The plaintiff, appellee, was accorded a judgment aggregating $4,500, and interest, in an action upon three benefit certificates, of which this one is an example:
"Organized December 3, 1867. Incorporated March 1, 1894. Locomotive Engineers' Mutual Life and Accident Insurance Association. Certificate of Membership and Policy of Life Insurance. No. 69,728. Policy $1,500.00 This certifies that L. D. Ponder was admitted a member of this association this third day of Sept., 1905. Cleveland, O., Sept. 22, 1905. W. E. Futch, President. H. M. Shay, Gen. Secy. Treas. All payments or benefits that may accrue or become due by virtue of this policy will be payable to Mrs. Jennie B. Ponder, wife, or his lawful heirs, which cannot exceed the amount the association shall be able to pay from one assessment. Any member of this association, neglecting or refusing to pay any assessment when ordered as provided in the by-laws or being expelled one year from the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, shall forfeit all right and title to membership, and be debarred from further participation in this Insurance, or benefits arising from the same. For the benefit of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers."
Following rulings adverse to the defendant on demurrers to defendant's pleas, it appears from the judgment entry that the defendant pleaded "the general issue, in short, by consent, with leave to give in evidence any testimony material to its defense as if specially pleaded, with the same privilege to plaintiff as to replication. * * *" The defendant offered to introduce in evidence the intestate's applications for certificates of insurance and a part of the by-laws referred to in the quoted benefit certificate. The court declined to admit these documents in evidence, upon the ground that they were not parts of the contract of insurance, because their contents were not "plainly expressed in the policy issued thereon," as provided in the following pertinent excerpt from Code, § 4579:
"No life, nor any other insurance company, nor any agent thereof, shall make any contract of insurance, or agreement as to policy contract, other than is plainly expressed in the policy issued thereon."
This ruling of the court was induced by the authority afforded by our decision in the case of Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers v. Milner,
National Union v. Sherry and Brotherhood, etc., v. Milner, supra, are therefore overruled, in so far as they affirm that Code, § 4579, was or is applicable to insurance issued by fraternal benefit associations observing the purely assessment plan. It is to be noted that, in the Sherry Case, no account was taken of the provisions of Code, § 4562, wherein the National Union was undertaken to be expressly excepted from the effect of the statutes in the article. In this decision all the members of the court concur. The errors thus committed by the trial court in applying the quoted provision of section 4579 of the Code to the exclusion of the applications and by-laws of the association prejudiced, of course, the rights and possible defenses of the appellant, and must therefore result in a reversal of the judgment.
In view of the retrial to occur, following reversal, the writer (with whom ANDERSON, C. J., and MAYFIELD and SOMERVILLE, JJ., concur) feels constrained to note that the certificates upon which plaintiff relies for recoveries do not import an unconditional promise or obligation, on the part of the Brotherhood, to pay a definite sum of money, since they all carry the limitation that the amount of payments or benefits that may accrue thereon shall not "exceed the amount the association shall be able to pay from one assessment." These certificates do not purport to insure for a term, within the contemplation of the Code form. Civil Code, p. 1196, form 12. Having regard to this Code form, it was held in United States H. A. Co. v. Veitch,
For the errors following from the application to the case of the provisions of Code, § 4579, the judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded. All the Justices concur.