99 A. 485 | Conn. | 1916
This is an action of interpleader brought by the plaintiff, a beneficiary association, to determine to whom should be paid a fund of $1,000 due from the plaintiff under a benefit certificate issued upon the life of William E. McDonald. There are two claimants to this fund: Mary Frances Curran, and the children of Minnie O'Donnell.
The record discloses that on the 20th day of June, 1904, William E. McDonald of Portland, Connecticut, was a member in good standing of the Order of the Knights of Columbus. On this day a certificate of insurance was issued to him as such member, payable upon his death to Mrs. Minnie O'Donnell, if living, if not living to her children. Mrs. O'Donnell, named in the certificate, was a cousin of the insured, and the policy was delivered to her by the insured and she continued to pay all the premiums and assessments thereon to the date of her death. After her death, the certificate remained in the hands of her children, the O'Donnells named as the defendants in this action, who continued to pay all the premiums or assessments against the certificate to the date of the death of the insured on the 7th day of June, 1914. The total amount of the assessments so paid by Mrs. O'Donnell and her children was $178.95.
By the terms of this certificate the constitution, laws and regulations of the Order were made part of the contract. This certificate also provided that the Knights of Columbus would make payment to Mrs. O'Donnell, or her children, if "said member at the time of his death is an insurance member of said Order in good standing and that this certificate shall not have been surrendered and another certificate issued." *117 Section 79 of the by-laws, relating to a change of beneficiaries, provides: "A member desiring to change his beneficiary shall give written notice and surrender his benefit certificate to the Financial Secretary of his council, directing that a new certificate be issued to him, payable to such beneficiary or beneficiaries as such member may designate in accordance with the laws of the Order. The Financial Secretary shall forward the written direction under seal of the council, with the benefit certificate, to the Supreme Secretary, who shall issue a new certificate, if the direction is in accordance with the laws of the Order. The issuance of a new benefit certificate, in accordance with the laws of the Order, shall cancel and render null and void any and all previous certificates issued to a member." Section 80, as to the time when the change takes effect, states that "said change of beneficiary, if in accordance with the laws, shall take effect upon the receipt of certificate and written direction by the Supreme Secretary."
Mary Curran, formerly Mary Carey, one of the defendants, claims that the insured, Mr. McDonald, in the fall of 1911, desired to make a change from Mrs. Minnie O'Donnell, who was at that time the beneficiary, to the defendant Mrs. Curran; that the officers of the plaintiff association neglected and refused to perform their duty in making such change; that McDonald did everything that he could to make such change; and that after the officers of the subordinate council of which Mr. McDonald was a member, had neglected and refused to comply with the request of Mr. McDonald, he executed and filed with the National Secretary of the plaintiff association an instrument which constituted Mrs. Curran his legal beneficiary. It appears that no written notice, required by the by-laws, was ever given to Patrick Butler, the Financial Secretary *118 of the Freestone Council of Middletown, of which Mr. McDonald was a member. Neither does it appear that this secretary ever forwarded any directions to the Supreme Secretary as required by the by-laws of the Order, or that the certificate payable to the O'Donnells has ever been surrendered and a new one issued. It does, however, appear that Mr. McDonald, acting through his attorney who was unfamiliar with the procedure necessary to make a proper change of beneficiaries, upon two different occasions wrote to Mr. Butler, secretary of the Freestone Council. These letters, in effect, notified Mr. Butler that Mr. McDonald desired to change his beneficiary from Mrs. O'Donnell to the defendant Mary Curran, and asked for advice and information as to what was necessary to be done to make the change. Mr. McDonald, the insured, informed the Financial Secretary, Mr. Butler, that he desired to transfer his beneficial interest in this insurance from Mrs. O'Donnell to Mrs. Curran, only on the condition that Mrs. O'Donnell should be repaid the entire amount which she had paid as premiums and assessments. Mr. Butler, feeling that it was equitable and fair that the O'Donnells should be reimbursed for the payments which they had made upon this certificate, made three or four visits to Mrs. Curran in attempting