19 Ga. App. 545 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1917
Wilson brought suit in a justice court against the Grand Lodge Brothers and Sisters of Love, a mutual benefit association, upon a certificate of life insurance, and claimed that he was 'entitled to the benefit of the certificate. The certificate was originally issued to Isabella Tripp and was payable “to Maria Tripp, the legal beneficiary of Isabella Tripp.” The plaintiff and Isabella Tripp were married in January, 1915, and she died in the following May. When they married she was a member of the local lodge of Brothers and Sisters of Love, located at Shady Dale, Georgia. 'She held a certificate of insurance issued by the defendant, payable as hereinbefore stated, and that certificate was surrendered to the association, on its request, and a new certificate was to be issued. The old certificate was recalled by the association for the sole purpose of having a by-law of the Grand Lodge printed on it, and no other change was to be made. The hew certificate was returned to the secretary of the local lodge, in accordance with the custom of the Grand Lodge, with the beneficiary left blank. The plaintiff testified that the insured had the right to direct the secretary of the local lodge to insert in the certificate the name of any beneficiary named by her, and that on the return of the new certificate his wife saw the president of the local lodge and directed that the plaintiff’s name be inserted as beneficiary in the certificate. It was admitted by the defendant that the insured had the right to have the secretary of the local lodge insert the name of the beneficiary in the certificate at her direction; but the president of the local lodge, in his evidence, denied that the insured saw him and directed that the name of the plaintiff be inserted as the beneficiary in the certificate. On the contrary, he testified that the certificate was delivered by him to.a friend of the insured, at her direction, with a blank left for the name of the beneficiary. This occurred just before her death. After her death the plaintiff obtained the certificate, and when the president again saw the certificate it had the name of the plaintiff inserted as beneficiary. The plaintiff testified that he did not know who caused his name to be inserted in the certificate.
Section 9 of the by-laws of the defendant was introduced in
There was no error in admitting in evidence the original certificate of insurance; and the evidence authorized the jury to find against the plaintiff. The case is largely controlled by Smith v. Locomotive Engineers Mutual Life &c. Asso., 138 Ga. 717 (76 S. E. 44). The judge did not err in overruling the certiorari and in denying plaintiff a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.