After the issues had been made up, judgment, on-motion of plaintiffs, was entered in their favor for the amount of the certificate of insurance less deductions for the reserve fund. Necessarily, this ruling was based on facts conceded by the pleadings, and these may be stated. The defendant is a fraternal society organized under chapter 9 of title 9 of the Code, and as such delivered to Geo. D. Wood a certificate of insurance, May 31, 1899, with his then wife, Ella E. Wood, named therein as beneficiary. ,The certificate in terms made the application part thereof, and agreed “that in event of my death by suicide, whether sane or insane, any certificate issued upon said application by said order shall be void.” A by-law allowedi any member to change beneficiaries if the -assured pay to the correspondent a fee of fifty cents and deliver to him the benefit certificate with written surrender on the back thereof and directions as to the change desired and name and relationship of the beneficiary. “The correspondent shall then forward the certificate with the fee of fifty cents to the chief correspondent, who shall at’ once issue a benefit certificate as requested.” Ella
Assuming, ■ as we must, that the certificate had never reached the insured, there could have been no acquiescence on his part in the change from the certificate surrendered whereby the monthly assessments were increased and the indemnity decreased by the reservation clause. As to these, there had been no agrément. Mutual assent, the meeting of the minds, as essential to a contract of insurance as any other, was utterly wanting. Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. Young,
