201 Ill. App. 144 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1916

Mr. Presiding Justice Eldredge

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Modern Woodmen of America filed a bill of interpleader in the Circuit Court of Sangamon county in which it averred that on February 21, 1887, it issued to Warren D. Scott a benefit certificate in the sum of $3,000, payable, subject to the terms and conditions thereof, to his wife, Priscilla Scott; at the request of said Warren D. Scott the certificate was thereafter on July 14, 1913, changed and a new certificate was issued payable to J. A. Scott, son of the' said Warren D. Scott, which said new certificate was in lieu of the former one; said Warren D. Scott died April 18, 1914, and that the sum of $3,000, is now due and payable to whoever is entitled thereto; said J. A. Scott has commenced an action at law to recover said sum of $3,000, which action is now pending; one Roscoe Scott, a minor, claims that he has an interest in the said sum of $3,000; said complainant is unable to determine to whom and in what proportion the said sum of $3,000 should be paid.

A guardian ad litem was. appointed for Roscoe Scott, who, by leave of court, filed a cross-bill, naming the Modern Woodmen of America, J. A. Scott, Bird Scott and Iva Scott parties defendant thereto. Subsequently an interlocutory order was entered finding that the Modern Woodmen of America had paid the sum of $3,000 into court, and ordering the benefit certificate to be canceled and complainant dismissed out of the case.

It appears that Warren D. Scott, the insured, paid all the assessments and dues on the certificate from the date when it was issued in 1887 to January 6,1894, at which time Priscilla Scott, his wife and beneficiary in the certificate, and his sons, J. A. Scott, B. B. Scott and D. A. Scott, entered into a written agreement by which Priscilla Scott agreed and covenanted with the three sons, collectively and separately, that at the death of Warren D. Scott, when she received the $3,000 by virtue of said certificate, she would with her said sons invest said money in real estate from which she was to receive the income during her life and at her death said estate was to descend to the three sons, respectively, in equal parts. The three sons on their part agreed to pay all dues and assessments on the certificate from the 6th day of January, 1894, until the death of Warren D. Scott. The agreement further provided that in case any of the sons should fail to pay his one-third share of all the dues and assessments, his right and interest in said real estate should descend to the other brother or brothers who should pay said share. The instrument is signed by Priscilla Scott and by the three sons, J. A., B. B. and D. A. Scott.

It will be noted that the father, Warren D. Scott, the insured, was not a party to this agreement. B. B. Scott ceased paying his share of the dues and assessments many years before the death of Warren D. Scott, and his share thereof from the time he ceased making the payments was paid by the insured. Priscilla Scott, the mother and beneficiary, died in October, 1905. D. A. Scott died intestate June 14, 1913, leaving Roscoe Scott, his son, and Iva Scott, his widow. D. A. Scott had paid his share of the dues and assessments up to May, 1913, and his widow in July, 1913, sent a draft for $5 to Warren D. Scott to pay her husband’s share of the dues and assessments then due, which the latter refused to receive and returned to her.

On July 14, 1913, Warren D. Scott caused a new certificate to be issued in which J. A. Scott was named as beneficiary, and from that time until Warren D. Scott died, on the 18th day of April, 1914, all dues and assessments were paid by the said J. A. Scott. Warren D. Scott died testate and in his will was the following provision: “Fourth, I request my son, Jesse A. Scott, if and when he shall make collection of the benefit certificate issued to me by the Modern Woodmen of America, to place Five Hundred Dollars ($500.00) thereof out at interest, and if and when my grandson, Roscoe Scott, shall become twenty-one years of age, and appear at the home of said Jesse A. Scott in person and apply therefor, to pay said sum with accumulated interest to said Roscoe Scott, and to no other person.”

The chancellor entered a decree finding that J. A. Scott was entitled to the amount of the certificate with the exception of $500, which he ordered J. A. Scott to hold as trustee for, Roscoe Scott subject to the terms, provisions and requirements of the will of Warren D. Scott. The appellant, Roscoe Scott, claims that the court erred in not decreeing that he was entitled to one-third the amount of the certificate, or $1,000, and appellee J. A. Scott has filed cross errors to the effect that the court erred in decreeing that he should hold $500 of the amount in trust for Roscoe Scott and in not ordering that the costs be taxed against appellants.

