Alexander v. Parker

42 Ill. App. 455, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 292
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 3, 1891
StatusPublished

This text of 42 Ill. App. 455 (Alexander v. Parker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. Parker, 42 Ill. App. 455, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 292 (Ill. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Boggs, J.

The general statutes of the State of Massachusetts provide for the incorporation of associations for charitable, educational and benevolent purposes, and empower any such association when incorporated, to provide by its by-laws for the payment by each member to the association of a fixed smn to create a fund for the purpose of assisting the widow, orphans or other relatives of deceased members or any person dependent upon the deceased members. The Supreme Council of the Boyal Arcanum became incorporated under these statutes. The certificate of its incorporation recites that the council was formed for the purpose of fraternal union, aid to its members and their dependents. Its constitution declares that one of the objects of the order is, “To give all moral and material aid in its power to its members and those dependent upon them.”

See. 1 of Law 3 of its Book of Laws provides for the issuance of benefit certificates to its members, and the second section of the same law designates two classes of persons to whom such benefits may be made payable, viz.:

Class first. To a member’s wife, children, grandchildren, father, mother, grandparents, brother or sister, in either of which cases no proof of dependency shall be required before the issuing of the benefit certificate.

Class second. To any other person who is dependent upon the members for maintenance (food, clothing, lodging or education), in which case written evidence of the dependency, within the requirements of the laws of this order, must be furnished to the satisfaction of the supreme secretary before the benefit certificate can be issued-.

Sec. 6 of Law 3 has reference to the rights of both of these classes of persons and it is as follows:

“Ho benefit shall be made payable to any person or persons of the second class, mentioned in paragraph two of this section, unless the dependency therein required to be shown exists at the time of the member’s death, in which case proof of such dependency at the member’s death shall be furnished in writing to the satisfaction of the supreme regent before the payment of the benefit shall be made. If at the time of the death of such member, the dependency herein required shall have ceased, or shall be found not to have existed, or if the designation shall fail for illegality or otherwise, then the benefit shall be payable to the person or persons mentioned in class first, paragraph two of this section, if living, in the order of the precedence as therein enumerated. If no one of said class shall be living at the death of the member, the benefit shall revert to the widows and orphans’ benefit fund.”

On the 15th of June, 1883, Edwin H. Turner, Sr., then a resident of Quincy, Illinois, became a member of the Royal Arcanum and received a benefit certificate of the order, binding it to pay out of its benefit fund, at the time of his death, the sum of §3,000 to Mrs. Laura A. Parker (“affianced wife”).

Edwin H. Turner, Sr., died October, 1888, leaving this benfit certificate in full force. He left surviving him no widow, and the appellants are his only children and next of kin. The fund to be paid under the benefit certificate was claimed by the appellants and also by Laura A. Parker, the appellee.

The Royal Arcanum, admitting a liability to pay to one or the other of the claimants, by a bill in chancery properly framed for that purpose, required them to interplead in the Circuit Court of Adams County, into which court the society prayed leave to pay the money, to be awarded to the persons entitled to receive it.

Upon a hearing of such interpleaders the fund was awarded to Laura A. Parker and this appeal is brought to reverse such decree and award of the Circuit Court.

It is first assigned for error that the appellee was allowed to testify in her own behalf. Appellants insist that she was not a competent witness as to occurrences before the death of Edwin H. Turner, Sr., because they are, as they contend, prosecuting their claim to the fund and defending against her claim thereto as the heirs of their father.

The fund upon the face of the certificate is payable to the appellee, as the affianced wife ” of Turner.

Funds raised by the Boyal Arcanum can, however, only be paid to persons of one or the other classes designated by the statutes of the State creating the society, and añ “ affianced wife ” is not included in either class.

The appellee can not, therefore, take from the fund by reason of the provision in the certificate making it payable to her as affianced wife.” She may, however, receive the fund if she was, within the meaning of such statute, dependent upon the deceased member. The appellants deny that such dependency existed, and assert that in the absence of such a dependency the fund vests in them as the heirs of the deceased, and that therefore they are heirs defending as against her claim to the fund and prosecuting a claim of their own as heirs.

Sec. 6 of Law 3 of the Book of Laws of the Arcanum provides that if the requisite dependency does not exist, the fund shall be paid to the persons mentioned in the first class of beneficiaries in the order of precedence therein mentioned.

This order of precedence is: 1, member’s wife; 2, children; 3, grandchildren; 4, father; 5, mother; 6, grandparents; 7, brother or sister.

If no state of dependency is found to exist in the beneficiary named, then under the operation of this law of the Arcanum the member’s wife would take the fund to the exclusion of all other relatives—not as an heir of the deceased, but purely by the operation of the rules and regulations of the society. If there be no dependent beneficiary and no wife, then the fund goes by the same rules and regulations not to the heirs of the deceased member but to his children.

It would come to them notas an inheritance from the father, nor to them as heirs, but as a class of beneficiaries under the laws of the society. The' laws of descent and inheritance would not so cast the fund, for grandchildren who are heirs at law are not beneficiaries under the rules and regulations controlling this fund, except there be no wife or children to take. Therefore it can not be said that the appellants are prosecuting or defending as heirs; hence the appellee was a competent witness in her own behalf.

Complaint is made of the ruling of the court permitting the appellee to testify that her husband left no property when he died, and in permitting her to state, as a total, the average amount contributed to her by the deceased member from 1883 to his death, and that such contributions were necessary for her support, and also in refusing to require appellee to answer as to whether or not her sisters, whom she said were also living with her mother, were employed and earning wages, and also in refusing to require her to state whether she paid her mother more for her board than her sisters paid. It is also complained that the court allowed Mrs. Lee, a sister of and witness for appellee, to testify that the appellee was “ dependent,” and in refusing to strike such testimony from the record.

One of the issues to be determined from the evidence was the alleged dependency of the appellee.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hughes & McCart v. Frisby
81 Ill. 188 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1876)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 Ill. App. 455, 1891 Ill. App. LEXIS 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-parker-illappct-1891.