184 Ga. 702 | Ga. | 1937
The children of a deceased assured, who had held a certificate in a fraternal beneficiary association, filed an equitable petition against the association, to recover the amount of the certificate, $1000. The certificate designated the wife of the assured, mother of the plaintiffs, as beneficiary. It was alleged that the assured and this beneficiary were killed in a common disaster, without any averment as to who died first. It was further alleged, that the plaintiffs “are the sole survivors of the class which may be designated as beneficiaries in associations of the type and character to which defendant belongs, as set out in section 56-1703 of the 1933 Code of Georgia, and are entitled to the benefit that would have accrued to the beneficiary designated, had she survived the member;” that “the principal object of defendant organization, as provided for in its charter, is that of benevolent and charitable work among sick and disabled' policemen of the City of Atlanta, the payment of sick benefits during illness to members, and the payment of death benefits to the families and dependents of deceased members, and your petitioners . . constitute the family of . . the deceased member, and are therefore in equity and good conscience entitled to the death benefit.” The court dismissed the petition on general demurrer.
1. Under the rulings in District Grand Lodge v. Cothran, 156 Ga. 631 (119 S. E. 594, 31 A. L. R. 758), the beneficiary named in the certificate had no vested interest therein, but only an expectancy; and consequently a suit could not properly have been maintained by either the administrator of the assured or the administrator of such nqmed beneficiary.
3. In this suit by the children of the assured father, and of a mother, who was the beneficiary named in the certificate, where both parents died in a common disaster, without any averment as to who died first, the assured was in no way negligent in failing to name a new beneficiary. Since the plaintiffs are alleged to con
Judgment reversed.