103 Mo. App. 356 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1903
— Tbis is an action on a life insurance policy numbered 524567, issued June 29, 1899,
But one question is presented by the record and that is, was the defendant as a foreign beneficial society authorized to do business as such in this State under
Article XI, Revised Statutes 1899, entitled “Benevolent, Religious, Scientific, Fraternal, Beneficial, Educational and Miscellaneous Associátions” provides how these different kinds of organizations may be incorporated under section 1408 thereof, and defines what shall constitute a fraternal beneficiary association. Section 1396 provides the method by which the fore.going associations so organized under said article may avail themselves of the benefit of section 1408 and become also fraternal beneficiary associations. The language of said section is as follows: “Any such society, order or association heretofore or hereafter incorporated under the provisions of the laws of this State may avail itself of the benefits of the foregoing section (1408) by amending its constitution or article's of association or re-incorporating thereunder, or by an amended constitution or amended articles of association in the manner prescribed by this act.”
Plaintiff contends, and justly, that said section refers alone to domestic institutions. There seems to be no ambiguity in its language. Seemingly, it should have followed in order next after section 1408, instead of section 1395. This section was substituted for sections 2823-2824, Revised Statutes 1889. The object of the first was to enable fraternal beneficiary societies to provide for the families of deceased persons, etc., and
The argument of the plaintiff, that as section 1396 of the revision of 1899 (laws 1897) is in effect the same •as section 2824, Revised Statutes 1889, that foreign beneficial associations remain subject to the general insurance laws, would he good if the question depended alone upon a construction of said section. In the revision of 1889, foreign fraternal beneficiary associations are not included in said act and the section in that revision and section Í396 in the revision of 1899 refer solely to domestic societies.
But under section 1408, Revised Statutes 1899 all fraternal beneficiary associations, whether foreign or domestic, are placed upon the same footing and are exempted from the provisions of the general insurance laws. And section 1409 authorizes all such whether foreign or domestic institutions heretofore' doing business in this State to so continue, provided they comply with the provisions of said section. And section 1410 authorizes such foreign associations not then doing business in this State to do so by complying with the requisitions of said section. The question has been passed upon recently by the St. Louis Court of Appeals in which the same view is entertained. McDermott v. M. W. of A., 97 Mo. App. 636; Shotliff v. M. W. of A., 73 S. W. 326. The cause is affirmed.