80 Mo. App. 102 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1899
This is an action on a benefit certificate of insurance issued to Frank Ilueben in the sum of $2,000. He assigned it to the Missouri National Bank, of Kansas City, Missouri, as collateral security for an indebtedness to the bank amounting to more than the sum called for in the certificate. He afterwards died. Defendant is a corporation of the state of Iowa. Plaintiff is assignee of the Missouri National Bank
Treating, therefore, the defendant as an assessment company, we find that the question of suicide as a defense is eliminated by the findings of the jury that his death was not self inflicted.
Rut plaintiff meets this position by the contention that an assignment of the certificate as collateral security is not a change of the beneficiary. He cites us to the cases of Ins. Co. v. O’Brien, 92 Mich. 584, and Dillingham v. Cotton Exchange, 49 Fed. Rep. 719, as bearing out his proposition. An assignment by the assured to some one other than the beneficiary is a change in the beneficiary and whatever may be said of the application of the cases referred to we do not believe that a member of an assessment company can assign the certificate or change the beneficiary, in violation of the by-laws of the company which have been made a part of his contract. In this statement of the law we are borne out by the following cases. Coleman v. Supreme Lodge, 18 Mo. 189; Head v. Supreme Council, 64 Mo. App. 212; Grand Lodge v. Elsner, 26 Mo. App. 108; Legion of Honor v. Smith, 45 N. J. Eq. 466; Sanger v. Rothschild, 123 N. Y. 577; Mut. Ben. v. Burkhart, 110 Ind. 189; Presbyterian Mut. v. Allen, 106 Ind. 593; Mut. Ben. Ass’n v. Brown, 33 Fed. Rep. 11. The latter case was -an attempt to change the beneficiary by way of assignment as collateral security.
We have found no objection to the capacity of plaintiff’s insolvent bank to become beneficiary under the laws of Iowa. For while the law is well settled that a valid certificate can only be issued to a beneficiary contemplated by and within the terms of the -statute, Keener v. Grand Lodge, 38 Mo. App. 543, yet, in this case, we find the beneficiary clause of the statute to be exceedingly broad. It permits a certificate
The views here expressed make it unnecessary to pass upon many points suggested by counsel for either side. The judgment is reversed.