194 Mich. 124 | Mich. | 1916
The fund claimed by each of the defendants, being the proceeds of a benefit certificate issued by complainant upon the life of Harry Hudson, deceased, has been paid into court. Originally Jane Hudson, mother of defendants and of three other sons, procured to be issued by complainant upon her life a certificate in which her sons were named as bene-' ficiaries. It is to be inferred that at her suggestion her sons George, Don and Harry each procured certificates to be issued upon their lives in which their mother was named as beneficiary. The defendants were older sons and married. The others were unmarried and lived with their father and mother. With the money received from them in payment of board, and with money she earned, Jane Hudson, until her
The testimony took a rather wide range, involving the alleged agreement between Fred and,Harry; whether Guy and his wife neglected Harry in his last sickness; whether there was a conspiracy between the secretary of the local lodge and Guy to induce Harry to make a change of beneficiary. The court found the charge of a conspiracy unsustained by the proof, found that Guy and his wife took excellent care of Harry during his last illness, and that Harry did all that it was possible for him to do to effect a change of beneficiaries. It was found also that Harry had himself never paid an assessment upon his certificate nor any dues to the local lodge; that Fred paid them from the time his mother died, three years and seven months, until Harry died; that Fred aided Harry by procuring a doctor, furnishing for his use a wheel chair, and some clothing; and that all — assessments, dues, and other contributions — were made by Fred in pursuance of the alleged agreement of the brothers. The conclusion is that Fred acquired a substantial vested interest in the certificate and fund. By the payment of dues he preserved for his deceased -brother the rights and benefits of member of the local lodge, which of itself was a valuable consideration for the •alleged agreement by which Fred became beneficiary of the certificate. There is no finding upon the subject of the terms of the agreement, if one was made, by which defendants took over the certificates upon
There being in court, in the fund, $958.90, the court directed that Guy should be reimbursed one-half of the funeral expenses, $97, that $100 more should be paid on account of expenses of the last sickness of Harry to Guy’s wife, if no objection was made, and the balanée of the fund, $761.90, was ordered paid to Fred, no costs being allowed to either party defendant.
The conclusions which I have, in substance, stated were written and a motion to amend them was made by Guy Hudson, an amended finding was made, but the eventuality was the same, and a decree in conformity with the foregoing statement was entered, the decree reciting that there was a “mutual understanding and agreement between the said three brothers that defendants Fred and Guy should care for said insured during sickness and bury him after his death.”
In his amended answer to the bill of complaint defendant Fred Hudson, appellee, sets up that the agreement between himself and his brother Harry was that Fred should pay all assessments, dues, and levies made against the said Harry on account of and by virtue of his having said certificate, and, in consideration of such payments to be made, said Harry agreed to name Fred beneficiary in said certificate, alleging further that he (Fred) had paid in accordance with the agreement.
Defendant Guy Hudson in his answer alleges that as an inducement to Harry to surrender the old and procure a new certificate in which Fred was beneficiary, Fred promised and agreed that he would pay all dues and assessments payable to complainant, and, in the event that said Harry became disabled or sick and unable to care for himself, Fred was to aid and
A provision of complainant’s certificate permits an assured member totally and permanently disabled to withdraw in cash one-half the sum payable at death— in this case, one-half of $1,000 — thereby canceling the certificate. The assured, Harry, applied for, and in May or June, 1914, executed, papers for the purpose of securing the sum secured to him by the certificate under said provision thereof. Learning of the contemplated action of Harry in this behalf, Fred procured from the probate court, and had served, a citation in an inquisition as to the mental competency of Harry. The complainant took 90 days, under its laws, to consider the application for payment, and the inquisition in probate court was continued and never brought to a hearing. It is obvious that the inquisition proceeding was instituted for the purpose of preventing the assured canceling the policy by withdrawal of the disability benefit, and equally obvious that there was no foundation, in fact, for any claim that Harry was mentally incompetent.
“Q. What was said by Harry respecting Ms insurance, or Fred respecting Harry’s insurance?
“A. Harry never said nothing. Fred asked what we were going to do with ours; if we were going to keep, them up.
“X}. Whom did he mean by ‘we’?
“A. Mine and Harry’s.
