97 Kan. 422 | Kan. | 1916
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Leonard C. Uhl held a certificate in the Life & Annuity Association of Hiawatha, Kan., issued March 30, 1898. The association by a change in its by-laws made July 23, 1913, undertook to readjust rates and benefits, and notified him in November of that year of a number of options that
(1) The plaintiff in his application for membership agreed that his contract should be subject to future amendments in the laws of the association. It is, however, an implied condition of such an agreement that the changes shall be reasonable. (29 Cyc. 75; Niblack, Benefit Societies and Accident Insurance, 2d ed., §25; Bacon, Benefit Societies and Life Insurance, 2d ed., § 91a; Note, 8 L. R. A., n. s., 521.)
(2) It has" already been determined that the contract between the plaintiff and the defendant was such as to-permit the association to make the very changes here involved, provided they were reasonable and necessary to the accomplishment of its purposes. (Moore v. Annuity Association, 95 Kan. 591, 148 Pac. 981. Recent cases illustrating the conflict of authority on the subject are collected in a note to Thomas v. Knights of Maccabees, 85 Wash. 665, 149 Pac. 7, in L. R. A. 1916 A, 762.) “Necessary” is a word the force of which depends upon the context. (M’Culloch v. Maryland, 17 U. S. 316, 414.) Here it is not used as the equivalent of “indispensable.” If some change in the association’s methods was required to enable it to continue business, and while acting in good faith it effected a readjustment by means reasonably adapted to the end sought, its action must be regarded as necessary, although some other plan might also have been available. The requirement that a change in the rules shall be reasonable fairly implies that it shall be necessary in this sense, so that the former decisions of this court may be said to have determined that under its contract with the plaintiff the defendant had authority to make the changes in its by-laws now in controversy, provided they were reasonable.
(3) Here the court submitted to the jury the question whether the changes made were reasonable, in the sense indicated, and a negative answer was returned. By the original terms of the plaintiff’s certificate the sum of $2000 was to be paid at his death to the beneficiary named; he was to pay $2.80 a month for twenty years, at which time his payments were to end; he had the right, after three years, to cease payment and
The evidence upon the question of the reasonableness of the changes that were made was meager. It was shown that the defendant had advertised that it had the “largest per capita of any fraternal organization in the United States,” a statement which had at one time been true, but was no longer so. This could be of little or no weight in determining the question. The secretary of the association, called as a witness by the plaintiff, testified that at the time of the change in the bylaws the plaintiff’s share of the reserve fund (taking account of interest earned on the one hand and losses paid on the other) was about $280. No effort was made to controvert this. The defendant used the deposition of the actuary upon whose computations the changes had been based. He stated that the rates in force prior to the change were grossly inadequate to mature the certificates in twenty years. He computed the plaintiff’s exact proportion of the, reserve fund to be $278.65. Making allowance for this, he estimated the amount necessary to be collected each month until the end of the original twenty-year period, to justify the association in issuing a paid-up certificate, to be $20.78, the figures adopted by the association. His estimates were based upon the National Fraternal Congress table of mortality, and an assumption that the reserve
There was really nothing before the jury upon which they could determine that the changes made in the by-laws were ■ unreasonable. The amount in the reserve fund for which the plaintiff was given credit was presumably correct, and even if it were wrong there was nothing in the evidence by which the mistake could be rectified. The mortality tables and assumption of interest adopted by the actuary were not open to objection, for they had received the approval of the legislature. His actual computation was hardly reviewable by the jury, for its details were not developed, nor is any error in the result-now pointed out. Where the detailed facts are admitted or established the question whether a change in the by-laws is reasonable is seldom referable to a jury. (Clarkson v. Supreme Lodge, K. of P., 99 S. Car. 134, 82 S. E. 1043.) “Whether a by-law is reasonable and consistent with the law, is a question solely for the court to determine.” (Niblack, Benefit Societies and Accident Insurance, 2d ed., § 23, p. 45.) It is usual for the courts to declare that a particular change is or is not obnoxious to the rule imposing the test of reasonableness and fairness. (See, for example, Maccabees v. Nelson, 77 Kan. 629, 95 Pac. 1052; Conner v. Golden Cross, 117 Tenn. 549, 97 S. W. 306; Wuerfler v. Trustees Grand Grove W. O. D., 116 Wis. 19, 92 N. W. 433. See, also, Loan Association v. Merriman, 67 Kan. 779, 74 Pac. 256.) Such examination as has been found practicable has failed to discover an instance of that question having been determined by a jury, and but one — a dictum — in which that has been referred to as the proper practice. (Supreme Lodge, etc., v. Bieler, 58 Ind. App. 550, 105 N. E. 244.) In view of the situation pre
(4) Upon the showing made it does not appear that the new by-laws were unreasonable. It is quite clear that the association had issued certificates containing provisions more favorable to the beneficiaries than it could carry out. Under the original arrangement it undertook to pay $2000 at the time of plaintiff’s death, from a fund to which he could have contributed no more than $552, and his expectancy when he became a member was but a little over twenty years. Some change of rates of benefits was obviously necessary. If in 1913 the plaintiff, being then-67 years of age, had elected to continue the monthly payment for life ($2.30 going into the reserve fund), and had died at the expiration of his then expectancy of about eleven years, his additional contribution to the fund would have been but $303.60. No detailed computation is necessary to show that this proposition was not open to objection as requiring too many or too large payments. If he had elected to pay at the monthly rate of $20.78 ($20.28 going to the fund) for the remaining fifty-one months of the original twenty-year period his additional contribution would have been $1034.28, which added to the $278.65 already to his credit would make $1312.93. According to the calculations of the actuary, to which no definite objection is made, this is the amount necessary, giving it an earning capacity of four per cent, to justify the association’s undertaking to pay $2000 on the death of the plaintiff. In view of the statute enacted just before the readjustment of rates, recognizing the mortality tables of the National Fraternal Congress, and authorizing the issuance of paid-up certificates only on the basis of a maximum rate of interest of four per cent, the rate of $20.78 per month can not be regarded as unreasonable. It results from these conclusions that the change made in the defendant’s by-laws were valid, and the plaintiff’s contentions must fail so far as they turn upon that question.
(5) It is said that “any amendment which entirely changes the scheme of insurance, and makes a radical departure from the fundamental plan, is not a reasonable exercise of the reserved power of amendment.” (Niblack, Benefit Societies
Inasmuch as the question of the issuance of a paid-up certificate for the amount corresponding to the plaintiff’s share of the reserve fund seems not to have been directly referred to in the negotiation between the parties, the cause will be remanded with directions to enter judgment for the defendant,