Condon v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Ass'n

42 A. 944, 89 Md. 99, 1899 Md. LEXIS 22
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 14, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 42 A. 944 (Condon v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Condon v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Ass'n, 42 A. 944, 89 Md. 99, 1899 Md. LEXIS 22 (Md. 1899).

Opinion

*108 McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The questions to be decided on this appeal arise on a demurrer interposed by the -appellee to a bill in equity filed by the appellant in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City. The appellant is a resident of Maryland. The appellee is a corporation created under the laws of the State of New York and having its principal office there, though transacting business in Maryland. It is a mutual insurance company formed on and conducting the co-operative, or assessment plan. The appellant is a member of the body corporate and holds one of its certificates of membership issued in eighteen hundred and eighty-four. By this certificate it is provided that “ in consideration of the application for this certificate of membership ” — the application being expressly made a part of the contract — and in consideration of the payment of certain dues and designated mortuary assessments falling due in February, April, June, August, October and December of each year, “ or from such other periods as the board of directors may from time to time determine,” the Mutual Reserve Association “ does hereby receive Levi Z. Condon * * * as a member of said association.” It is then stipulated that the association will upon the death of Condon, during the continuance of the certificate and upon certain conditions, pay to his legal representatives the sum of ten thousand dollars from the death fund of the ) association at the time of said death, or from any moneys that shall be realized to the said fund from the next assessment tobe made.” The certificate further declares: “If at such date as the board of directors of the association may from time to time fix or determine for making an assessment, the death fund is insufficient to meet existing claims by death, an assessment shall then be made upon every member whose certificate is in force at the date of the last death assessed for, and said assessment shañ be made at such rates, according to the age of each member, as may be established by the said board of directors, and the net amount received from such assessment (less twenty-five per cent, to *109 be set apart for the reserve fund) shall go into the death fund.” It is also provided that “the net earnings of the association, together with the twenty-five per cent, of the net receipts from each assessment shall constitute a reserve fund and that “ after the expiration of each period of five years, during the continuance of this certificate of membership, a bond will be issued * * * for an equitable proportion of the reserve fund, and the principal of said bond shall be available ten years from its date towards paying future dues and assessments under this certificate * It is likewise declared that the contract shall be subject to all the provisions and stipulations contained in the constitution and by-laws of the association, “with the amendments made or that may hereafter be made thereto.” And it is agreed that “ the entire contract contained in this certificate and said application taken together, shall be governed by, snbject to, and construed only according to the constitution, by-laws and regulations of said association, and the laws of the State of New York, the place of this contract being expressly agreed to be the home office of said association in the city of New York.” Upon the back of the certificate there is printed a “table of rates ” containing among other things a statement, that “ the basis of the assessment rate for each member according to the age taken at the nearest birthday on each $1,000 shall be as follows,” and then the various ages from twenty-five to sixty-five are set forth and the several sums payable at the respective ages are placed opposite. Condon’s age upon entering the association was fifty-five, and the amount designated as the assessment upon each one thousand dollars at that age is three dollars and twenty-five cents. The appellant paid for some years six assessments annually, each of which amounted to thirty-two dollars and fifty cents. Subsequently the assessment was increased to forty-eight dollars and fifty-five cents, then raised to forty-nine dollars and ten cents, and later on to seventy-five dollars and thirty cents. These sums were paid by Condon “ with extreme reluctance.” On February the *110 first, eighteen hundred and ninety-eight, mortuary call number ninety-six was issued and by it the appellant was required to pay on or before March the third the sum of one hundred and thirty dollars. He alleges that these assessments were enormously in excess of what he understood to be the meaning and effect of his contract with the appellee at the time he entered into it. By a written agreement the time for the payment of the ninety-sixth assessment was extended, first, for thirty days from March the third, and then for thirty days from April the second. Oh the twenty-ninth of April, Condon filed a bill in equity against the appellee in the Circuit Court of Baltimore City; and on June the seventeenth he filed an amended and supplemental bill. These are the bills now before us.

The bill, which was filed by Condon for himself and in behalf of others similarly situated who might come in and make themselves parties to the proceedings, after setting forth the facts already alluded to proceeds to charge that the levying of the assessments in excess of three dollars and twenty-five cents per one thousand dollars of insurance and in excess of six per annum is a gross violation by the appellee of its contract with the appellant and is both fraudulent and illegal: That the validity of this action cannot be maintained upon the ground that by a strained interpretation of some of the conditions of the policy the levying of assessments is remitted to the discretion of the officers, because the discretion referred to means the honest discretion of the corporation and its officers : That these assessments were not levied bona fide in the honest exercise of any discretion vested in the corporation or its officers, but were levied with the dishonest and fraudulent purpose of forcing the appellant and others situated as he is to allow their policies to lapse by a failure to pay illegal, ruinous and fraudulent assessments.

The bill further charges that these increased assessments cannot be defended by the suggestion that the same are to any extent ” needed in order to enable the corporation *111 to meet its death claims, because if the corporation is in the prosperous financial condition represented in its circulars, the levying of such assessments is a wanton abuse of the power it possesses and “ plainly proves ” that the same are illegal, fraudulent and ultra vires. The bill then sets forth clauses two and three of the policy. It is under these clauses that a reserve fund is created out of the net earnings plus twenty-five per cent, of the net receipts from each assessment. By these clauses it is further provided that after five years a membership bond is to be issued to the policy-holder for an equitable proportion of this reserve fund; and this bond is made available after the expiration of ten years for the payment of future dues.

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Bluebook (online)
42 A. 944, 89 Md. 99, 1899 Md. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/condon-v-mutual-reserve-fund-life-assn-md-1899.