99 Pa. Super. 315 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1930
Argued April 30, 1930. The Police Pension Fund Association of the City of Pittsburgh is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Pennsylvania, the membership thereof being composed of persons employed in the police department of that city. Its purpose, as disclosed by its charter, is "to accumulate a fund from the dues of its members ...... in order that from this fund pensions may be paid to members of this association and to families of deceased members, the amount of which pension, the circumstances under which they shall be paid, and the parties to whom they shall be paid, to be determined by the by-laws." In accordance with the provisions of the by-laws of the association there was created a fund separate and apart from the pension fund, which was called the "Disability and Death Benefit Fund," and was maintained by monthly contributions of the members to the fund, in addition to the dues paid by the members. Section 8 of the by-laws provides as follows: "Upon satisfactory proof of the permanent disability of any active member, or upon satisfactory proof of the death of any active or pensioned member of this fund, such active member who is permanently disabled, or the legal representatives or beneficiary of such deceased active or pensioned member, shall receive from the general fund during the year beginning February 1, 1920, the sum of $750, and provided such active or pensioned member has regularly paid said dues up to the time of the happening of such permanent disability or death, from the Disability and Death Benefit Fund the sum of $450...... Beginning February 1, 1923, the payment of any permanent disability or death benefit from the general fund shall cease and thereafter all permanent disability and death benefits, as provided for in this section of the by-laws, shall be paid only out of the Disability and Death Benefit Fund. Upon the death of any active or pensioned member of *318 this fund the death benefit payable shall be paid to the legal representatives of such member, or, if the member shall so provide in writing, executed by him ...... and filed with the secretary of this association prior to the member's death and approved by said secretary by endorsement thereof before any such member's death, such death benefits shall be in such case payable to the beneficiary designated in such writing."
John J. Haggerty was employed by the City of Pittsburgh as a police officer and was a member of said association in good standing at the time of his death, May 4, 1928. On May 6, 1927, while he was a member in good standing, he appointed Annie E. Neff, who was not a member of his family, as beneficiary in accordance with the terms of the by-laws. On December 20, 1928, Catherine Haggerty, widow of John J. Haggerty, sued the association, in behalf of herself and the children of herself and deceased husband, for the death benefits then amounting to $1200, and payable out of the Disability and Death Benefit Fund. On January 14, 1929, pursuant to a stipulation of counsel presented in the court below, that tribunal granted leave to the association to pay said fund of $1,200 into court and thereby discharge itself of all liabilities to Catherine Haggerty and to Annie E. Neff, the rival claimants for the fund, and ordered them to interplead and that a feigned issue be framed, wherein Annie E. Neff should be plaintiff and Catherine Haggerty defendant, to determine the rights of ownership of the fund, and that the proceedings should be in accordance with the Practice Act of 1915 and the rules of the court below. Whereupon Annie E. Neff filed her statement of claim January 26, 1929, to which the widow filed an affidavit of defense raising questions of law. On July 9, 1929, the questions of law were decided in favor of Catherine Haggerty and an order was made that the prothonotary pay to her the amount of the fund in his hands. Annie E. Neff brings this appeal. No *319 question has been raised as to the appropriateness or as to the regularity of the proceedings adopted for the determination of the ownership of the fund, which resulted in this order, and we will raise none.
As between the widow of the decedent and Annie E. Neff, the beneficiary designated, who is entitled to the fund? The court below held that as the purpose of the association, as declared in its charter, was to provide pensions for living members and benefits to families of deceased members, and decedent left surviving him a widow and children, Mrs. Neff, who is not a member of his family, was not within the class of persons entitled to benefits under the charter and by-laws of the association and that the designation of her as beneficiary was invalid. In our view the language of the charter and by-laws does not permit so strict a construction and the decisions in this State do not support it. In determining whether the beneficiary designated by the member in a given case is capable of taking the fund under the charter of the association the courts will give as broad and comprehensive a meaning as possible to the terms of the charter in which the general object of the association and the class of persons to be benefited are set forth: Compton's Estate,
In Maneely v. Knights of Birmingham,
Nor is the case ruled, as the court below thought it was, by Fodell v. Miller,
The order is reversed and the record remitted with a procedendo.
KELLER, J. dissents on the ground that Maneely v. Knights of Birmingham,