42 Minn. 204 | Minn. | 1889
The Odd-Fellows’ Mutual Benefit Society is a corporation organized in 1870 under Gen. St. 1878, c. 34, tit. 3, relating to corporations other than those for pecuniary profit. The articles of association of the society state that “the general nature of its business, and its general purpose, is the insuring the lives of the members upon the plan of paying to the representatives of every deceased member a certain sum, to be assessed upon and received from the other members of said association.” The by-laws, after stating the purpose and object of the association in the same language as the articles, and limiting membership to Odd-Fellows under the age of 55 years, who can pass the requisite medical examination, provide that, upon the death of a member, his widow, heirs, or designated beneficiary shall receive a sum equal to one dollar for each member of his class at the time of his death, not exceeding a specified sum; that the applicant for membership shall designate in his application some person or persons to whom it shall be paid in the event of his death, and that the secretary shall enter such name or names upon the records, and indorse them upon the certificate of membership; that, in the event that any member fails to designate a beneficiary, then in case of his death the amount should be paid (1) to his widow; (2) if no widow, to his
The contention of the administrator is that the Odd-Fellows’ Mutual Benefit Society is a benevolent association of the class de
If this contention as to the nature of the society is correct, it is ■difficult to see what right defendant has to the money; for, if only members of the family of a member could be beneficiaries, the designation of his personal representatives, like the designation of “his •estate,” would amount to no designation at all, and the money would, in such contingency, under the by-laws, belong to Everett’s daughter. For, while it may be that if money had in fact been paid over to the administrator which in fact belonged to the daughter, he would be deemed to hold it as trustee for her, and not as assets of the estate, yet he would have no right to demand payment of it or sue for it. Personal representatives have a right only to such funds as ■belong to the estate of the decedent, and which, when received, are .assets for the purposes of administration and distribution under the ■statute or the will. If this money belongs to the daughter, it is no part of the estate of the deceased, and the defendant, as administrator, in no way represents the daughter.
But, passing this question, we think the defendant is entirely in ■error as to the nature of this society. He reasons from a false premise, or, rather, begs the very question at issue. He assumes that the society is organized under a statute which authorizes the payment of insurance on the lives of its members only to their families, and then argues from that premise that the term “representatives” in the articles of association must, in order to make-these articles conform to the statute, be construed as limited to members of the families of the insured, and then the by-laws construed so as to harmonize with this construction of the articles. If he was correct as to the statute, it is true that we would be justified in giving a liberal construction to the articles in order, if possible, to make them •conform to the law under which the society assumed to organize;
The stipulation in the case that the association is a “benevolent”' society amounts to nothing, for at best that is a very ambiguous and equivocal term. Moreover, the articles of association and by-laws are also stipulated into the case, and to them must we look to ascertain their meaning and the character of the association. When we turn to the articles, we find no prohibitory or restrictive language excluding from the powers of the corporation the right to contract specially with a member for the payment of benefits to persons other than his widow, children, or members of his family. There are two rules, which we think should be applied in the construction of these articles : (1) That, in the absence of any prohibitory or restrictive language in them, or in the statute under which the society is organized,, any person might be designated the beneficiary of the insurance on the life of the member, provided, of course, such designation did not violate some rule founded in public policy, — a question not raised or-
Judgment affirmed.