Courtois v. Grand Lodge of Ancient Order

67 P. 970, 135 Cal. 552, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 841
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1902
DocketS.F. No. 2803.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 67 P. 970 (Courtois v. Grand Lodge of Ancient Order) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Courtois v. Grand Lodge of Ancient Order, 67 P. 970, 135 Cal. 552, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 841 (Cal. 1902).

Opinion

HAYNES, C.

Gonzague M. V. Courtois was in his lifetime a member of the Ancient Order of United Workmen, and while such member there was issued to him a beneficiary certificate in the sum of two thousand dollars, in which Emilie Courtois, then his wife, was named as the beneficiary.

Said Emilie afterwards procured a divorce from her said husband, but without any provision for her support, and was permitted to resume her former name of Emilie Etienne. Said G-. M. Y. Courtois afterwards married the plaintiff Annie, and on January 7, 1900, died, without having in any manner changed the designation of the beneficiary of said certificate. Said Annie (the widow) and certain of the children of said Courtois brought this action against the defendant the grand lodge to recover two thousand dollars, the benefit named in said certificate, and made Marius J. Courtois, a son of said Courtois, a defendant, he having refused to become a plaintiff. Said Emilie, the beneficiary therein named, not having been made a party, filed her complaint as intervener, and prayed judgment for the sum named in said certificate.

The defendant the grand lodge answered the complaint, alleging its willingness to pay said sum of two thousand *554 dollars to the heirs of the deceased member, as soon as they could be determined, “and it can be freed from the claim of the intervener,” Emilie Etienne, and asked permission to pay the money into court until the court should determine who were the heirs, and what were the rights of said Emilie. No order was made in that regard, however, nor has the grand lodge appealed. The answer of the grand lodge to the intervener’s complaint alleged that the “intervener has no right, title, or interest in said fund, or any portion thereof,” and fully answered her complaint.

The plaintiffs had judgment against the grand lodge upon said beneficiary certificate, the complaint in intervention was dismissed, and the intervener appeals.

There is no controversy as to the relationship of the several parties to the deceased member, and an agreed statement sets out all of the provisions of the constitution and by-laws of the order so far as necessary to be considered, and it is conceded that such certificates are issued subject to, and are to be construed and controlled by, the laws of the order.

Said constitution and laws provide that upon the death of a full-rate member “such person or persons as said member may have directed while living shall be entitled to have from the beneficiary fund of the order the sum of $2,000.” In this case Courtois, the member, designated as the beneficiary “Emilie Courtois, bearing to him the relation of wife.”

The laws of the order require that the beneficiary so desig- , nated by the member and named in the certificate “shall in every instance be one or more members of his family, or some one related to him by blood, or who shall be dependent upon him.” It is, however, in the power of the member at any time to change the beneficiary. It is also provided that if one or more of the beneficiaries die during the lifetime of the ■member, the survivor or survivors shall be .entitled to the benefit equally, unless otherwise provided in the certificate; and if all shall die during the lifetime of the member, and he shall have made no other direction, the benefit shall be paid to his heirs at law.

It is not questioned that appellant was a competent beneficiary at the time the certificate was issued,-nor that she would now be entitled to the benefit named but for the divorce. But did the divorce, under thq facts here existing, deprive *555 appellant of the benefit provided in said certificate? I think not.

The certificate created a valid contract, upon a sufficient consideration, with the member to whom it issued. The grand lodge promised to pay to the beneficiary therein named, or to such person or persons as said member may have directed while living, upon the death of the member, two thousand dollars. The grand lodge reserved no power in any contingency to substitute any other person as beneficiary during her life. It provided by a by-law that in case of her death, if the member failed to appoint another beneficiary during his lifetime, the benefit should be paid to his heirs at law. The death of the beneficiary was thus provided against, but no other contingency; and in no other contingency than the death of the beneficiary and the failure of the member to appoint another are the heirs at law entitled to the benefit. Death and divorce are not synonymous, and we cannot read into the contract the one in place of the other. The certificate, or the constitution and laws of the order, might have provided that in ease of the wife being named as the beneficiary a divorce should have the same effect as her death upon the disposition of the money. But it is not so provided.

Respondent contends, however, that the by-law which provides that “each person shall designate the person or persons to whom the beneficiary fund due at his death shall be paid, who shall in every instance be one or more members of his family, or some one related to him by blood, or who shall be dependent upon him,” excludes the intervener from a recovery. This by-law relates to the designation of a beneficiary when he becomes a member of the order and applies for a beneficiary certificate; but there is no provision by which the grand lodge or any of its officers can revoke the certificate in case an authorized beneficiary becomes disqualified as an original appointee by some subsequent act or event. Suppose the beneficiary named in, the certificate was at that time a “dependent” upon the member, and had ceased to be such dependent,—a case likely to occur,—and no other person had been substituted by the member as the beneficiary, will it be contended that upon the death of the member he would not be entitled to the benefit named in the certificate ? The evident policy of the order is, that the beneficiary named *556 in the certificate when it issues shall be at that time of the class designated in said by-law, but beyond that it reserves no control, and makes no provision by which it may make or compel a new designation of a beneficiary, or by which it may itself appoint a beneficiary or cancel the certificate.

It is further contended that, as the by-laws are made part of the contract, it follows that the appellant never had any vested interest in this fund. The by-laws provide that the members themselves have no individual property right in the fund from which benefits are paid; that “it does not constitute a part of their estates to be administered upon, nor have they any right in or control over the same, except the power to designate the person or persons to whom, as beneficiaries, the same shall be paid at the. death of the member. The beneficiaries thus designated have no vested rights in said sum until the death of the member gives such right; and the designation may be changed by the member in the method prescribed by the laws of the order at any time before his death. ’ ’

This by-law vests

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Bluebook (online)
67 P. 970, 135 Cal. 552, 1902 Cal. LEXIS 841, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/courtois-v-grand-lodge-of-ancient-order-cal-1902.