70 Iowa 360 | Iowa | 1886
The articles of incorporation and constitution of the grand and subordinate lodges are made a part of the petition, and it is conceded that the benefit fund, to recover which is the object of this action, must be paid to the person entitled thereto, as provided therein. A certificate of membership was issued to the deceased, and, when issued, it was therein stated that Margaret F. Mitchell was the beneficiary, and entitled to receive such portion of the benefit fund as was due, by virtue of the membership of said Charles F. Mitchell. Said Margaret, however, was not his wife, heir or member of his family; and the sole question to be determined is whether she or the plaintiff is entitled to the fund.
The articles of incorporation pr’ovide “that the object of this corporation shall be to unite all acceptable men, of every profession, * * * to provide benevolence and charity, by establishing a widows’ and orphans’ fund, from which, on satisfactory evidence of the death of a member of the corporation, * ■* * . a sum 'not exceeding two thousand dollars shall be paid to his family, or as he may direct. * * *” It is further provided in the constitution of subordinate lodges that every applicant for membership “must be a male person. * * * competent to earn a livelihood for himself and family.”
It is contended by counsel for the appellant that the avowed object of the corporation is to provide a widows’ and orphans’ fund for the family of deceased members, and that the widow and children of the deceased member are named as a class to whom the fund is due and must be paid. That it is the primary object of the corporation to provide such a
Counsel for the appellant have cited a number of adjudged cases, but in none of them was there a provision in the articles of incorporation or rules of the order like that in question, and they have only a remote, if any, application to the case in hand.
The judgment of the district court is ,
AFFIRMED.