiff is shown to have been the1 wife of the deceased, we come to the point which raises for consideration the only real question in the case. The plaintiff admitted upon the ■stand that she did not marry the deceased until January, 1909. This was nearly six years after the policy or endowment certificate was issued.' Clearly, then, at the time it was issued, the plaintiff was not the wife of the insured. It is upon this fact that the argument that Barnard was living in a state of concubinage most strongly depends. Indeed, there is no evidence that Barnard had avoided the contract by living in a state of concubinage, unless it can be inferred from the fact that he made this certificate of insurance payable to her six years before he married her, and continued to pay the dues necessary to keep it in force for her benefit even during the life of his second wife. It is to be doubted, under the ruling in Norman v. Goode, supra, and authorities there cited, that it was proved that Barnard ever was married prior to his marriage to the plaintiff. The licenses were never introduced, and no witness testified to facts going to show that a marriage contract was actually entered, into by Barnard with any other of his alleged wives. The mere fact that Barnard took out a policy of insurance or endowment certificate qoayable to Bosa Barnard when she was not his wife would hardly authorize the inference that he was at that time or at any time thereafter sustaining illicit relations towards her. The cases are numerous where persons have taken policies of insurance upon their own application for the benefit of others to whom they entertain nothing except a platonic affection. Under ■the circumstances of the ease as developed by the evidence, it is just as Reasonable to suppose that the deceased intended, at the time
But, conceding that all three marriages were proved, we think that the verdict rendered was authorized by the law and evidence for at least two reasons: First, because, if Barnard was not guilty of concubinage, the payment of the certificate could not be avoided merely because Rosa Barnard was not his wife at the time the cer- • tifieate was issued, for it was not material to the risk, and therefore it was immaterial to the contract whether she was his wife or not. In the second place, so far as the beneficiary is concerned, the policy
The second marriage of the deceased may be dismissed from consideration, because it is not disputed that the second wife had died before the plaintiff married the insured. Granting it to be established (as counsel for the defendant in error concedes it to be a fact) that Ella Barnard was the first wife of Barnard, it is clearly established by the preponderance of the testimony that she left her husband and went to New York more than eight years before Barnard married the plaintiff, and the circumstances all tend to prove that Barnard had no communication with her nor any information in regard to her or as to her whereabouts from the time she left Savannah. Ella Barnard, it is true, swore that she wrote to him twice and received a reply to her letters, but against this, among several other contradictory circumstances, was the testimony of her father-in-law, who testified, that for some years before the first wife left Savannah she and his son, the husband, were as far apart as the North from the South; also the fact that his son, after his first wife left him, lived in his house, and that he never knew of his receiving any letter from the first wife, and his son never spoke of having heard from her; and the fact that great difficulty was experienced in ascertaining the whereabouts of the first wife when she was wanted as a witness after the death of her former husband. All of these matters were for the jury, and they found that the insured had had no news of his wife for more than seven years. This would have authorized the deceased to marry Rosa Barnard, and, if the marriage was otherwise legal, would have made her for many purposes his lawful wife.
If the plaintiff at the time of the death of the insured was his
After all, the important fact as to a representation is whether the representation is material, and, so far as the beneficiary is concerned, whether the beneficiary has such a beneficial interest in the life of the assured as would relieve the insurer’s risk from hazard resulting from lack of insurable interest. Under our code a contract of insurance is valid where the beneficiary has an insurable interest. Civil Code (1910), § 2496. An insurable interest is not necessarily dependent upon marital relation or kinship by affinity or consanguinity. In a broad sense it may be said that any one has an insurable interest in the life of another where the latter feels sufficient
This brings us to a second reason on account of which the writer thinks the judgment of the lower court is correct. The policy declares that, if it , is not payable to Rosa Barnard, his wife, it shall be payable to his heir. If, therefore, by reason of the fact that Rosa Barnard was not his wife at the time the policy issued, the payment is not required to be made to her as such, she is still entitled to recover the amount of the policy as the heir of Barnard, for the reason that she was at the time of his death his wife, and, so far as appears from the record, his only heir. The majority of the court think that if she was not his lawful wife, she was not his heir.
We are all of the opinion that the verdict was authorized by the evidence, and that the court did not err in refusing a new trial.
The plaintiff in error insists, in the seventh, eighth, and ninth grounds of the motion for new trial, that the Grand Lodge, Knights of Pythias, is not an insurance company, and that no evidence was offered to support the allegation of the petition to that effect, and it also insists, in the ninth ground, that the court erred in charging the jury that, “where there is nothing in the contract to evidence a restriction of the right of the party to name a beneficiary, he, for and on behalf of himself, may take a policy of insurance and may make any one his beneficiary.” In this instruction we find no error which could have been harmful to the defendant in the court below. We recognize that there is a difference between a fraternal organization which incidentally insures the lives of its members (while insurance is not the controlling idea of the organization) and those companies which are organized and maintained solely for the purpose of conducting the business of insurance. But while fraternal insurance associations ordinarily restrict both their membership and the right to procure benefit certificates or insurance to certain classes, and while these contracts might be controlled by their constitutions and by-laws, still, as no by-laws were in evidence in this case, we think the court had the right to assume that there was no bydaw restricting the beneficiaries to any particular class; and, as the .policy or certificate itself did not restrict them, the error was harmless.' Judgment affirmed.