Basye v. Adams

81 Ky. 368, 1883 Ky. LEXIS 75
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 16, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 81 Ky. 368 (Basye v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Basye v. Adams, 81 Ky. 368, 1883 Ky. LEXIS 75 (Ky. Ct. App. 1883).

Opinion

JUDGE LEWIS

DELIVERED TIIE OPINION OF THE COURT.

September 13, 1878, the National Mutual Benefit Association, in consideration of the payment by him of six dollars membership fee, two dollars annual fee, and his agreement [370]*370to pay the further sum of two dollars on each anniversary of his membership, and three dollars within thirty days after the death of any member of the association, issued and delivered to J. R. Throckmorton a certificate of life membership, in which it was agreed by the association to pay to the estate of Throckmorton, within sixty days after proof of his death, such sum as might be realized from an assessment on all surviving members, as provided in the sixth section of the charter.

March 3, 1881, in consideration of five hundred dollars, fifty of which was in discharge of an existing debt, and the balance cash paid, Throckmorton, in writing annexed to it, assigned to appellant Basye the certificate, "and all the benefit and advantage to be derived therefrom.” And thereafter he paid all dues and assessments which Throckmorton had, in consideration of the certificate and as a life-member of the association, agreed to pay, amounting to sixty-three dollars, and also expended the sum of fifty-five dollars in procuring formal proof of the death of Throckmorton.

The amount found due and payable by the association, after the death of Throckmorton, which occurred in July, 1881, is the sum of four thousand dollars; and whether that sum, which was deposited by the association, subject to the disposal of the court, should be paid to the administrator of his estate who is the plaintiff in the action, or to appellees, his legal heirs, or to appellant as assignee of the policy, was the question presented and decided by the lower court.

The chancellor rendered judgment for the repayment to appellant Basye out of the fund in court the sum of five hundred dollars, the consideration paid for the assignment of the policy, and the other two sums advanced and paid [371]*371by him subsequently, and to appellees, legal heirs of deceased, the balance of the amount. And of that judgment both Basye and the heirs complain, each party claiming to be entitled to the whole amount.

As the administrator has not appealed, and it does npt appear from the record that there are any creditors of the estate of deceased, unless appellant may be regarded as one, the issue to be here determined as to the ownership of the fund is between Basye and the heirs.

The National Mutual Benefit Association was, by an act of the general assembly, approved April 6, 1878, created a body-corporate, with the right to acquire and hold real and personal property, not exceeding one hundred thousand ■dollars in value; to make contracts, sue and be sued, and to transact all busiicss for its corporate purposes; and power was also given to it to confer charities, as provided in the charter, or as the president and directors may determine.

By section 2 of the charter it is provided that the persons named therein may constitute a board to do business, and organize and receive as members all clergymen, physicians, lawyers, their wives, and such persons as may be recommended by a member of either of these professions, of good standing, sound health and constitution, and who shall pass a satisfactory medical examination, and be between the ages of eighteen and sixty-five years.

Section 3 provides that each person, on application for membership, shall pay into the treasury of the association certain fees, and “upon the payment of these sums, each member shall receive a life-membership certificate,..... which shall express on its face the obligations of such member, and the benefits to accrue to the legal heirs or beneficiary of the same in the event of death.”

[372]*372Section 5 is as follows: “The membership and annual fees paid into the treasury by each member, together with assessments, after paying the legal heirs or beneficiary of a. deceased member and the expenses of the association, shall form a permanent fund, which may, at the discretion of the directors, be appropriated to relieving the necessities of sick or disabled members, by granting a weekly sum, not to exceed fen dollars a week, for a time not longer than twenty weeks, consecutively, to be paid to such sick or disabled members, or in such charities as they may direct.”

Section 6 provides that “upon the death of a member, each surviving member shall pay into the treasury the mortuary fee stipulated in the certificate of membership, which sum shall constitute a fund, to be paid within sixty days-from the date of proof of death, to the legal heirs or beneficiary of the deceased member, less twenty per centum to be deducted for permanent fund and expenses.”

Section 7 provides that any member failing to pay his assessment within thirty days, as provided in section 6, shall forfeit his membership and all benefits arising therefrom, &c.

Section 8 is as follows: “No part of the interest of any member of the association shall be subject to any debt, liability, or legal or equitable process against them, or which may alienate the benefits from the legal heirs.”

The first question to be considered is, whether the assignment of the certificate to appellant is valid for any purpose.

It will b'e observed that the association was incorporated for two distinct objects, and that provision was made in the charter for raising two distinct funds.' One of the objects is to relieve the necessities of sick and disabled members, or to confer charities, in the discretion of the directors, and for [373]*373that purpose a permanent fund is provided for by the charter. The other object is to pay the legal heirs or beneficiary of a deceased member such sum as may be realized from an assessment on all surviving members, less twenty per cent., to be deducted for the permanent fund and expenses.

It will also be observed that it requires the consent of the association to become a member thereof, only certain classes of persons, or those possessing prescribed qualifications, being admissible, and that each applicant for membership is required to pay certain fixed fees before being admitted as a member.

It is therefore clear that the assignment of the certificate to appellant did not have the effect of investing him with the personal privileges of a life-member of the association, or giving him any interest in the permanent fund which, according to a fair construction of the charter, is to be used for the benefit only of members of the association. It thus follows, if the assignment was valid and effectual for the purpose it was intended to accomplish, that while appellant was bound to pay all the assessments and fees required of a member to prevent forfeiture of the policy, and was entitled to the fund payable at the death of Throckmorton, the latter still retained all the other rights and privileges of life-membership which appellant did not nor could possess -merely in virtue of the assignment to him.

The fund to be paid upon the death of a member of the .association must, according to the charter, be paid to the legal heirs or beneficiary of such deceased member.

It is not pretended that appellant is a legal heir, nor, in our opinion, is he a beneficiary in the sense that, keeping in view the nature and objects of the association, we are required to use that term.

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Bluebook (online)
81 Ky. 368, 1883 Ky. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/basye-v-adams-kyctapp-1883.