122 Mo. App. 591 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1907
On April 13, 1899, defendant issued to .Phillip Zimmermann the following certificate of insurance:
“Supreme Tent, K.. O. T. M. of the World. No. 11054. $1,000. This certifies that Sir Knight Phillip Zimmermann has been regularly admitted as a member of Imperial Tent No. 52. Located at St. Louis, State of Missouri, and that in accordance with, and under the provisions of the laws of the order he is entitled to- all the rights, benefits, and privileges of membership therein, and that at his death one assessment on the member*595 ship not exceeding in amount the sum of one thousand dollars will be paid as a benefit to Phillip Zimmermann, Jr., bearing relationship' to him of son, upon satisfactory proof of his death together with the surrender of-this certificate, provided he shall have in every particular complied with the laws of the order now in force.or that may hereafter be adopted, and has not obtained his membership by fraud or misrepresentation as to his age, family history, physical condition or occupation, when admitted to membership, as shown by his application which is hereby made a part of this certificate.”
On the back of the certificate were printed certain references to provisions of the laws of the defendant order which were made a part of the certificate. One of these laws reads as follows:
“When Certificate Void. — If the member commits suicide within five years after his admission to the order, whether sane or insane, all that his beneficiary shall be entitled to is the sum he has paid into the Life Benefit Fund.”
In the application for the certificate (also made a part of the contract) is the following:
“I hereby declare, that the above are fair and true answers to the foregoing questions and I hereby agree that these statements, together with those hereinafter made to the examining physician in this application and the laws of the Supreme Tent of the Knights of the Maccabees of the World, now in force or that may hereafter be adopted, shall form the basis of this contract for beneficial membership.”
At the time of the issuance of the certificate in question, the following law of the association was in full force and effect, being section 173, of the laws of 1897.
“ . . . and no benefit shall be paid on account of the death of any member when death was the result of suicide, within five years after admission, whether the member taking his own life was sane or insane at the
On June 17, 1905, there was a law of the order, in force and effect, providing that “no benefit shall be paid on account of the death of a member who shall die by his own hand, sane or insane.” This law was amended so as to give the beneficiary, in all cases of suicide by the member, an amount equal to twice the amount contributed by the suicide to the life benefit fund (twice the amount of assessment paid in by the suicide during his life).
Zimmermann died on the seventeenth day of June, 1905. The action was to recover the amount of the benefit certificate, with legal interest. The petition is in the usual form for such actions. The answer alleged as a defense, that Zimmermann committed suicide; that during his lifetime he had paid to the life benefit fund eighty-eight dollars and eighty cents, and that prior to the commencement of the suit, defendant tendered plaintiff double this sum (one hundred and seventy-seven dollars and sixty cents) and again tendered the same amount in its answer. At the trial an agreed statement of facts was filed, in which it was admitted that defendant was incorporated as a fraternal benefit association, under the laws of the State of Michigan, and at the time of the issuance of the certificate sued on, and at all times thereafter, was and had been doing business in the State of Missouri, under the laws of 1897, pertaining to fraternal benefit associations, and was a fraternal benefit association, Avithin the meaning of section 1108, Revised Statutes 1899, and duly authorized to do business
Under the pleadings and the agreed statement of facts filed, but two issues were raised: one of fact, viz., Did Zimmermann commit suicide; and one of law, viz., If he did commit suicide, is the right of his beneficiary to a recovery, under the laws of the order, limited to twice the amount paid in by the assured to the life benefit fund of the order? The issue of fact was submitted to the jury, who found that Zimmermann “did, on or about the seventeenth day of June, 1905, commit suicide.” The court notwithstanding the verdict, on motion of plaintiff, rendered judgment for plaintiff for the sum of one thousand and twenty-one dollars and sixteen cents, thus deciding the issue of law against defendant. After taking the usual steps to preserve its exception, defendant appealed.
The question decisive of the case is whether the bylaw, passed after the issuance of the certificate sued on, making suicide a defense, was operative upon the contract of insurance. It has been frequently said, that neither the beneficiary nor the assured has any vested interest in a fraternal benefit certificate. This is true as to the beneficiary before the death' of the member, but the statement is misleading when applied to the insured, for while he has no vested pecuniary interest in the certificate, he has a sort of property interest in the contract, that is, the right to designate who shall be the recipient of his bounty at his death, and the right to keep his contract alive and binding on the association. This right the courts have always protected. For the reason the beneficiary has no vested interest, the courts of this State and elsewhere have uniformly held, that the member may agree in advance that his contract of insurance may be governed and controlled by by-laws then in force, or that ma.y be thereafter enacted by the association. There is, however, a wide divergence in the decis
In his application for insurance, made a part of the contract, Zimmermann agreed that the laws then in force, or that might be adopted thereafter, should form the basis of his contract for the beneficiary membership. ITe agreed that the very foundation of his contract, that
Bacon, in his work on Benefit Societies and Life Insurance, vol. 1, sec. 188a, says: “After a review of most of the authorities, the St. Louis Court of Appeals said: ‘The foregoing cases were all decided on the theory that subsequent by-laws, despite the member’s agreement to' comply with them, cannot defeat or abridge the essential rights created by the policy, but effect only the member’s duties as such; not his interests as a contracting party. In all of them we find the same argument here advanced and accepted by some courts, that the business experience of companies shows them what regulations ought to prevail and that it is necessary that they be permitted to avail themselves of the teachings of experience by enacting new regulations, as needed, to bind all members and control all agreements. There is some merit in that
The judgment is affirmed.