Compton's Estate

25 Pa. Super. 28, 1904 Pa. Super. LEXIS 8
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 18, 1904
DocketAppeal, No. 81
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 25 Pa. Super. 28 (Compton's Estate) 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
Compton's Estate, 25 Pa. Super. 28, 1904 Pa. Super. LEXIS 8 (Pa. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Opinion by

Rice, P. J.,

When, in 1897, Cornelius Compton, the decedent, made application to become a member of the D. L. & W. Mutual Aid Association he had a minor son, who at that time and until the death of the former, lived with his mother, the divorced wife of Compton, and her second husband. He had no other family.

[30]*30Article 15 of the constitution and by-laws contains the following sections, to which reference will have to be made in this discussion: “Section 5. In case of the death of a member in good standing, either from sickness arising'from natural causes or from an injury received in a manner not prescribed by these by-laws, the person or persons named in his declaration shall receive a sum equal in amount to $1.00 for each member in good standing in the association at the date of the death of said member; provided, however, that such amount shall not exceed the sum of $1,000, which amount shall be paid within sixty days from the date of receipt of notice of death by the association, which notice must be in writing, approved by at least two members of the committee on injury, and shall be accompanied by the proper proof of death. Section 6. Benefits in case of death shall be paid to the person or persons named by the member in bis declaration, or in case of their death to his estate. Section 9. In case a member had not any family or relatives to become heir to the benefits arising from this association, the expenses incurred for the proper interment of his remains will be paid from the amount due said member by the trustees ; the balance, if any, shall be placed in the general fund; provided, however, no application be made by legitimate heirs sixty days after interment, and in case such claimants should appear they must present sworn proof that they are entitled to any consideration in the premises. Any claims presented later than the limit of this article shall not be considered.”

In his declaration, accompanying and forming part of his application for membership, appear the following question and answer: “ To whom shall the benefits arising from your connection with this organization be paid ? Name. To my estate. Related to me as .” We infer that the words, “ To my estate ” are in writing and that the other words are part of the printed blank. The application was accepted and thereupon the association issued a certificate declaring Compton to be a member of the association and “ entitled to all the rights and privileges in said association and entitled to all benefits arising therefrom, in accordance with and subject to the constitution and by-laws of said association. Death benefits to be paid to my estate, related to said member - , or in event [31]*31of death before his, to .” This awkwardness of expression, both in the application and in the certificate, is doubtless due to carelessness in filling up the printed blanks that were used, but the meaning is perfectly plain.

Compton died on July 22,1901, and letters of administration were granted to his brother Jacob, to whom the association paid the sum de-man dable under the certificate of membership. Shortly before the audit of his final account the claim was made, in the form of an exception to his account, by the guardian of Lorin C. Compton, the decedent’s minor son, that this fund constituted no* part of the estate of the decedent and was not subject to the payment of his debts or the costs of administration. The orphans’ court sustained the claim and decreed “ that the administrator pay the fund received from the D. L. & W. Mutual Aid Association to the guardian of Lorin C. Compton, the son of the decedent.” No question has been raised by appellant’s counsel as to the appropriateness or as to the regularity of the proceedings which were chosen by the appellee for the determination of the ownership of the fund and which terminated in this decree, and we will raise none. As between the administrator of the decedent and the guardian of his minor son who was entitled to the fund ? In the consideration of this question we will first briefly review the principal cases cited by the court below and the appellee’s counsel in support of the guardian’s claim.

In N. W. Masonic Aid Association v. Jones et al., 154 Pa. 99, the agreement, as shown by the certificate, was to pay the money “ to the devisees or, if no will, to the heirs at law ” of the member. —He died leaving a will by which he appointed an executor, but made no specific bequest of the benefits or specific direction as to them, and it was held that the word “ heirs ” did not mean “ executor ” or “estate” but the distributees under the intestate laws, and that the executor was not a “ devisee ” within the meaning of the certificate.

In Masonic Mutual Association against the same defendants, 154 Pa. 107, the agreement was to pay the money “ to the legal heirs of the assured ” and it was held that as he made no change in the beneficiary in the manner prescribed by the rules of the association the executor had no right to the fund.

In Fischer v. American Legion of Honor, 168 Pa. 279, the [32]*32by-laws of the association provided that “ in the event of the death of all the beneficiaries selected by the member, before the death of such member, if no other or further disposition thereof be made in accordance with the provisions of these by-laws, the benefit shall be paid to the widow.” A member named his wife as the beneficiary and after her death married again and subsequently died without having made any change in his certificate. It was held that the beneficiary first designated had no vested interest in the fund and therefore her administrator had no right to claim it. The grounds of the decision appear in the following quotation from Justice Fell’s opinion: “It was the right of Charles F. Fischer after the death of his first wife to name a new beneficiary within the limits as to persons and classes prescribed. Upon his failure to do so the law of the association fixed the persons to be benefited. Of this law he presumably had knowledge, and his acquiescence in the selection made by it had all the effect of a new appointment by him.”

In Hodge’s Appeal, 8 W. N. C. 209, the by-laws of the association provided that “ the premium to be paid in case of the death of any member of this company may be disposed of by his last will and testament, otherwise it shall belong to, and be paid to, his widow, and in case he shall leave no widow, then the heirs and legal representatives of the deceased.” It was held that by “ heirs and legal representatives ” was evidently meant next of kin under the intestate laws of the commonwealth, and as the member did not exercise the power of appointment by will, the fund was payable to them and not to his administrator.

In Hunter v. Firemen’s Relief and Benevolent Association, 20 Pa. Superior Ct. 605, the member did not designate a beneficiary. We held that the only contract between him and the society was that which grew out of his membership and that, giving this the interpretation most favorable to him, it was a contract to pay the deatli benefits to his wife and children or to such person as he should designate in the manner prescribed by the constitution.

In none of these cases was the conclusion, that the executor or administrator was not entitled to the fund, reached by overriding the contract between the association and the member, [33]*33but by a construction of it in accordance with its true intent and meaning.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Pa. Super. 28, 1904 Pa. Super. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comptons-estate-pasuperct-1904.