to obtain a reimbursement for the O'Donnells. Failing in this he took no further steps in aiding the proposed change. The attorney for Mr. McDonald then wrote a letter to the president of the local council making substantially the same request that had been made to Mr. Butler. To this there was no reply. Being convinced that the officers of the local council were opposed to a change being made in Mr. McDonald's beneficiary, the attorney decided to make a request for such change through the national officers of the Knights of Columbus, and accordingly drew up *119 and forwarded a request that such a change be made, addressed to William J. McGinley, Secretary, of New Haven, Connecticut. This request was signed by Mr. McDonald and one copy of it was forwarded to the Supreme Secretary of the Knights of Columbus at New Haven, Connecticut, and another handed to Mrs. Ahearn to keep for her daughter, the defendant Mrs. Curran. This request states, among other things, that "I now respectfully request that you will take official notice that I name as my beneficiary under my certificate as a member of said Freestone Council, Mary Frances Cary [Curran] of Middletown, Conn., who is related to me as cousin, and I direct that such sum as may be due under my certificate at the date of my death, be paid to her, her heirs and assigns." It also appears that no formal action was ever taken by the Knights of Columbus or any of its officials, in complying with this request of Mr. McDonald for this change of the beneficiary. It was ignored.
Mrs. Curran's counsel conceded that equity and good conscience required that the O'Donnells be reimbursed, and requested that so much of the fund as necessary for this purpose be awarded to the O'Donnell defendants in this action. This the court attempted to do in the judgment which it rendered.
In this effort upon the part of Mr. McDonald to change beneficiaries, it cannot be seriously claimed that he, or any one in his behalf, made a legal designation of Mary Curran as the beneficiary of the fund in question, in compliance with the requirements of the by-laws of the Knights of Columbus which regulated the exercise of its power to appoint a new beneficiary. It is true, as the defendant Mrs. Curran contends, that a designated beneficiary has no vested interest in a benefit during the lifetime of the member. Upon the other hand, it is also a well established principle of *120
law that he who relies upon a change in a beneficiary contract, whereby a new beneficiary is designated, must show that the change has been made in the manner provided for in the laws of the order. In Fink v.Fink,
The defendant Mary Curran also relies upon the claim that the plaintiff waived the noncompliance with the provisions of its by-laws by asking that the adverse claimants be required to interplead. This claim is unfounded. By the weight of authority the society cannot be regarded as having waived the requirement of the by-laws by bringing an action of *121
interpleader. By so doing the Order admitted its liability to one or the other of the claimants, and asked the court to protect it by determining the conflicting rights of the parties; but it cannot be held that the rights of either claimant were prejudiced thereby. The rights of the parties became fixed at the moment of the death of the insured member, and the plaintiff was powerless to do anything to affect vested rights. They were controlled by the contract as it existed at the time. Grand Lodge v. Burns,
In this case there is no basis for the application of that equitable rule founded upon the principle that "equity will treat that as done which ought to have been done." It is stated in Modern Woodmen of America
v. Headle,
If the officials of the Knights of Columbus in their discretion might, in the lifetime of Mr. McDonald, have waived the informalities which attended the attempt to change beneficiaries, yet it cannot be said that their inaction in this respect was a neglect to perform their duty.
The circumstances which the record shows are a part of the history of this case, are such as to demonstrate that Mrs. Curran was not entitled to the relief which she claimed and that was awarded to her by the court below. The general rule is that "whenever a party who, as actor, seeks to set the judicial machinery in motion to obtain some relief, has himself violated conscience or good faith in his prior conduct with the matter of the controversy, then the door of the court will be shut against him; the court will refuse *123
to interfere in his behalf, to acknowledge his right, or award him any remedy." Brown v. Brown,
There is error, the judgment of the Superior Court is set aside, and the cause is remanded with direction to render judgment for the O'Donnells for the entire amount of the fund in controversy.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.