60 Tex. 532 | Tex. | 1883
It seems pretty well settled by authority that in cases of an ordinary life insurance policy the beneficiaries named in such policy become the owners of it the moment it is issued, and the person procuring the insurance cannot by any subsequent act of his transfer to others the interest of those beneficiaries. Bliss on Life Ins., §§ 317, 337; Ricker v. Charter Oak Life Ins. Co., 27 Minn., 193.
The principle upon which this doctrine rests is that “ the rights under the policy become vested immediately upon its being issued, so that no person other than those designated in it can assign or surrender it.” See above authorities; also May on Ins., § 392.
The person procuring the insurance is held to divest himself of all interest in the policy, and to vest it exclusively in the beneficiaries, and to make an irrevocable settlement upon them of the amount for which the policy is issued. Ricker v. Charter Oak Life Ins. Co., supra.
But this is merely a matter of legal construction obtaining where a different understanding is not had between the original parties to the contract. The law does not prohibit the person procuring the policy from entering into such arrangements with the insurer as may be agreed on, either as to the persons who are to receive the benefit of the policy, or as to what control over it the “ insured ” is to exercise. In these respects an insurance policy does not differ from any other contract authorized by law, and should be subject to the same interpretation. The person procuring the policy for the benefit of another may reserve the right to change this designation in whole or in part, and the law will respect any change he may make in the beneficiaries of the policy in pursuance of such right. Bliss on Life Insurance, § 318; Hutchings v. Miner, 46 N. Y., 456. In such case there is no indefeasible interest in the insurance money vested in the beneficiaries named in the policy, nor settlement made upon them, which cannot be revoked. Such reservation being allowable, may be made expressly in the policy, or may become part of it by being included in any instrument or paper which enters into the insurance contract.
The institution in which the insurance in the present case ivas effected is known as the “ American Legion of Honor of Texas.”
This “ benefit fund,” according to the by-laws, is raised by means of payments made by parties joining the order before being received into membership, and assessments levied upon them upon death of a member, should this fund at the time be insufficient to pay the death benefit. Art. I, secs. 1-6.
Thus, the life of each member becomes insured immediately upon his entering the order, and he also becomes one of the insurers of the lives of his fellow members, i. e., to the amount required to be paid by him under the above provisions of the by-laws. The order is in effect, and so far as those provisions are concerned, a mutual life insurance company, in which the life of every member is insured by reason of his membership and compliance with the requirements of its constitution and by-laws.
Every one insured by reason of membership in such a company is charged -with a knowledge of its constitution and by-laws, bound by their requirements and entitled to the rights and privileges conferred by them. May on Ins., § 552; Cales v. Ins. Co., 18 Iowa, 425. The present order did not issue policies as do ordinary insurance companies, but delivered to the insured a benefit certificate, which, together with the positive regulations of the order, evidenced the contract between the member and the company so far a.s the insurance was concerned. The question, then, as to whether the contract between E. J. Chew and the Legion of Honor vested an irrevocable right in the appellees, who were the beneficiaries named in the certificate, or left him. the power to name by will or otherwise other and different persons to whom its benefits should accrue, must depend upon the terms of the certificate, as read in the light of the laws of the order and interpreted by them. The provision of article III, section 2, of its by-laws is as follows: “Applicants shall enter upon their application the name or names of the members of their family or those dependent upon them, to whom they desire their benefit paid, and the same shall be entered in the benefit certificate by the supreme secretary, subject to such future disposal of the benefit among their dependents as they thereafter direct.”
The clear import of this section is to place the certificate entirely
The right to change the disposition of money being established in the member, the next question is, How is it to be exercised? It is-contended by appellees that it can be exercised only in the manner pointed out in the third section of the third by-law, which reads as follows: “Members may at any time, when in good standing, surrender their certificate, and have a new one issued, payable to such beneficiary or beneficiaries dependent upon them as they may direct, upon payment of a certificate fee of fifty cents.”
This section is in further recognition of the right to make the-alteration, and it seems to be admitted that a surrender of the old certificate and the issuance of a new one under this section would effect a change in the beneficiaries of the policy. But is this the only way in which such change can be effected? The right to make the change is given by a different section of the by-laws, and exists in the insured as long as he remains a member of the order. A method by which he may accomplish it to the satisfaction of the order is pointed out in the section last recited, but we do not consider this as exclusive of all other ways of effecting the same object. The design of this section' is to protect the interests of the corporation. The company are entitled to know who are the parties entitled to the benefit money, and this is an effectual and certain means of giving that information. But, like all such provisions in the by-laws of private corporations, it may be waived at the option of the corporation, being for its benefit alone. This has been held in reference to such provisions when prescribed in mandatory terms. If they can be waived in such cases, much stronger would seem to be the reason why this can be done when the course to be
A provision in the charter or by-laws of a corporation requiring that its stock shall be transferred on the books of the company will not vitiate an assignment as between the parties made in any other way known to the law for the transfer of like personal property. Such an assignment may even be made binding upon the company, if not objected to in the proper manner and at the proper time, though the provision as to the transfer may be peremptory. Angell & Ames on Cor., § 354; Black v. Zacharie, 3 How., 483; Bank v. Iglehart, 6 Gill, 50; Duke v. Cahawba Nav. Co., 10 Ala., 90.
The rules of law in reference to them rest upon the same grounds as those we have stated above, viz., that the provision is for the benefit of the company, and they alone may enforce or waive it when the rights of third parties, under the special protection of the law, have not intervened.
Other instances might be cited where contracts contrary to the express provisions of corporation charters and by-laws are enforced, such as insurance policies made and issued in a form different from what is prescribed, or lacking the signatures of some of the officers whose duty it is to sign them; or even contracts of that character resting in parol, when the requirement is that they should be in writing. Bliss on Life Ins., §§ 137, 141; Sanborn v. Ins. Co., 16 Gray, 448; Ins. Co. v. Robinson, 25 Ind., 536; 19 How., 318.
As a by-law of the order this provision entered into the understanding between the company and the member effecting the insurance, and the rights of interested parties are not strengthened by the fact that the same provision is found in the certificate. It is still a condition for the benefit of the company, to be insisted upon or waived according to their election.
The provision in the by-laws of the Legion of Honor as to changing the beneficiaries of a benefit certificate is not peremptory, but merely points out a method which shall satisfy the company as to the parties entitled to receive the benefit money. The suit is not between the claimant of this money and the corporation by whom it is to be paid, and the latter does not object to the manner in which the change of beneficiaries was made. The exact case before us seems to be one of the first impression; we have been furnished with no authorities precisely in point by the able and distinguished counsel who have represented the respective parties to the cause, although their briefs show great research for that purpose, nor have we been able to find any bearing upon the question. Upon prin
Reversed and rendered.
[Opinion delivered December 14, 1883.]