Coleman v. Anderson

86 S.W. 730, 98 Tex. 570, 1905 Tex. LEXIS 143
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1905
DocketNo. 1414.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 86 S.W. 730 (Coleman v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coleman v. Anderson, 86 S.W. 730, 98 Tex. 570, 1905 Tex. LEXIS 143 (Tex. 1905).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

Plaintiffs in error, W. H. Coleman and R. B. Coleman, brought this action to recover of the defendants in error, Anderson, Evans & Evans, the possession of a benefit certificate issued by the Knights of Honor to R. B. Coleman as a member of that order, by which it agreed to pay to W. H. Coleman, son of the member, upon the latter’s death,"the sum of $2000.

The defense- was that the certificate was held, under the contract hereinafter stated, to secure the repayment of sums advanced to W. H. Coleman to pay the dues and assessments upon it and another certificate from *574 the same order, for a like amount, to W. H. Coleman, also a member, of which his wife was beneficiary.

The evidence in the District Court showed that, after the issuance of the certificate sued for, B. B. Coleman delivered it to W. H. Coleman, the beneficiary, without any agreement between them as to the payment of dues and assessments to the order. W. H. Coleman, considering that it was his duty to make such payments, entered into an agreement with W. H. Levy by which the latter was to pay the sums thus becoming duo from time to time upon the two certificates named and was to be reimbursed his expenditures out of the benefits, or either of them, when paid, and, as security, the certificates were delivered to him by W. H. Coleman and his wife under written instruments executed by them embodying the contract. Under this agreement Levy acted for many years and advanced the money necessary to keep the certificates in force, until he failed in business and made a deed of trust to creditors, by proceedings under which all of his rights, including those arising under this contract, passed to Anderson, Evans & Ward, which firm made further advancements until Ward retired from the firm, assigning all his interest to the defendants’ firm as now constituted. The defendants, after making some further payments, declined to make others without some understanding with W. H. Coleman, who denied their right to do so, and the latter has himself since paid the dues and assessments upon the certificates. The advancements made upon the two certificates, as stated by -the Court - of Civil Appeals, amounted almost to $1800. B. B. Coleman did not testify and there is no evidence in the record that he ever at any time objected to the payment of the dues and assessments under the contract as stated.

The certificate in dispute was not introduced in evidence, and no proof was made of its contents beyond what has been stated. The only evidence as to the laws of the order is contained in the following, designated in the record, as “Laws and Official Decisions of the Supreme Dictators and Supreme Lodge of the Knights of Honor,” the date of the promulgation of which, as well as that of the issuance of the certificate, are left to conjecture.

“Sec. 206. Benefit certificates can in no sense be denominated commercial paper, and therefore can hot be assigned as collateral security or otherwise. They can not be sold so as to give the purchaser any valid claim on the widows and orphans benefit fund.

“Sec. 207. A member can not dispose of his benefit certificate, or part of it, to a party who will agree to pay. all his assessments.

“Sec. 208. A member can not assign his benefit certificate to secure a debt.

“Sec. 209. A member can not assign any portion of the benefit certificate to which his beneficiaries may be entitled.

“Sec. 210. A beneficiary of a member during his life has no Interest in the benefit certificate, and can not assign it.

*575 “Sec. 212. A benefit certificate can not be collateral security. The member has and retains complete control over same. He can cnange it at his will and pleasure in the manner provided by law. It is not a policy of insurance and can not be assigned as security. We are permitted by our charter to raise a fund only for the protection of members of our families and dependents, and not for the benefit of creditors.”

The District Court rendered judgment for plaintiffs for the recovery of the certificate, and for defendants for the amount paid by them upon It alone. The Court of Civil Appeals reversed this judgment and gave judgment that plaintiffs take nothing, etc., without prejudice to their right to reclaim the certificate upon payment of the amount advanced by defendants and their assignors under the contract stated for dues and assessments upon both certificates.

The chief contention of counsel for plaintiffs in error is that the right to the possession and control of the certificates is in E. B. Coleman and Is unaffected by the contract between W. H. Coleman and other parties The difficulty in sustaining this position is that the member voluntarily placed the paper in the possession of the beneficiary and has allowed the latter to make the arrangement with the other parties, on faith of which they have paid out their money. He has for years accepted the benefit of such payment, and by his silence has evidently acquiesced in the course pursued. In this way his connection with the order has been maintained and the certificate kept alive, and it is not with good grace that he now asks a court of equity to undo what he himself has done, and deprive the other parties of the frail security which they have taken and. at the same time,“leave him and his son in the enjoyment of the advantage gained. To sustain such a claim the law and the facts in his favor should be made very clear.

Treating the certificate as affected by the only rules of the order introduced in evidence, as plaintiffs claim it should be treated, it invested the member .with no property interest in the benefit. His only right, with respect to the benefit, was to appoint a beneficiary to receive the money at his death, and the beneficiary named could only be one or more among those designated by the laws of the order, namely: "Members of our families and dependents,” and not creditors. The money to be paid could never go to him or to his estate, according to this rule; and, in this state of things, the authorities are ample to the effect that the only right of a member of such an order with respect to the benefit is that of appointment just stated. They are cited in Bacon on Benefit Societies, sec. 237; 3 Am. and Eng. Enc. of Law, 990-993. In Sclionfield v. Turner, 75 Texas, 329-330, there are expressions to the effect that the member -owned the beneficial interest in the certificate and that a beneficiary who had no insurable interest in the life of the member held it in trust for the member; but the certificate ,there in question was issued at a time when the member was allowed by the order to make it payable “as he mav direct,” and this would have permitted him to make it payable to hi« *576 estate. At least this much was evidently assumed, since the court held that, as the named beneficiary had no insurable interest beyond the amount advanced, the heirs were entitled to the money. The decision does not conflict with the rule stated by us, that under the rules shown in this case the member, during life, has no property interest in b the-benefit, but only the power to appoint a beneficiary among the class designated by the laws of the order. That right R. B.

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Bluebook (online)
86 S.W. 730, 98 Tex. 570, 1905 Tex. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coleman-v-anderson-tex-1905.