112 Ga. 315 | Ga. | 1900
When this case was here before (109 Ga. 1), it was held, that if there was nothing in the charter and laws of a benefit .society which restricted the right of a member in the appointment •of a beneficiary to receive the benefit fund, such member might, at the time he executed the contract, legally designate whomsoever he pleased as beneficiary, and his right to do so would not be ■questioned, notwithstanding the person so designated might have no insurable interest in the life of the member. The only question then involved was whether the petition set forth a cause of action; and while the benefit certificate appeared on its face to have been issued upon the condition that the member complied with the constitution, laws, and rules of the society, and it was indorsed thereon that the by-laws of the society should govern the certificate, there was no allegation in the petition, nor anything in the certificate or any indorsement thereon, which indicated that the right of the member to appoint a beneficiary was limited to a designation of some person who had an insurable interest in his life. When the case came on to be tried, the defendant introduced in evidence an extract from its “Charter, Constitution, and General Laws,” which provided that “ Any member of this order shall have the right to change a beneficiary or beneficiaries (to parties having .a legal insurable interest) under their benefit certificate at any time, by applying to the Cabinet Secretary, and transmitting with the ■said application a fee of $0.50 for each certificate. Provided, that no person shall be a beneficiary under any certificate, except he or she have a legal insurable interest.” While it was stated in the certificate that Mrs. Walton, the beneficiary, was a cousin of the insured, it was admitted at the trial that she was not related to him either by consanguinity or' affinity, and there was no evidence to show that she sustained any other relation to Mm which would give her an insurable interest m Ms life. The judge directed the jury to return a verdict in favor of the defendant. The plaintiff filed a motion for a new trial upon several grounds, and the case is here upon a bill of exceptions sued out by the defendant, assigning error
It is immaterial whether we treat the contract as one to be governed by the laws of Georgia or of Massachusetts, as it is not contended that there is anything in the law of either State which- would prevent a benefit society from maldng a rule limiting the right of a member in the appointment of a beneficiary to some person who has an insurable interest in his life. But it was argued that the above-quoted extract from the rules of the society does not limit the right of the member in regard to naming the beneficiary, except in cases where there is to be a change of beneficiaries. While the first sentence in the rule relates to the subject of changing the beneficiary, nothing can be clearer than that the proviso was intended to apply to certificates as originally issued. It was further argued that, because the agent of the society, who was the organizer of the local lodge of which the insured was a member, knew at the time the certificate was issued that Mrs. Walton had no insurable interest in the life of the insured, and because the collector and agent to whom the assessments were paid had like knowledge, the society is estopped from setting up, as a defense to the suit, that Mrs. Walton’s designation as a beneficiary in the certificate was contrary to the rules of the society. The stipulations indorsed upon
Unless, therefore, some ground of the motion for a new trial complained of an error of law committed during the progress of the trial which would have affected the result, a new trial should not have been granted. One ground of the motion complains that the court erred in admitting in evidence the application for insurance, npon the ground that there was no sufficient legal proof of execution, and that the application was not sufficiently identified as the application upon which the certificate in the present case was issued. Under the view we have taken of the case, the application was not at all material, and even if the court erred in admitting the same, such error was no sufficient reason for awarding a new trial. Another ground of the motion complains of the admission of what purported to be the copy of a statute of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. The ground of objection to this evidence was that it was
It was error to grant a-new trial.
Judgment reversed.