69 S.E. 51 | N.C. | 1910
The Supreme Lodge Knights of Honor is a fraternal beneficiary association under the laws of the State of Missouri, issuing (204) benefit certificates to its members. The member has the right to designate a beneficiary, but the right of revocation is reserved, and the by-laws provide that, if all the beneficiaries designated by the member die before the decease of such member, if no other benefit certificate has been procured by him, the benefit shall be paid to the widow and children of the member, and if no widow, then to his children. *167
One John Selby became a member of the order and received a benefit certificate for the sum of two thousand dollars ($2,000), and died on 4 December, 1908. At the time of his death he was a member in good standing in appellant's said order, and appellant became bound to pay the amount of the benefit certificate to whomsoever should be lawfully entitled thereto.
The benefit certificate was payable to the wife of the member, Esther Selby, who died in his lifetime, and at the time of his death, Selby had not obtained a new benefit certificate. He left no widow, but three children, namely, the defendants Benjamin R. Selby, Susan B. Rierson and Minnie B. Walls. After the death of Selby, the said children made demand on appellant for the payment of the amount of the certificate to them. They resided in Wilson County. About the same time the defendant, Smyth Bros., McCleary-McClellan Co., a corporation, with headquarters at Richmond, Va., made demand on appellant for the payment of the amount of the benefit certificate to it, claiming that in his lifetime said John Selby delivered and pledged to said corporation the said benefit certificate to secure advances made by it to him; that the said benefit certificate was always and then was in its possession, and that said company had paid all assessments and premiums on said benefit certificate for a period of four years, and that the amount of the indebtedness of Selby to the company at the time of his death largely exceeded the amount of said certificate, and said company threatened to sue plaintiff for the said amount unless the same was paid to it.
On the first day of March, 1909, the appellant filed in the Superior Court of Wilson County its action against the respective claimants of this fund, making as additional parties the husbands of the defendants, Mrs. Rierson and Mrs. Walls.
The Virginia corporation entered its appearance in such suit as interpleader in Wilson County, so that all questions might (205) determined in the one suit.
The plaintiff, in its complaint filed, prayed that it might be allowed to pay into court the sum of $2,000 and stand discharged from any and all liability; and that the defendants be required to litigate their claims to the same; and that it be allowed its costs and reasonable attorney's fees. The children of John Selby answered admitting the allegations of the complaint except that the plaintiff was a mere stakeholder; stated their right to the fund and demanded judgment against the the plaintiff for the amount and interest and costs, and denied its right to be allowed attorney's fee. The corporation defendant filed answer and stated its claim to the fund. There was no order made before the final judgment, requiring the plaintiff to pay the fund into *168
court and the defendants to interplead. Upon the admissions in the pleadings his Honor adjudged that the children of John Selby were entitled to the fund, and gave judgment against the plaintiff for the amount, with interest from 4 March, 1909; denied the motion of plaintiff for allowance of attorney's fees, and taxed the costs against the defendant corporation. The plaintiff excepted to the judgment because it awarded interest against it, and because its motion for attorney's fees, fixed at $25, was disallowed, and appealed to this Court.
In 4 Pomeroy Equity Jurisprudence (3 Ed.), sec. 1322, the learned author thus states the essential elements required to invoke the equitable jurisdiction of the court by a bill of interpleader or a complaint as a substitute for the bill: "1. The same thing, debt or duty, must be claimed by both or all the parties against whom the relief is demanded. 2. All their adverse titles or claims must be dependent, or be derived, from a common source. 3. The person asking the relief — the plaintiff — must not have nor claim any interest in the subject-matter. 4. He must have incurred no independent liability to (206) either of the claimants, that is, he must stand perfectly indifferent between them, in the position merely of a stakeholder." And in speaking further in section 1328 of the averments of the bill, the same author says: "The bill need not show an apparent title in either of the defendants. On the contrary, if the bill should show that plaintiff was fully informed of the defendants' rights and of his own liability, or if it should show that one of the defendants was certainly entitled, on the facts alleged, to the thing, debt or duty, in either case it would be demurrable; there would be no ground for an interpleader." Citing, among other cases, in the note Barker v. Swain,
We do not think there was any error, however, in the ruling of his Honor, disallowing an attorney's fee to the plaintiff, to be paid out of the fund, and ultimately to be taxed against the unsuccessful defendant. We do not think such practice has obtained in this State. In Gay v. Davis,
Modified and affirmed.
JUSTICE BROWN did not sit upon the hearing or decision of this case.
Cited: Banking Co. v. Leach,