Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. Veltri

37 Pa. Super. 399, 1908 Pa. Super. LEXIS 295
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 12, 1908
DocketAppeal, No. 195
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 37 Pa. Super. 399 (Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. Veltri) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. Veltri, 37 Pa. Super. 399, 1908 Pa. Super. LEXIS 295 (Pa. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinions

Opinion by

Orlad y, J.,

In 1889, Vincenzo Greco, while a resident of Italy, was there married to Maria Veltri. Subsequently, he came to the United States, and in 1902 was married to Maria D’Angelo, and with whom he lived as her husband until 1905, when Greco was accidently killed while he was in the employ of the defendant’eompany. In 1904 Greco made an application for and was received into membership in the relief department of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company, by signing an application for full membership, the principal parts of which are as follows:

“I consent and agree to be bound by all the regulations of the Relief Department now in force, and by any other regulations of said Department hereafter adopted applicable to the relief feature. . . . For the purpose of securing the benefits provided by said regulations for a member of Class A, to myself, or in the event of my death, to my wife Maria D’Angelo, or to whomever I may hereafter, from time to time, designate in writing, by way of substitution, with the written consent of the superintendent; or if no such beneficiary be then living, then to my next of kin. I expressly stipulate that my marriage ipso facto, shall have the effect of substituting my wife in the place and stead of the beneficiary named above, to receive such benefits in the evént of my death, if she be then living,' except as to children by a former marriage, who may have a claim as beneficiaries, and in that event my said wife shall have one half of said benefits. I further agree that this application, when accepted by the superintendent, shall constitute a contract between myself and the said company, as a condition of my employment by the company. I further agree that in consideration of the contribution of said company to the relief department, and of the guarantee by it of the payment of the benefits as aforesaid, the acceptance of benefits from the relief department for injuries or death shall operate as a release of all claims against said company, or any company owning or operating its branches or divisions, or any company over whose railroad, right of. way or property the said Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company shall have the right [403]*403to run or operate its engines or cars, or send, its employees in the performance of their duty, for damages by reason of such injury or death which could be made by or through me; and that the said superintendent may require, as an additional precedent in the payment of such benefits, that all acts, by him deemed proper or necessary to effect a full release and discharge to said company from any such claim, be done by those who might bring suit for damages by reason of such injury or death. I understand and agree that each of the statements herein contained and each of my answers to the questions asked by the medical examiner, and hereto annexed, shall constitute a warranty by me, the truth whereof shall be a condition of payment of the benefits aforesaid.”

The relief department is not separately incorporated, but all employees of the company are required to become members thereof, and it is provided that the regulations governing the relief department of the railroad company shall supply the place of the by-laws of an ordinary beneficial association. Two of these regulations are as follows:

“Third. The relief feature will afford relief to those members entitled thereto, when they are disabled by injury or sickness, and to their families in the event of their death.”
“ Eighteenth. The beneficiary or beneficiaries named in any application for full membership, if the applicant be married, must be his wife, or his wife and children. No one shall be entitled, as the beneficiary of a member, who is not his widow, or a relative not more remote than first cousin; except in case of an assignment to the superintendent of a natural death benefit, to secure a loan from the saving feature, or in case of the taking of a special natural death benefit for that purpose.”

After the death of Greco, the railroad company ascertained that there were two claimants for this fund, each asserting herself to be the lawful widow of the decedent. The company admitting the genuineness of the contract, and the death of Greco, in ‘ order to avoid interest, costs and expenses incident to threatened litigation at the instance of these parties, filed a bill in equity, in which these claimants were named as defendants, setting out the facts, and its willingness to pay the money to [404]*404the party justly-entitled thereto, but owing to the dispute it had not been able to do so. To this bill each claimant filed an answer. This appellant, Maria D’Angelo, admitted all the averments contained in the bill and concluded, “I am ready to interplead with Maria Veltri as prayed for in the bill, and to submit myself to the further order of the court.” Whereupon, it appearing to the court that one of the two women was the rightful widow of Greco, it was ordered that the money should be paid into court and “the claimants interplead between themselves; that as between the claimants the court retain further jurisdiction in the cause for making such inquiry as it may deem just and proper as to their conflicting claims.” The case was then heard on the answers of the two defendants and a decree was entered directing the money to be paid to Maria Veltri, as the rightful widow. From this decree the other claimant took this appeal. The claim of each is founded on the application of Greco, and the payment of the fund into court did not add any merit to the right of either. They being the only claimants of the fund, the railroad company did not acknowledge the validity of either claim, but simply and only that one of the two was the rightful claimant. The fund was properly paid into court to be distributed in accordance with the law, under the authority of Fodell v. Miller, 193 Pa. 570; Penna. Railroad Co. v. Wolfe, 203 Pa. 269; Schoales v. Order of Sparta, 206 Pa. 11. Bringing money into court is said to be an admission of a legal demand only, and beyond the amount of the sum brought in, it is no acknowledgment of a right of action; therefore if the plaintiff proceeds further it is at his peril. After the payment of money into court the cause goes on substantially in the same manner as if the money had not been paid in at all. In other words, the defendant is not precluded by it from making a defense which goes to the whole cause of action: 1 Tidd’s Practice, *624, *625; Elliott v. Lycoming County Mutual Insurance Co., 66 Pa. 22. Payment of money into court is no acknowledgment of the plaintiff’s right of action. Whatever may have been the legal consequence of such payment in ancient pleading, no such effect is longer given to it: Hall v. Blackburn, 173 Pa. 310.

[405]*405It is conceded that Maria D’Angelo had no knowledge of the former marriage of Greco, and it must also be conceded that the railroad company would not have assented to the naming of Maria D’Angelo as the beneficiary if the fact of an earlier marriage had been known. The designation “to my wife, Maria D’Angelo, ” was false in fact, and must have been so known to Greco. The purpose of the contract was not simply insurance, though this feature might well be the object of Greco, but as to the.railroad company, the purpose was to protect the company from litigation at the instance of persons entitled under our statutes to recover in case of death or injury. The application provides for the contingency of an improper or unlawful designation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
37 Pa. Super. 399, 1908 Pa. Super. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baltimore-ohio-railroad-v-veltri-pasuperct-1908.