73 Mo. App. 47 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1898
In February, 1895, the Grand Lodge of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen, a fraternal and beneficial organization, issued to one G-eorge Dombach the following benefit certificate, viz.:
“Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen.
“Number Dollars
“6280 $1500.00
“Protection, Sobriety, Charity, Industry.
“This certificate, issued by the G-rand Lodge of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen, witnesseth: That Brother Geo. Dombach, a member of Peace Lodge No. 109 of said order, located at St. Louis, Missouri, is entitled to all the rights, privileges, and benefits of membership and to participate in the beneficiary department to the amount of fifteen hundred •dollars, inmediately on the issuance of this certificate,*50 which amount, in the event of his total disability, shall be paid to him or at his death shall be paid to Sophia Dombach, his mother,, whose residence is St. Louis, Missouri. This certificate is issued on condition that said Ueo. Dombach shall comply with all the laws, rules and regulations of the order while a member. of the same, otherwise this certificate shall be canceled and become null and void.
“In witness whereof, the Grrand Lodge of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen has caused this certificate to be signed by its Grrand Master and Grrand Secretary and Treasurer, and the seal thereof to be attached this second day of January, one thousand, eight hundred and ninty-five.
“F. W. Arnold,
“Urand Secretary and Treasurer,
“T. P. Sargent,
“Urand Master.
“We, the undersigned, Master and Secretary of Peace Lodge No. 109, do hereby countersign and attach the seal of this lodge hereunto this 19th day of February, 1895.
“H. L. Allison, “J. L. Woods,
“Secretary, “Master.”
Sophia Dombach, the beneficiary named in the certificate, was the mother of Ueorge Dombach; she died on March 11, 1895, prior to the death of Ueorge, which occurred in a railroad accident in November, 1895. Sophia Dombach was married twice; her first husband was named Anthes; by him she had three children, the plaintiff being one of them, and Mary Bolgard and Phillip Anthes, defendants, the other two. By her second marriage to Ueorge Dombach she had one child, Ueorge Dombach, to whom was issued the above benefit certificate. At the time of the marriage of Sophia to Ueorge Dombach, Sr., he had living sis
“Sec. 47. The beneficiary department of this order established to provide substantial relief to members and their families in the event of death or total disability, shall be known as the beneficiary department of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen.
“Sec. 51. Upon the death of a beneficiary member in good standing, the person or persons named in the beneficiary certificate of the deceased member shall be entitled to receive from the beneficiary fund of the order the sum mentioned in the beneficiary certificate issued from the Grand Lodge office as determined by his application for the same, and the records of the
“Sec. 66. Any member desiring to make a new direction as to the payment of his .beneficiary certificate, may do so by and with the consent of the lodge of which he is a member. He shall then authorize, or make such change in writing, on the back of the certificate in the form prescribed, attested by the secretary, with the seal of the lodge attached; but no such change or transfer shall be valid or have any binding effect until reported to the grand secretary and treasurer. All subsequent transfers shall be made in the same manner, except that á duplicate beneficiary certificate shall be issued by the grand secretary and treasurer when a third transfer is authorized, provided that the old certificate has been returned to the Grand Lodge, and provided further that in no other case shall a duplicate beneficiary certificate be issued unless the original has been lost or destroyed, or possession thereof can not be secured, and an affidavit to that effect, releasing the order from all liability thereon, has been filed with the Grand Lodge. All transfers of beneficiary certificates shall be recorded in the beneficiary certificate register of the subordinate lodge, and also in the grand register.;;
On the back of the original benefit certificate was printed the following blank form of a new designation:
“I.hereby revoke my direction as to the payment of the within certificate, and now authorize and direct such payment, in the event of my death, to be made to.whose re*53 lation to me is that of.and whose residence is.. . . .
“Witness my hand and seal this . . . . day of ... . 189 . . .(Seal)
“Attest.Secretary.”
The blanks in this form were filled in by pen writing in the handwriting of George Dombach, and read as follows:
“I, George Dombach, hereby revoke my direction as to the payment of the within certificate, and now authorize and direct said payment, in the event of my death, to be made to Eleanora Hofman, whose relation to me is that of sister, and whose residence is 4322 Beck Ave., St. Louis, Mo.
“Witness my hand and seal this 11th day of March, 1895. J. L. Woods. [Seal]
“Attest: H. L. AllisoN, Secretary.
“Seal of Peace Lodge, No. 909, B. of L. E.”
The certificate with the new designation made by George Dombach was some months prior to his death handed by him to the respondent, with the direction that she should keep it, and with the statement that he had fixed the certificate so that she would get the benefit of it, if anything should happen to him. It was admitted on the trial that George Dombach, Jr., was a member of the family of respondent, and that he was. not a member of the family of appellants, in the sense that he did reside and abide with them. It was shown by witnesses not of kin to the parties that George Dombach, Jr., had, on divers occasions subsequent to the death of his mother, expressed his desire that his sister Sophia should have the full benefit of his certificate in the event of his death. The new direction as to the payment of his benefit certificate was made by George Dombach, Jr., without first obtaining the consent of his subordinate lodge; nor was the change
The new designation was therefore not made in accordance with section 66 of the charter of the order, and was ineffectual in law to nominate the respondent as the beneficiary in said certificate. Bacon on Ben. Soc., sec. 307; Niblack on Ben. Soc., sec. 158; Holland v. Taylor, 111 Ind. 127; McLaughlin v. McLaughlin, 104 Cal. 171; Coleman v. Knights of Honor, 18 Mo. App. 194; Head v. Supreme Council Catholic Knights of America, 64 Mo. App. 212. Immediately on the death of George Dombach, Jr., the beneficiary fund, evidenced by the certificate, vested and became a fixed interest in whoever was entitled to take under the certificate, and it was not in the power of the order by a waiver of a compliance with its laws, in the attempt made by Dombach to make a new designation, to defeat this vested interest. McLaughlin v. McLaughlin, supra; Wendt v. Legion of Honor, 72 Iowa, 682. Sophia Dombach, as the beneficiary named in the certificate, acquired no vested interest in the fund by her nomination as such beneficiary. As to her, the fund was a mere expectancy, which might at any time be defeated by the designation of a new beneficiary — by a failure on the part of the member to pay dues and assessments, or by his failure to otherwise comply with the laws of the order, it was therefore not such a property interest as would descend to the heirs of Sophia Dombach at her death. Neither can the fund be treated as a part of the assets of the estate of George Dombach, Jr., the deceased member, for he had no interest in the fund— his sole power over it was to designate to whom it should be paid after his death. Keener v. A. O. U. W., 38 Mo. App. 543.
It follows that the appellants, neither as heirs of Sophia or of George Dombach, have any legal claim to