District Grand Lodge No. 23, United Order of Odd Fellows v. Hill

57 So. 147, 3 Ala. App. 483, 1911 Ala. App. LEXIS 166
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 1, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 57 So. 147 (District Grand Lodge No. 23, United Order of Odd Fellows v. Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
District Grand Lodge No. 23, United Order of Odd Fellows v. Hill, 57 So. 147, 3 Ala. App. 483, 1911 Ala. App. LEXIS 166 (Ala. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

dm GRAFFENRIED, J.

The Grand United Order of Odd Fellows in America is a beneficial unincorporated association operating, in the United States, and having for its object the social enjoyment and good fellowship of its members, the insurance of their lives for [487]*487the benefit of their wives and children, or snch other persons as the members may designate as their beneficiaries, and providing means for the comfort or sustenance of its members when sick, their funerals, etc. The order seems to be composed of one Supreme Lodge, of Grand- Lodges, and of lodges. The Shipreme Lodge is the general governing body of the entire order, having certain officers whose duties require them to supervise the various Grand Lodges, and the Grand Lodges are, of course, subject to all the reasonable rules and regulations adopted by the Supreme Lodge. A Grand Lodge appears to be that part of the order which governs its business and social affairs in a state or territory, and a lodge that part of it which is confined in its operations to a particular_community. The Supreme Lodge, the Grand Lodges, and the various lodges constitute the order or society. — Bacon on Benefit Societies and Life Ins. § 74.

In Alabama the Grand Lodge, through which the order operates in the state, is known as “District Grand Lodge of Alabama No. 23, Grand United Order of Odd Fellows,” and in article 3 of the constitution of said Grand Lodge it is provided: “The amount of insurance to which each member shall be entitled under this plan shall be five hundred dollars to be paid to- the person or persons named on the face of the policy within sixty days after the filing of the death notice, as per requirements under article xi of this constitution.” Under the constitution of the parent order, a member in good standing in his lodge is a financiál member, and each Grand Lodge is authorized by proper by laws to create an endowment department, and to compel each of its members' to become an endowment member. Under the constitution of the endowment department of the Grand Lodge in control of the affairs of the order in Alabama [488]*488and known as “District Grand Lodge of Alabama Number 23, Grand United Order of Odd Fellows,” every financial member is required to be an endowment member, viz., a member with a policy of insurance payable to some beneficiary named by him for the sum of $500. So that, under regulations authorized and sanctioned by “District Grand Lodge of Alabama Number 23, Grand United Order of Odd Fellows,” every member of each of its lodges in good financial standing with the order is insured in the sum of $500 by said Grand Lodge. A member of a lodge not in good financial standing, on account of the nonpayment of dues, is during such period of disability and for such period of disability only not insured. It is therefore manifest that, while the appellant has certain officers whose principal duties are to look after the financial standing of each of its lodges and each of its members and for that reason has what it terms its endowment department, this is for the convenience and proper management of the insurance feature, and the appellant is, as to each of its members, a beneficial life insurance association. It follows, therefore, that appellant, and not its endowment department, is the party liable to appellee if appellee is entitled to recover on the certificate of life insurance in evidence in this case. No other conclusion can be drawn from the language of the constitution of the order or the constitution of the endowment department of said Grand Lodge of Alabama. The money collected by the endowment department is for the equal benefit of all the members of the'Grand Lodge in g’ood financial standing, just as is all the other money paid in by its members, except such part of it as is necessary to meet the current expenses of the lodges, the Grand Lodge, etc., and all of such members in the aggregate, therefore, are the real owners of the money for said [489]*489purposes. There is no magic in mere words to change the real into the unreal. A device of words cannot be imposed upon the court in place of an actuality of fact.—Union Mut. Ins. Co. v. Wilkinson, 13 Wall. 235, 20 L. Ed. 617.

1. It appears from the evidence that one Pines, who was an old man, and who, so far as the evidence discloses, had no relations, several years before his death went to appellee, who was a married woman, and asked her to move with her husband to his home, and care for him while he lived, saying that, if she would do so,, “he would treat them as a parent and will her his life-insurance policy.” It further appears that Pines owned a home, but that he had no other property, as the evidence shows that appellee accepted his proposition and for several years furnished him with food and clothing, paying his medical bills, nursing him when sick, and, as appellee in her testimony expresses it, expending on him an average of $15 per month from the time she moved into his home until he died. Appellee testified that prior to the issuance of the certificate sued on in this action Pines had another policy, which had been issued to him by appellant; that he destroyed this policy, and in its stead received from appellant the certificate payable to her as his beneficiary, which is the subject of this litigation. When the first policy was, if ever, issued by appellee, the evidence does not disclose, but we are of the opinion that appellee’s testimony on this subject was competent and material. Appellant denied liability to appellee upon the ground, among others, that appellee was not related to Pines, and had no insurable interest in his life, and we think that all this evidence was .relevant to that issue. The undisputed evidence shows that appellant was not related to Pines, and that, when the present certificate was issued, it was issued to Pines for [490]*490appellee’s benefit “as his guardian.” If it be true, as testified by appellee, that she undertook the care of Pines under an agreement that he would, for so doing, “avíII her his life insurance policy,” the above evidence has a strong tendency to shoAV that the certificate was not “void in its inception as a Avagering policy.” It tends to shoAV, on the contrary, that the present certificate was issued in lieu of an already existing policy, and that in having appellee named in the certificate as his beneficiary Pines was simply complying with his agreement to “will her his life insurance policy” when she moved with him and undertook to care and provide for him. — 1 Bacon on Benefit Societies and Life Ins. 249.

The evidence further tended to show that, when the certificate was issued, Pines had been provided for by appellee for about three years at a cost of about $15 per month, a sum aggregating over $500, and it therefore seems clear that under the most rigid application of the doctrine that the beneficiary in a life insurance policy must possess an insurable interest in the life of the assured, the appellee, if her evidence is to be believed, had an insurable interest in the life of the assured to the full amount of the certificate when it was issued, by the appellant.—Helmetag’s Adm’x v. Miller, 76 Ala. 183, 52 Am. Rep. 316.

Manifestly the appellee was competent to testify as a witness to the facts about which she was interrogated. She was by name the beneficiary in the certificate, and this suit was brought by her against the appellant, whose officers, for it, had issued the certificate. Pines’ estate was not interested, and on this issue the question simply was whether appellee possessed an insurable interest in the life of Pines.

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Bluebook (online)
57 So. 147, 3 Ala. App. 483, 1911 Ala. App. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/district-grand-lodge-no-23-united-order-of-odd-fellows-v-hill-alactapp-1911.