Palmer v. Welch

132 Ill. 141 | Ill. | 1890

Mr. Justice Mageudee

delivered the opinion of the Court :

This is a bill of interpleader, filed in the Superior Court of Cook County by the Supreme Council of the Royal Arcanum, a Mutual Benefit Society organized under the laws of Massachusetts, against the appellant and the appellees as deiendants, alleging that W. D. Welch, who died at Waukegan, Illinois, on November 20, 1887, had been a member in his lifetime of a subordinate council of the Boyal Arcanum at •Chicago; that before April 22, 1885, a benefit certificate for $3000.00 had been issued to him naming his mother, Almira Welch, as his beneficiary, but on that day such certificate had been cancelled upon his application to the Supreme council, and a new one had been issued to him, naming Nettie Parke, “affianced wife, ” as his beneficiary; that he died in good standing in the order having paid all dues, and that proofs of death Bad been made as required by the rules; that L. C. Welch and S. C. Welch (the appellees) claim to be entitled to the fund as brothers of the deceased W. D. Welch and deny the right of Nettie Parke thereto on the ground that she was never dependent upon him; that said fund is claimed by said Néttie and also by said L. C. and S. C. Welch, and that complainant is willing to pay it to the party entitled to it, and offers to do so, and asks that it be paid into court for the benefit of such of the defendants as may be adjudged to be the owners of it. The bill states the objects of the Order, attaches a copy of the ■constitution and laws and sets forth, in full, paragraphs numbered from 1 to 5 inclusive of Section 2 of Law 3, and Section 3 of Law 3.

Nettie Parke answers the bill, alleging that she was the .affianced wife of W. D. Welch at his death and had been since 1884, and claims to be entitled to the fund as the beneficiary named in the certificate which is set forth in full. She admits all the material allegations of the bill.

The answer of L. C. and S. C. Welch also admits the material allegations of the bill and that Nettie Parke is the beneficiary named in the certificate, but denies that she was dependent on W. D. Welch at his death, or has been since the issuance of the certificate, or that she is entitled to the benefit iherein mentioned, and alleges that W. D. Welch died unmarried without children, grandchildren, father, mother, grandparents or sister, and that they are his only brothers and»next of kin and heirs at law, and that they are entitled to the benefit under the constitution and laws of the order. The answer as amended also sets out the various sections of the Massachusetts Statute, which are applicable to the organization ■of such corporations as the complainant in the bill. The $3000.00 was paid to the Clerk of the court by the complainant, and the latter was discharged from liability under the certificate.

Upon the hearing it was stipulated that the Massachusetts Statute was as set forth in the answer and should be considered as in evidence; that L. C. and S. C. Welch are the brothers and next of kin and only heirs at law of W. D. Welch; that Nettie Parke was his affianced wife when the certificate was issued, “and that she was not actually dependent upon him, nor represented so to be, within class second of Law 3 of the constitution and laws of the Boyal Arcanum, either at the time the certificate was issued, or at the time of. his death, otherwise than that he gave her occasional presents of clothing, jewelry, money etc., up to the time of his death”; that the certificate was delivered to W. D. Welch and by him to Nettie Parke in Illinois.

The Superior Court decreed that L. C. and S. C. Welch were ■entitled to the fund, and this decree has been affirmed by the Appellate Court. Since the decision of the cause by the Appellate Court Nettie Parke has married a man named Palmer, and appears upon the record in this Court as Nettie Palmer.

There is no question as to the liability of the corporation issuing the benefit certificate. Such liability is conceded by the payment of the money into court. The only question is, whether the fund belongs to the appellant, or to the appellees.

The certificate issued to the deceased as a member of “Bon Accord Council,” a branch of the Boyal Arcanum in Chicago, recites upon its face that it is so issued “upon condition that the said member complies in future with the laws, rules and regulations governing the said ■ Council and fund,” and that the Supreme Council binds itself to pay the $3000.00 “in accordance with and under the provisions of the laws governing said fund.” It, therefore, becomes important to know what sueh~“laws, rules and'regulations” are, as they enter-into and become a part of the certificate itself.

The second paragraph of Section 2 of Law 3 is as follows:

“Second—A benefit may be made payable to the following classes of persons: Class 1st, to a member’s wife, children, grandchildren, father, mother, grandparents, brother or sister,—in every one of which cases no proof of dependency shall be required before the issuing of the benefit certificate. Class 2d, to any person who is dependent upon the member for maintenance, (for food, clothing, lodging or education) in which case the written evidence of the dependency, within the requirements of the laws of the Order, must be furnished to the satisfaction of the Supreme Council before the benefit certificate can be issued.”

