Cathcart v. Equitable Mutual Life Ass'n

82 N.W. 964, 111 Iowa 471
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 18, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 82 N.W. 964 (Cathcart v. Equitable Mutual Life Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cathcart v. Equitable Mutual Life Ass'n, 82 N.W. 964, 111 Iowa 471 (iowa 1900).

Opinion

Given, L

1 I. There is no dispute as to the facts, and we will avail ourselves of the following concise statement thereof made by the defendant’s counsel: “On the 8th day of October, 1887, the Io-wa Masons’ Benevolent Society, a mutual benefit association, incorporated under the laws of Iowa,' issued to Aaron D. Wetherell a certificate of membership in which plaintiffs in this action were named as beneficiaries. On the 24th day of June, 1896, the officers of,said Iowa Masons’ Benevolent Society and the officers of this defendant, Equitable Mutual Life Association, executed a certain instrument purporting to be a contract of consolidation between said Iowa Masons’ Benevolent Society and this defendant, which is set out as Exhibit 2 of appellant’s abstract (page 47 ei seq.f). It will be necessary hereafter to notice in detail certain of the provisions of this contract. The present action is brought upon the certificate of membership issued by the said Iowa Masons’ Benevolent Society and the alleged agreement of this defendant, contained in such contract of consolidation, and plaintiffs ask judgment for two thousand dollars and interest, and that defendant be compelled to levy an assessment upon all its members, and to account for alleged trust funds in the hands of defendant, and for other relief. It is an undisputed fact that Aaron D. Wetherell, the person on whose life the certificate of the Iowa Masons’ Benevolent Society was issued, was over seventy-seven years of age at the date, of the execution and delivery of the alleged contract of consolidation, and that said Wetherell had not, prior to that date, been a member of this defendant. It is further undisputed that subsequently -to [474]*474the making of such alleged contract of consolidation the defendant assessed the members of the _ Iowa Masons’ Benevolent Society on certain claims for death losses in such society, and many of the members of the Iowa Masons’ Benevolent Society, including the said A. D.. Wetherell, paid such assessments. The defendant disbursed the mortuary part of the funds so derived from the membership of the Iowa Masons’. Benevolent Society among the beneficiaries named in certificates of membership issued by that society upon which claims had accrued, and also advanced from its own mortuary funds, in order to pay the limit of liability on such certificates of membership, sums in the aggregate exceeding two thousand eight hundred dollars. Afterwards A. D. Wetherell died, and proofs of his death were furnished to. defendant at about the same time proofs of death of three other members of the Iowa Masons’ Benevolent Society were furnished. The defendant thereupon levied its assessment No. 4 upon the members of the Iowa Masons’ Benevolent Society for the deaths of such four members of that society; and, for the purpose of reimbursing its own mortuary fund for the money theretofore advanced, also included in the same assessment the names of three of its own members upon whose certificates of membership in this .defendant claims had accrued, thereby assessing the members of the Iowa Masons’ Benevolent Society by its assessment No. 4 for four deaths in said Iowa Masons’ Benevolent Society and three deaths in the defendant association. The defendant realized on this assessment for seven deaths from the members of the Iowa Masons’ Benevolent Society about six thousand dollars, a certain per cent, of which, however, was expense fund under the by-laws of such society. The certificate of membership of the Iowa Masons’ .Benevolent Society upon which the action is brought did not provide for the payment to the beneficiaries of the proceeds of an assessment, but did require such society, in case of a claim accruing on the certificate, to pay to the beneficiaries named therein certain [475]*475amounts for each member of such society in good standing at the date of such death, the provision of the contract in this respect being as follows (plaintiffs’ Exhibit 1, abstract 40) : ‘That the Iowa Masons’ Benevolent Society * * * does promise and agree to and with the said Aaron D. Wetherell, to pay or cause to be paid to his children, Maria Cathcart and Erank D. Wetherell, equally * * * after due notice and satisfactory evidence’ of the death of the said Aaron D. Wetherell shall have been received at the office of this society, for every member, of the first division of this society at such death as follows: Eor every member of the first class, seventy cents; of the second class, eighty cents; of the third class, one dollar and five cents; of the fourth class, one dollar and sixty cents; provided, however, that the aggregate sum so to be paid by this society shall in no case exceed the sum of two thousand dollars.’ The membership of the Iowa Masons’ Benevolent Society, at the date of the death of A. D. Wetherell, was such, as shown by the undisputed evidence, that there was due from such society, under the provisions of the certificate hereinbefore quoted, the sum of one thousand seventy-five dollars and forty-one cents; that is, there were in the first division of said society at the date of the death of said Wetherell sixty-one members in the first class, two hundred and ninety-seven members in the second class, four hundred and eighty-six members in the third class, and one hundred and seventy-eight members in the fourth class. The, defendant, prior to the commencement of this action, and after the execution of the alleged contract of consolidation, received from the Iowa Masons’ Benevolent Society, under the provisions of such contract, a conveyance of certain real estate in the city of Oskaloosa, subject to mortgages thereon. The defendant tendered to plaintiffs the amount of money due to them under the contract of the Iowa Masons’ Benevolent Society as above computed, and denied liability for any, further amount. The court below entered’a judgment against [476]*476the defendant for this sum, with interest, amounting in the aggregate to one thousand one hundred and thirty-six dollars and thirty cents, and ordered the defendant to make an assessment upon all its members who became such after the execution of the alleged contract of consolidation, and pay the proceeds derived therefrom to the plaintiffs. The defendant complied with the judgment of the court to the extent of paying to the plaintiffs the said sum of one thousand one hundred and thirty-six dollars and thirty cents and the costs of the action, and appeals from the order of the court requiring it to assess its members who became such after the date of the alleged contract of consolidation, and from all other portions of'the decree. The plaintiffs appealed from the judgment and decree in so far as it was adverse to them.” The contract of consolidation is important as showing the relations and rights of the parties, but it need not be set out at length, but simply such parts as are hereafter noticed.

2 3 II. The defendant’s first, contention may be summed up as follows: That Aaron D. Wethrell, deceased, being over sixty-five years of age at the time said contract of con- • solidation was entered into, could not, under the law, become a member of the defendant association, and therefore neither the defendant nor its members are liable to the plaintiffs. It is not questioned but that, by the terms of the contract, the membership of the Masons’ Society was transferred to and received by the defendant association as members thereof, and that defendant agreed to carry out the contracts, between said members and the Masons’ Society.

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Bluebook (online)
82 N.W. 964, 111 Iowa 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cathcart-v-equitable-mutual-life-assn-iowa-1900.