172 Ill. App. 192 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1912
delivered the opinion of the court.
The declaration in this case was predicated on the claim that the plaintiff, as the only heir of a deceased member of the defendant’s society, was, under its rules and regulations, entitled to a death benefit of $350, payable on such member’s decease. The defendant admitted that it was bound to pay the amount to some one, but claimed that it should pay in accordance with a designation of beneficiaries made by the deceased some months before his death, which directed the payment of $100 to his infant heir aforesaid, $200 to his father and mother and $50 for church masses. In view of such admission judgment was rendered for $100, and as to the rest of the fund the case was tried before the court, without a jury, and without submission of propositions to be held as law. Upon the record as presented the only questions saved for review relate to the sufficiency of the evidence upon which the court based its findings for plaintiff, and its ruling in excluding from the evidence the written designation aforesaid.
The constitution and by-laws of the society were printed in the Polish language, and the only material fact in dispute was the meaning of the word employed therein to designate the class of persons entitled to death benefits, plaintiff contending it meant “heirs” and defendant that it meant “beneficiaries.” All other facts material to the issue were agreed upon. Upon the point in dispute there was a clear preponderance of evidence in favor of plaintiff’s contention. Witnesses familiar with the Polish language, and the different shades of meaning given to the word in controversy, agreed in the main that its proper meaning and translation is “heirs at law.” As plaintiff was the only heir she was entitled to the entire fund under the society’s constitution and by-laws, which narrowed the scope of its beneficial action to heirs alone, and to which, in determining who can take as beneficiaries, we must look rather than to the statute under which the society was organized. Murphy v. Nowak, 223 Ill. 301. It was therefore beyond the power of the deceased member to designate others than his heirs as beneficiaries. Knights of Honor v. Menkhausen, 209 Ill. 277.
While the motion made at the close of the evidence to exclude such designation from the evidence should not have been granted, as the document was a part of the agreed state of facts upon which the case was submitted to the court, and was the wrong method of obtaining the court’s view of the law as to who was entitled to the fund, yet, as the designation furnished no protection against appellant’s liability the ruling was harmless.
While the court’s finding-, for the plaintiff was reached by different reasoning, it was correct and the judgment will be affirmed.
Affirmed.