30 F. 817 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1887
This is a suit in equity to recover tbe sum of $2,000 upon a benefit certificate issued by the defendant to one John P. Hulett. The defendant company is a corporation organized and existing under an act of the state of Illinois entitled “An act concerning corporations,” approved April 18, 1872, and by one of the articles of the association it is provided as follows:
“Upon positive proof of the death of any member, the board of directors shall order an appropriation equal to two dollars for each member then on the rolls of the association, unless the same shall exceed 1,000 members, in which case the amount appropriated shall bo limited to the sum of $2,000, and shall pay the same to the person or persons previously designated by the deceased upon his Application for membership as shown by the books of the association, or as ordered by his last will and testament.”
The proof shows that Hulett became a member of this association on February 8, 1883, and up to the time of bis death, which occurred August 11, 1885, be remained a member in good standing. In his application for membership he designated his daughter, Mary A. Lamont, as his beneficiary. On the sixteenth day of August, 1884, he designated Emily R. Graft as his beneficiary in the place of Mary A. Lamont; and this change was accepted and approved by the board of directors of the association, and from that time forward the name of Emily E. Graft as the beneficiary of this member was carried on the hooks of the association. The complainant insists that the change was void and inoperative; that she acquired a vested right to the benefit by virtue of Ilulott’s original benefit certificate; and that the assignment and transfer of the benefit to Mrs. Graft was wholly inoperative and void.
Without taking time to discuss the -large number of cases cited by each party in this case, it is sufficient to say that there is probably a conflict