22 Or. 271 | Or. | 1892
This is an appeal from a judgment of the circuit court for Multnomah county in favor of the plaintiff in an action brought to recover the sum of two thousand dollars, the amount alleged to be due on a benefit certificate "which had been issued by the defendant society to Frederick Freeman for the benefit of the plaintiff. The cause was tried by stipulation before the court, without the intervention of a jury. In substance, the facts found show that at different times during his membership in the association, Frederick Freeman held two of its benefit certificates. In the first certificate which was issued to him he had designated his wife, Anna Freeman, as his beneficiary; but when she ceased to be his wife, he surrendered that certificate and took a second certificate, in which he designated the plaintiff Philip Wist as his beneficiary. TTis application upon which the certificate was issued expressly provided that “ compliance on his part with all the laws, regulations and requirements which are or may hereafter be enacted by said order is the express condition upon which I am entitled to participate in the beneficiary fund, and have and enjoy all the other benefits and privileges of said order.” In July, 1888, the society changed its law relating to the classes of persons who might be designated as beneficiaries, to read as follows: “Each member shall designate the person or persons to whom the beneficiary fund due at his death shall be paid, who shall, in every instance, be one or more members of his family, or some one related to him by blood, or who shall be dependent
At the time when Freeman designated the plaintiff as his beneficiary, and the society issued to him a certificate accordingly, it was a valid exercise of his power of appointment. There was at that date no rule or regulation of the society in conflict with his right to make such designation of his friend and fellow member, his beneficiary; and if Freeman without revoking his appointment of the plaintiff had died before the society had enacted the law in question limiting the appointment of beneficiaries to a certain specified class, there is no doubt or dispute as to its liability-The general rule undoubtedly is, that a designation of a beneficiary, valid at its inception, remains so; and as Freeman never revoked the appointment of the plaintiff as his beneficiary unless the after-enacted law required Freeman to change his beneficiary so as to conform to the classes specified and become a part of his contract, and the law is valid in so far as it affected his contract, the appointment of the plaintiff as his beneficiary is still valid, and the certificate took effect upon the death of Freeman, and vested in the plaintiff an absolute right to the benefit money.
The contention for the defendant is, that the law enacted by the society subsequently to the issuance of Freeman’s benefit certificate, relating to the persons whom a member is entitled to designate as his beneficiary, became a part of his contract and required him to make a designation of a beneficiary in conformity therewith, and that on his failure to do so before his death, without leaving any one capable of taking such benefit certificate, it reverted to the beneficiary fund of the supreme lodge. This contention is founded on the assumption that the law in question was retroactive and intended to annul the appointment of beneficiaries theretofore made by members which did not belong to the classes specified in such law. The benefit
There is no power in the society to amend or enact laws which shall work any repudiation of its obligation. It resides in the society for the purposes of carrying out the objects for which it was. formed; and, when the power is expressly reserved in the charter, it is not construed as intended to reserve the power to avoid its contracts, or work the destruction of vested rights. So that a party’s contract of insurance may be modified or varied by a subsequent law, and he be bound by it, either through the reserved power in the society to amend or enact such law, or by his contract with reference to future enactments, when it does not operate as a repudiation of its contracts, or a complete deprivation of the member’s rights. As the rights of the plaintiff are derived from the contract of Freeman with the society, and as his benefit certificate, designating the plaintiff as his beneficiary, was issued before the enactment of the law limiting the persons whom a member is entitled to designate as his beneficiary, it now becomes necessary to examine this subsequent law, and ascertain whether it is • applicable to benefit certificates of members which were issued before its enactment, and if so, to what extent. That law provides: “Each member shall designate the person or persons to whom the beneficiary fund due at his death
In fact, so great is the disfavor in which such laws are held, and so generally are they condemned by the courts, that they will not construe any law, no matter how positive in its terms, as intended to interfere with existing contracts or vested rights, unless the intention that it shall so operate is expressly declared, or is to be necessarily implied. As the law of the society is prospective in its operation, it did. not affect Freeman’s contract with the defendant. It did not, by its terms, nor by implication, require him to change his policy. It would only have affected his contract in the event he should have revoked the appointment of the plaintiff as his beneficiary, and then only to the extent of requiring him to appoint a beneficiary that should belong to the specified classes. There is not a word in the law requiring any member to make a change of his beneficiary; or in case of his failure to do so, as contended for by the appellant, that his benefit certificate reverted to the society. It may be conceded that Freeman was bound by all subsequent laws enacted, but as the law in question is not retroactive, it does not affect his contract. It only affects him or any other member of the society in the issue of certificates after its passage. While there is no pretense that this contract was a cover for speculation, or a wager policy, it may be conceded that the object of the law was to discourage wager policies. And it was said by counsel, unless it was held “that the society could amend its laws so as to discourage wager policies, it will be involved in a maze of difficulties.” By giving this law a prospective operation, it will greatly cut off the opportunities for such speculation in life insurance policies, and will in a great measure remedy the evil it was designated to abate, without denying the power of the society to amend its laws, or to enact others for the promotion of its interests and welfare.
We may, therefore, assume, for the purposes of the case, that the law was retroactive, and intended to require a change of beneficiaries, limiting them to the classes specified, and still we would be bound to construe it so as to
The argument of counsel that Freeman’s failure to designate a beneficiary before his death, operated to vest the fund in the society, assumes that he failed to do something, which, under the law, he could have done, or neglected to do, and which would have prevented such result, and preserved the fund for the benefit of his beneficiary. As we have assumed only for their sake that the law is retroactive, this argument only strengthens our construction that it should be construed as only applicable to those who could make the change, and refused or neglected to do it before they should be visited with the consequences of forfeiture.
Nor does the case upon which counsel rely support their contention. I refer to the case of Supreme Commandery v. Ainsworth, 71 Ala. 436; 46 Am. Rep. 332. There, the legislature provided that a policy should be rendered void in case the holder of the certificate committed suicide. In that case, the certificate was accepted by the assured, subject to the laws of the order now in force, or which hereafter may be enacted by the supreme commandery, and the court by Briokell, J., said: “Parties may contract in reference to laws of future
In our view of the case, therefore, we do not think that the law in question is retroactive, or that it affects the certificate of Freeman, or the rights of his beneficiary under it; or if it be considered to have a retroactive operation, that it applies to certificates held by those members who cannot comply with its terms, and whom to construe it to include would operate as a complete destruction of their certificate and their rights under it, and as a .repudiation by the society of its obligation.
It follows that the judgment must be affirmed.