110 Mo. App. 328 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1905
— This action is to recover the amount alleged to be due on a benefit certificate issued to plaintiff’s deceased husband. The trial court gave several instructions for either party. The judgment was for defendant and plaintiff appeals.
The real contest between the parties to this controversy is whether the defendant can properly claim to be an insurance company known to the laws of this State at this time as a fraternal beneficiary association. If it belongs to that class, it is exempt from some stringent provisions of our statute governing general life insurance. The statute as to general life insurance companies does not allow the defense of suicide unless the policy be taken out with that view. [R. S. 1899, sec. 7896.] Nor does it allow misrepresentations in obtaining the policy to be of any consequence, unless the matters misrepresented shall have.actually contributed to the death. [R. S. 1899, sec. 7890.]
In this case the defendant, claiming to be a fraternal beneficiary association, set up as separate defenses that deceased committed suicide, and that he represented that he had never had syphilis, which representation, it is alleged, was willfully false. The plaintiff contends, among other things, that defendant is not a1, fraternal beneficiary society and that, therefore, the
The answer of defendant shows that it is an Iowa corporation doing business in this State by certificate from the Secretary of State as provided by our statute; and it further shows that under its own by-laws, the certificates of insurance issued by it could be made payable to “the legal representatives” and the widow or children of the deceased. The statute of Iowa authorizes such certificates to be issued to the ‘ ‘husband, wife, relative, legal representatives, heir, or legatee of such member.” Our statute (sec. 1408, R. S. 1899) authorizes such certificates to be for the benefit of “families, heirs, blood relatives, affianced husband or affianced wife, or to persons dependent upon the member.” It will thus be seen that the laws of Iowa and the by-laws of the defendant permit certificates to be issued to a class not recognized by our statute, viz.: legal representatives of the deceased. And in point of fact the certificate in this case was issued to the legal representative. Such certificate was, therefore, within the Iowa law and without our law. In Baltzell v. Modern Woodmen, 98 Mo. App. 153, we held that where the statute of the State where the company was organized and the statutes of this State differ, the latter controls.
We must, therefore, hold the certificate to be without the protection of our statute and to fall under the provisions of the general insurance statute. The beneficiaries of such certificate must be of the class or
Nor does it aid-the defendant in any respect that it called itself a beneficiary and fraternal society; or that the Secretary of State issued the statutory permission for it to do business in this State as such. The contract as evidenced by the certificate in this case shows the character the company assumed in this case. The Supreme Court has made the following utterances on such subjects:
In McDonald v. Life Ass’n, 154 Mo. 618, it said: “The certificate of the State Superintendent of Insurance authorizing a company to do business as an assessment company does not determine the character of insurance the company actually does. The policy determines that. ’ ’ And in Aloe v. Fidelity Mutual, 164 Mo. 675: “The fact that an insurance company was chartered by another State as an assessment company and was licensed to do business in this State under its laws as an-assessment company, does not make it such, nor in any wise change its character or status under the Missouri law. Nor is the liability of the company in any wise affected by its name. That is determined by the character of its contracts of insurance, and by those contracts the law places the company in its proper class, and determines whether or not it is an assessment company. ’ ’ And in Logan v. Fidelity & Casualty Co., 146 Mo. 115: ‘ ‘ The calling of a contract of insurance and accident, tontine, ordinary life, or bond investment policy, does not make it any the less a policy of life insurance, nor remove the policy from the operation of the statute.”
'We have examined the point made by defendant as to the sufficiency of plaintiff’s abstract, and have concluded that the objections thereto are not well taken. The abstract presents the points we have considered and which determine the case.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.