Paragraph 6 of said Section 2 is as follows:

“Sixth—No benefit shall be payable to a person or persons of the second class mentioned in par. 2 of this section, unless the dependency therein required to be shown, exists at the time of the member’s death, in which case proof of such dependency at the member’s death shall be furnished in writing, to the satisfaction of the Supreme Eegent, before payment of the benefit shall be made. If, at the time of the death of such member, the dependency shall have ceased, then the benefit shall be payable to the persons mentioned in class 1st, paragraph 2, of this section, if living, in the order of procedenee as therein enumerated. If no one of said class shall be living at the death of the member, the benefit shall revert to the Widows’ and Orphans’ Benefit Fund.”

Appellant did not belong to Class 1st above mentioned. She bore no such relationship to the deceased as is designated in that class. She was merely bis “affianced wife,” or, in other words, he was under a promise or engagement to marry her.

Nor did the appellant belong to Class 2d, because it is admitted in the stipulation that she was not dependent on the deceased, either when the certificate was issued, or at the time of his death. Not having been dependent upon him when he died, then by the terms of paragraph 6 she is not entitled to receive the benefit. It is difficult to understand why the certificate was ever issued to her, as she was never such a relative as is described in class 1st, nor such a dependent as is described in class 2d.

It is, however, claimed by the appellant that, under paragraph 6, the appellees as brothers of the deceased could only take the fund in case, “at the time of the death, * * * the dependency shall have ceased," and that her dependency never ceased because it never existed, and that, the appellees not being entitled to the money, she ought to have it as being the beneficiary named in the certificate.

The mere fact that appellant is named in the certificate gives her no right to the benefit, it appearing that her dependency did not exist at the time of the death. As she cannot herself take the fund, it is a matter of no concern to her whether it goes to the appellees, or to the Widows’ and Orphans’ Benefit Fund.

It is an exceedingly technical construction of paragraph 6 to say that the relatives named in the first class can not take, unless the dependency is one which has once existed and thereafter ceased. It is sufficient if the dependency does not exist at the time of the death, whether it had ceased to exist, or had never existed at all. But if such construction should be assumed to be correct, the present case would be one where the deceased had not selected such a beneficiary as was empowered to receive the fund. This being so, the Massachusetts Statute, as construed by the Supreme Court of that State, gives the fund to the appellees.

The statute of Massachusetts, under which the Supreme Council of the Royal Arcanum was organized, provides that such corporations may be formed “for the purpose of assisting the widows, orphans, or other relations of deceased members, or any persons dependent upon deceased members. ” (Mass. Stat. 1882, chap. 115, secs. 1, 2 and 8; chap. 195, sec. 8.) The appellees are relations and come within the meaning of the law. Appellant, being neither a relation, nor orphan, nor widow of the deceased, nor dependent upon him, does not come within the purview of the statute. The mutual promise of herself and the deceased to marry did not in any sense by itself make her dependent upon him.

We must respect the construction given to this Statute by the Massachusetts Courts. In American Legion of Honor v. Perry, 140 Mass. 580, the Supreme Court of that State, in construing this statute, said: “The statute under which the plaintiff corporation is organized gives it authority to provide for the widow, orphans or other persons dependent upon deceased members, and further provides that such fund shall not be liable to attachment. The classes of persons to be benefited are designated, and the corporation has no authority to create a fund for other persons than the classes named. The corporation has power to raise a fund payable to one of the classes named in the statute, to set it apart to await the death of a member, and then to pay it Over to the person or persons of the class named in the statute, selected and appointed by the member during his life, and if no one is so selected, it is still payable to one of the classes named.” (Elsey v. Odd Fellows Mut. Rel. Assn. 142 Mass. 224; Daniel v. Pratt, 143 id. 216; Rockhold v. Canton Mas. Mut. Ben. Society, 129 Ill. 440.)

The appellees belong to one of the classes named in the Statute. They are the heirs at law and next of kin of the deceased. There being no selection of a beneficiary authorized to take, the fund goes to them.

One of the objects of the Eoyal Arcanum is stated to be “to establish a widows’ and orphans’ benefit fund, from which, on the satisfactory evidence of the death of a member of the Order who has complied with all its lawful requirements, a sum not exceeding $3000.00 shall be paid to his family, or those dependent upon him, as he may direct.” The words “as he may direct” confer the power to direct the payment of the fund to one of the specified classes only. The deceased cannot direct the fund to be paid to a person outside of the classes designated by the law and the articles of association. The power of the corporation to issue the certificate, and the power of the member to designate the beneficiary, are controlled and limited by the provisions of the statute. If the member die naming as his beneficiary a person not authorized to take, the law itself will dispose of the fund for the benefit of the classes named in it.

We are of the opinion that the money was properly decreed to belong to the appellees.

The judgment of the Appellate Court is affirmed.

Judgment affirmed.