79 Minn. 59 | Minn. | 1900
In his lifetime, James Maguire, an unmarried man, was a member of defendant beneficial association. He held its certificate of date December 31, 1892, whereby it was certified that he was entitled to all of the rights and privileges of membership and to the sum of $2,000 of the beneficiary fund at his death, to be paid “to his cousin, H. H. Gruber.” Maguire died February 24, 1898, having been all of the time a member in good standing in his subordinate lodge. He had in every particular complied with all of the rules, regulations, and requirements of the order, and until after his decease no question was raised as to his right to designate Gruber as the beneficiary, or that such designation was invalid and inoperative. After his death, the defendant refused to pay, solely upon the ground that Gruber was not Maguire’s cousin, or in any manner “related” to him, nor was he a member of his family, or dependent upon him. For the purposes of this appeal it is conceded that Gruber was not “related” to Maguire, nor was he a member of his family or a depend
The articles of association under which defendant issued and paid beneficial certificates are not as clear as they should be, and in passing it is not out of place to say that they have been materially changed since the decision in Jewell v. Grand Lodge A. O. U. W., 41 Minn. 405, 43 N. W. 88. It is provided (article 13, § 6) that in the beneficiary fund of $2,000 the members themselves have no individual property right. It does not constitute a part of their estate to be administered, nor have they any right in or control over the same
“Except the power to designate the person or persons to whom, as beneficiaries, the same shall be paid at the death of the member.”
The beneficiaries thus designated have no vested right in said sum until the death of the member gives such right, and the designation may be changed by the member, in the method prescribed by the laws of the order, at any time before his death. In the next article (14, § 1) it is provided that
“Upon the death of a workman in good standing in a subordinate lodge in this jurisdiction, the moneys payable under his certificate shall be paid to the person and- in the order hereinafter named and not otherwise: * * *
(1) To the person designated in the certificate, when designated by name, and a person related to the deceased, or a member of his family or dependent upon him.
(2) Where such person is not living at the time of payment in such case: First, to the wife and children of the deceased, share and share alike; second, to the wife of the deceased; third, to his father and mother, share and share alike; fourth, to the surviving father or mother; fifth, to the brothers and sisters of the deceased, share and share alike, or their living issue, according to the right of representation; sixth, to the surviving brother or sister, if no issue of other brothers or sisters is living; seventh, to the next of kin of the deceased, according to the statute of distribution of the state of Minnesota, — and to no other persons whomsoever.”
These are all of the provisions in the articles which bear upon the right of a member to designate his beneficiary, and it is to be ob
Now, when we examine the subsequent provisions to which the quoted words refer, we find that by the first subdivision payment is to be made to the person designated, if designated by name, and a person “related” to the deceased. If by this it was intended that the beneficiary, when named, must be some sort of a relative, the language chosen was quite inept, and possibly needs revision. The expression used suggests conditions and complications arising on the decease of a member which might end in defeating not only the wish of the deceased, as indicated in his designation of a beneficiary, but also the very object of the association, — that of providing a sum of money for the use of the widow of the deceased, or for his children, or for his aged parents, or possibly for some other persons related by consanguinity or affinity. Suppose the beneficiary is not designated by name, must he be related, or one of the member’s family, or a dependent? And upon looking at the second subdivision we find that no provision whatsoever is made in case the beneficiary designated by name is ineligible and incapable of receiving the money, and is living when payment is to be made. He might conveniently die in time to set the second subdivision in motion, but, if he survives the member, its provisions are inoperative, for the only contingency covered by this .second subdivision, unless words are read into it, is that which will arise in case a beneficiary designated by name is not living when the pay day arrives. And nowhere else in the articles do we find provisions which will prevent an absolute forfeiture to the defendant association in every case of such a character.
To illustrate: Unless plaintiff can recover, the defendant can resist payment as against the world, so far as we can now perceive..
But an exact and abiding construction of the language used in these articles is not necessary to a decision of the case now before us, as we regard it. Maguire’s application was made before the certificate was issued, and in the form, we must presume, laid down in the articles. This application was not introduced in evidence, so there is nothing of record tending to show what statements or representations were therein made as to Gruber’s relationship to the applicant, or why he thought him qualified for such designation. Nor was there any claim made at the trial that, in causing the plaintiff to be designated as beneficiary, Maguire made any fraudulent representations to defendant, or that because of false statements or representations on his part the defendant had issued the certificate in question. It had an opportunity, when the application was presented, to pass upon the competency or eligibility of Gruber to receive the money; and it certainly acquiesced in his being designated by name, for it issued the certificate. From that time, December 31,1892, to the time of his decease, February 24,1898, — over five years, — Maguire continued to comply with all of defendant’s rules and regulations. He contributed to the beneficiary fund when admitted to the order, and thereafter, and up to the day of his death, met and paid the assessments made from time to time, as was necessary to meet death claims. He was never delinquent when called upon to pay into the fund in question, and undoubtedly relied upon a well-founded belief that when he should pass away the surviving members would contribute to the $2,000 mentioned in his certificate quite as promptly and with as good grace as had been his custom. And unquestionably the defendant association received his payments in the belief that the beneficiary whom he had selected, and whose name had been designated in the certificate when issued, was
As we have stated, Maguire was not prohibited in express terms from designating a person not related to him as his beneficiary. And, if plaintiff cannot recover, the amount is forfeited to the association, simply because, as we construe its articles, it has failed to provide for a case of this kind; that is, for a case where the beneficiary named is living, but cannot take, at the death of the member. It is true that when a certificate is issued to a member of one of these unincorporated beneficial associations the articles and by-laws enter into and become a part of the contract. And it is also true, we presume, that the subdivisions we have quoted from article 14, § 1, contemplated that the person designated as a beneficiary in such certificate should be a relative of the member, or one of his family, or a person dependent upon him, and that payment should be made to a beneficiary of one of these classes. But this language was not a limitation of the power of the association, so as to prevent it from recognizing as a proper beneficiary a person who might be designated as such by the member, there being no claim of fraud, and there being no question of public policy involved. Such designation in itself was not a fraud upon the association. Its obligation to pay was not enlarged in any way by the naming of plaintiff as the beneficiary. Such designation was made by Maguire. It was assented to by the defendant, and relied and acted upon by both parties. It was never repudiated by either until it was too late for a change, and it was binding. Story v. Williamsburgh, 95 N. Y. 474; Maneely v. Knights, 115 Pa. St. 305, 9 Atl. 41.
When an association of this character, in the absence of fraud, voluntarily issues a certificate in which a beneficiary is designated by name, said person not being expressly prohibited in the articles or by-laws from being so named, there being no question of public policy involved, and thereafter and for a term of years collects and receives the amounts assessed upon the member on account of death claims asserted against the beneficiary fund, it will not be allowed to defeat a recovery on the certificate on the ground that
The order appealed from is reversed, and, when a remittitur, is filed below, the court will order judgment against defendant for the amount due upon the certificate, with interest, costs, and disbursements.