The cross bill of Roscoe Scott is based upon the theory that as his father, D. A. Scott, and appellee, Jesse A. Scott, had made the payments of the dues and assessments on the certificate mentioned, they obtained a beneficial interest therein, and their intervening rights having attached, the insured, Warren D. Scott, could not lawfully change the beneficiary and exclude them of their interests. This contention cannot be sustained. Warren D. Scott, the insured, was not a party to the written agreement, and while he acquiesced in the payment by his sons of the dues and assessments on this certificate, such payments were but voluntary and did not make him a debtor to those who paid them. Grand Lodge A. O. U. W. v. Ehlman, 246 Ill. 555. Priscilla Scott, the original beneficiary, undoubtedly had a right to make a contract with her three sons in regard to her expectancy under the certificate which would be enforced in equity, but her death in 1905 terminated that agreement. Jarvis v. Binkley, 206 Ill. 541. The facts in this case are clearly distinguishable also from those in cases in which reimbursement of dues or assessments paid has been allowed out of the amount of a beneficiary certificate, such payment having been made by a person named as a beneficiary with the expectation of receiving the fund itself, when, in fact, the person so named was not eligible as beneficiary. (Royal Arcanum v. Tracy, 169 Ill. 123; McGrew v. McGrew, 190 Ill. 604; Royal Arcanum v. McKnight, 238 Ill. 349.) Priscilla Scott, the original beneficiary, under the agreement with her sons, paid no dues or assessments. After her death there was no beneficiary for nearly eight years, and during this period of time the dues and assessments were paid by Warren D. Scott, the insured, J. A. Scott and D. A. Scott. The insured was not bound by any agreement that his beneficiary, Priscilla Scott, might have made with her sons to which he was not a party, and, in any event, that agreement was terminated by the death of Priscilla Scott. The fact that after her death two sons voluntarily paid a portion of the dues and assessments on the certificate, during a time when there was no beneficiary, would not deprive the insured of the control of his certificate nor bar him from appointing a new beneficiary therein. McGrew v. McGrew, 190 Ill. 604; Murphy v. Nowak, 223 Ill. 301; Ptacek v. Pisa, 231 Ill. 522. The mere voluntary payment of a portion of the dues and assessments on this certificate by the sons of the insured gave them no vested equitable interest or rights therein, and the insured was at liberty to name J. A. Scott as his beneficiary in the new certificate.

Section 45 of the" by-laws of the Modern Woodmen of America provides, among other things, as follows: “Any attempt by a member to change the payee of the benefits of his benefit certificate by will or other testamentary document, contract, agreement, assignment or otherwise than by strict compliance with the provisions of this section relating to change of beneficiary, shall be absolutely null and void.”

We think that the chancellor erred in holding that the fourth clause of the will was effective in establishing a trust fund of $500 for the benefit of Eoscoe Scott. The by-law above mentioned is reasonable and binding upon the insured. The clause of the will is an attempt on the part of the insured to add another beneficiary to his certificate without complying with the by-laws of the association in relation to the manner in which the beneficiary may be changed. The by-laws of the association set out what steps must be taken to change a beneficiary. The insured cannot change the beneficiary by will contrary to the by-laws of the association, which form a part of his contract of insurance. Moreover, the money payable by virtue of a certificate or policy of insurance, in which is named a beneficiary other than the estate of the insured, does not become a part of the estate of the insured (Martin v. Modern Woodmen of America, 253 Ill. 400), and consequently could not become subject to testamentary disposition. The cross error of appellee as to this part of the decree must be sustained:

The part of the decree which finds that J. A. Scott is entitled to the proceeds of the certificate in question is affirmed and that part of the decree which creates a trust fund out of $500 of the proceeds thereof in favor of Eoscoe Scott is reversed, and the cause is remanded with directions to enter a decree giving J. A. Scott the whole amount of said certificate in his own absolute right, less the costs in the Circuit Court, the costs in this court to be taxed against appellants.

Affirmed in part, reversed in part and remanded with directions.

© 2024 Midpage AI does not provide legal advice. By using midpage, you consent to our Terms and Conditions.