“Q. What did Harry tell him?
“A. Harry says, T guess I could keep it up.’
“Q. Harry told you he would keep it up?
“A. He said, T was going to drop it.’ Fred said, ‘You may keep it up for a little while, and then you will turn around and drop it after so much being paid into it,’ and he said, ‘If you will turn it over to me, I will pay for it and pay up the dues.’
“Q. Anything else? •
“A. Harry spoke up and says, ‘You will pay up the dues, but this policy is to look after me; I want a burial,’ and Fred, he said, ‘If you will turn it over to me, I will look after you through sickness and after death’; he says, ‘That is what they are for.’ ”
There is other competent testimony to the same effect. There is testimony, too, which upon analysis tends to prove nothing more than this: That Harry could not, probably, make necessary payments, and the certificates would therefore lapse, and that, in view of this fact, his brother Fred made the offer to make the payments if he was made beneficiary. In other words, Fred voluntarily offered to pay, and voluntarily paid, such assessments and dues as were necessary to keep the certificate in force, being under no legal obligation to pay them longer than he pleased.
In Schiller-Bund v. Knack, 184 Mich. 95 (150 N. W. 337), the court considered whether certain facts proved that a beneficiary in a certificate similar to the one in
“We have examined the cases cited in the briefs of counsel, and are unable to find a case in which it was held there was a vested right passing to the beneficiary where there was not an express contract founded upon valuable consideration (moving to the assured) between the assured and the beneficiary.”
It had been held repeatedly that the fact that the certificate was in the possession of a beneficiary named in it and that payments had been made of dues and assessments by the named beneficiary was not enough to create a vested interest or prevent a change of beneficiary. Union Mutual Ass’n v. Montgomery, 70 Mich. 587 (38 N. W. 588, 14 Am. St. Rep. 519); Grand Lodge, A. O. U. W., v. McGrath, 133 Mich. 626 (95 N. W. 739); Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. O’Brien, 92 Mich. 584 (52 N. W. 1012).
The distinction which the court made, and which counsel for appellee makes, namely, that because dues were for the benefit of the local lodge and the payment of them retained Harry’s membership in the local lodge, there was therefore a benefit derived by bim from their payment distinct from the benefits resulting from the payment of assessments, is not sound. It is assumed, and nothing to the contrary is made to appear, that a beneficial membership in complainant’s association can be had only by payment of both assessments and dues; the consideration moving to the complainant from the insured for the benefits promised by the certificate and laws of the association is the payment of both dues and assessments. Therefore the promise of Fred, if he made one, to pay assessments and dues, and the payment of them, was not sufficient in law to create in Fred a vested interest in the certifi
Assuming that defendant Fred Hudson promised that he would not only pay assessments and dues, but would take care of his brother Harry in sickness and give his body decent burial, in consideration of which undertaking he was made beneficiary in the certificate (a promise which Fred denies that he made), what are the controlling equities? Such a promise was not kept. Fred does not claim that he furnished anything to his brother, doctor, clothing, or use of a wheel chair, in pursuance of any agreement or legal obligation to do so. When in lieu of such assistance Harry proposed to secure from complainant the only thing promised by it which would benefit him in his last illness (he had tuberculosis of the lungs), which was one-half the sum payable in case of death, Fred attempted to prevent such a result. And when Harry found he could ^et neither assistance nor the disability benefit which Ms certificate and the laws of complainant secured to Mm, he changed, so far as his actions could so operate, his beneficiary.
Equitably defendant Fred Hudson is not entitled to rely upon an agreement which he says he did not make, and the court found that he, or he and his brother together, did make, which he did not perform, did not offer to perform, and, so far as statements and actions can be relied upon, repudiated if it was made. The right of a holder of a certificate, of the nature of the one before us, to change his beneficiary at pleasure, is one which this court has uniformly upheld, and the right ought not to be and will not be denied unless it is plain that the beneficiary named in the certificate has by contract and by performance acquired a vested interest in the certificate and fund. The case is ruled by Schiller-Bund v. Knack, supra. In any event equity demands no more than that Fred be repaid the sums
The decree is reversed, and one may be entered in this court in accordance with this opinion; appellant to recover costs of this appeal.