61 Pa. Super. 126 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1915
Opinion by
The admirable report of the referee which was adopted by the learned court below not only fully states the facts but convincingly disposes of a number of legal questions raised and pressed at the hearing before him. In the view we take of the controlling questions in the case, it will not be necessary we should further discuss them.
The claim presented by the plaintiffs is supported at least by every consideration of natural justice. Some months before his death, John Hvasta found himself afflicted with a serious sickness which incapacitated him for work. He needed care, nursing, medical attention, etc. He had been deserted by those on whom a man must ordinarily rely for the aid he requires under such conditions. Unable to work, he was without means. Even his own sister declined to receive him into her house or aid him in any manner. He had been for a number of years a member of the defendant union. He held its certificate, under the terms of which it was liable to pay to his beneficiary the sum of $1,000, after his death, if down to that time he kept his membership in good standing. There was nothing in the charter or by-laws of the defendant — leaving aside for the moment any consideration of our statute, — to prevent his substitution of another beneficiary for the one originally named in his certificate.
Under these circumstances he applied to the plaintiffs and agreed with them that if they -would receive him into their house, provide him with food and lodging, medical attention and care, and pay to the defendant regularly the dues that would be necessary .to retain his membership, he would substitute the plaintiffs as beneficiaries in his certificate to the extent of $700. As the plaintiffs, in consideration of such change, were to assume forward obligations and payments that might last
When Hvasta died, some seven months later, the contract into which they had entered with him and this defendant had been fully executed by them. Every particle of the valuable consideration they had agreed to pay had been fully discharged. They had regularly paid the defendant the necessary dues and they were received and retained by the union. They had relieved the latter of all obligations — imposed by the membership of Hvasta — to aid him during the time of his sickness that followed the execution of the contract. After his death the defendant refused to recognize the claim of the plaintiffs and this action was begun to compel the payment of the $700 to which we have referred.
Although the defendant was incorporated in 1892, under the laws of the State of Ohio, we accept the conclusion of the learned referee that in the disposition of this case our action must be controlled by the laws of our own State. It is not now important whether this conclusion follows from the nature and character of the contract we are to consider; or rests on the presumption
Now the basic proposition of the defense is this: Although we joined with our deceased member and these plaintiffs in making a contract which rested on a valuable consideration moving from the plaintiffs both to Hvasta and to. this defendant; and although the plaintiffs, on the faith of that contract, fully performed their obligations both to Hvasta and the union, we jointly did an act prohibited by the State of Pennsylvania. The union may therefore retain the fruits of the forbidden contract and successfully assert that the statute extinguishes its liability to perform any part of what it agreed to do. The cases ought to be and are rare indeed in which such a defense can be successfully maintained. It never can be, it never should be out of any consideration for the defendant who advances it. It is only where some public interest or policy is so necessarily involved that it overrides any consideration of individual rights or duties that the statute should be held to sweep away the individual rights.
Does the Act of April 6, 1893, P. L. 7, strike down and prohibit the contract, which it has been found the defendant made in this case, so that the plaintiffs, resting their case on such prohibited contract, can demand no aid from the courts in its enforcement? It will be observed the plaintiffs, in making out their case, in no way need the assistance of the statute to support it. The defendant did not receive its corporate life through the instrumentality of that legislative act. The plaintiffs are not confronted by any necessity to introduce or rely upon the statute in order to make out their case. The defendant, to escape its otherwise established liability, must call in the statute; agree that it entered into a contract prohibited by it; and that it received and retained the fruits of such contract, and then contend it is absolved by the statute itself from any obligation to stand by the contract it has made. Let us look at
Where, in the language of this statute, can be found any legislative declaration that a corporation, incorporated under the laws of the State of Ohio and lawfully doing business in the State of Pennsylvania, may not contract for a valuable consideration that, it will pay to a designated party a certain sum on the death of one of its members who has died in good standing? In Maneely v. Knights of Birmingham, 115 Pa. 305, the charter of the defendant corporation provided, “The purpose of this corporation shall be the maintenance of a society for the purpose of benefiting and aiding the widows and orphans of deceased members.” A member of that society undertook to assign or turn over to one who was neither his widow nor orphan, the fund which would be payable at his death. The circumstances much resemble those in the case before us. Mr. Justice Green, speaking for the Supreme Court, in considering the provision of the charter we have quoted, said: “Construing these words, the learned court below held that
In Hunter v. Firemen’s, Etc., Assn., 20 Pa. Superior Ct. 605, President Judge Rice plainly recognized the situation here presented, although the decision in that case did not involve the determination of the precise question before us: “Nor is it necessary to decide the question whether the Act of April 6, 1893, P. L. 7, applies to such an association as this, nor the question whether the deceased member had a right to designate one as beneficiary who was neither his wife, nor his child, nor a member of his family, nor his heir, nor his blood relation, nor a person dependent upon him. Even granting that he had that right, and that upon his exercising it a contract would have been created between him and the association whereby the latter would have been bound to pay the money to such person, the fact remains that he did not exercise nor attempt to exercise the right in the mode pointed out in the Constitution.”
If, under the facts of this case, we were considering
In disposing of the present case, it is no concern of ours to determine whether or not, under the laws of the State of Pennsylvania, the defendant is a beneficial society or an insurance company. We are not called upon to determine whether it is or is not by reason of anything it has done, exempt from the laws affecting insurance companies or from the payment of taxes ordinarily collected on money at interest. We have not an interpleader case in which we can dr should undertake to pass judgment on the adverse rights of several parties to a fund in court paid in by a stakeholder. Our examination of the Act of 1893 has led us to the conclusion that it does not either prohibit or declare invalid such a contract as the present defendant has made with these plaintiffs. That being true, there remains no sufficient legal reason why the plaintiffs should not receive the fruits of the contract into which they honestly entered and which they faithfully performed.
The order of the learned court below dismissing the exceptions to the report of the referee is reversed and