115 Ga. 798 | Ga. | 1902
The plaintiff in error, a mutual fraternal benefit association, issued to J. A. Thornton, on May 31, 1893, a certificate for $3,000, payable at his death, on certain conditions, to his wife as beneficiary. This certificate contained, among others, the following stipulation : “ This certificate is issued and accepted subject to all the conditions on the back hereof, and named in the Sovereign Constitution, fundamental laws, and by-laws of this fraternity, and liable to forfeiture if said Sovereign [member] shall not comply with said conditions, constitution, fundamental laws, and such by-laws and rules as are or may be adopted by the Sovereign Camp, head camp, or the camp of the jurisdiction of which he is a member at the date of his death.” Among the conditions referred to, and which were made a part of the certificate, was the following: “ If the member holding this certificate . . shall die . . by his own hand (except that it be shown that he was at the time insane), . . then . . this certificate shall be null and void.” In .18 9 7 the following by-laws were enacted: “ If the member holding this certificate . . should die . . by his own hand or act, whether sane or insane, . . or if any of the statements or declarations in the application for membership, and upon the faith of which this certificate was issued, shall be found in any respect untrue, this certificate shall be null and void and of no effect.” “ It [the Sovereign Camp] shall enact laws for its own government and for conducting the business of the order generally, provide penalties for violation thereof, have power to prescribe and finally determine the rights, privileges, duties, and responsibilities of itself and its Camps and the membership of the Order.” In 1899, prior to the death of Thornton, a by-law known as section 59 was enacted, as follows: “ The following conditions shall be made a part of every beneficiary certificate, and shall be binding on both member and order.” “If the member holding this certificate . .
Thornton died after the adoption of the by-laws which we have quoted. He was insane at the time of his death, and died by his own hand. Notice and proofs of death were duly submitted to the insurance society, but payment of the amount of the certificate was refused. Mrs. Thornton, the beneficiary, thereupon brought her action upon the certificate in the city court of Atlanta. The evidence introduced on the trial consisted of the extracts from the constitution and by-laws of the defendant society which have been quoted above, together with others which it is not necessary to specifically enumerate, and a statement of facts agreed upon by counsel for both parties. After argument, the court directed a verdict for the plaintiff for the full amount of the policy, to which ruling the defendant excepted. This ease has been twice argued, first orally and then by brief, by the able and learned counsel for the plaintiff and the defendant in error. Numerous cases have been cited by both sides upon the question of the power of an association of the character of the plaintiff in error, under such stipula
The charter of a corporation of this character is of a dual nature. It is a contract between the corporation and the State or other power granting the charter, and it is also a contract between the corporation and its members. Whenever a corporation makes a contract with one of its members, that contract stands on the same footing as if he were a stranger; and this is true although none but a member can make a contract with it under its charter and bylaws. Being on the same basis as a stranger or third party in making the contract, that contract should be construed and regulated
Mr. Niblack, in his work on Benefit Societies (2d ed.) 62, in discussing this subject, says: “It is a recognized rule in the construction of statutes that they shall be so construed as to give them a prospective operation only, and that they shall be permitted to operate retrospectively only where the intention to have them so operate is clear and undoubted. The same canon of construction should be applied to amendments and alterations of the by-laws of a society. They should not apply to or set aside acts already done under the sanction of the by-laws, unless it clearly and unmistakably appears that the authority adopting them intended that they should do so. It will be presumed that an amendment to the bylaws was not intended to affect a contract of insurance previously issued by the society.” In speaking of the certificate of membership, on page 273 of the same work, the author says: “Of course, he may consent that they shall modify it, but in that case they become effective by reason of his consent, not by reason of their enactment. It will be presumed that an amendment to the by-laws was not intended to affect a contract of insurance previously issued by the society, and it will be so construed as to give it a retroactive force only when the intention to have it so operate is clear and undoubted.” This is no new doctrine in law. It applies to acts passed by the legislature of a State as well as to laws enacted by a benefit society. It is a reasonable and just rule of construction for such acts. While a member may agree in his contract that laws thereafter passed shall bind him, such a law, in order to have that effect, must show clearly the intention of the lawmaking power that it shall become a part of the contract. The member is then put upon notice that his contract has been changed, and he can either acquiesce in the change or leave the association. The new law should not be ambiguous, or leave him in doubt as to whether or not it
Judgment affirmed.