Donnelly v. Burnham

86 A.D. 226, 83 N.Y.S. 659, 1903 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2335
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 86 A.D. 226 (Donnelly v. Burnham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Donnelly v. Burnham, 86 A.D. 226, 83 N.Y.S. 659, 1903 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2335 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Williams, J. :

The judgment and order should be affirmed, with costs.

The action as tried involved the ownership of $1,000 insurance money, which the defendant association had paid into court to await the determination of the question of such ownership. The action was tried before the court, a single question as to .the facts having been submitted to a jury and a finding thereon made. The facts were thus settled and are not in dispute here. Briefly they are as follows: July 20, 1899, the deceased became a member of branch No. 44 of this defendant association, located at Salamanca, N. Y., and the association issued to him a- certificate or policy of insurance for $2,000, the defendant, Mary Burnham, deceased’s [228]*228sister, being named as beneficiary. • The deceased died April .29, 1902, while a member in good standing, and his real beneficiary was entitled to thé $2,00.0.' January 28,1901, the deceased married plaintiff’s mother Mary, and -thereafter and November 19, 1901, .■plaintiff was born -of that marriage.

Just prior to the death of deceased he made an. -effort to- change the beneficiary in the certificate or policy .so as to make $1,000 payable to his wife and the Other $1,000 to his daughter, and the question is whether he accomplished that purpose or failed. Deceased was taken sick on Wednesday, April 23,1902, and died on the following Tuesday, April twenty-ninth: His wife took care' of him until Sunday, when a nurse was called, Mr. Smith, and was also with him until he died. Deceased kept a store, and lived across the . street with his wife and child. On .'Thursday he directed:his clerk, Stillman, to get the certificate from his papers at the store and have the-beneficiary changed, as above indicated. Stillman found the certificate at the store, brought it to the' deceased’s room and laid it bn his dresser.' Mr. Dowd, a lawyer, was there with deceased, and Stillman' evidently assumed Mr. Dowd would attend to the matter. Nothing was done about it, however, Until Tuesday, the day deceased. died. About eight o’clock in the morning of that day deceased and Stillman again talked about the-matter, and deceased told Stillman to attend to it right away. Stillman took the certificate to the store, properly filled out the blank on its back for the purpose of accomplishing the change of- beneficiary, as directed, and signed deceased’s name to it. He then took the paper to Mr. Sherry, the president of branch 44. Sherry told him that deceased would have personally- to sign the paper on- the back of the certificate. Stillman then went back to the store, erased his own signing of deceased’s name and took the paper back to deceased’s room. The nurse, Mr. Smith,, and deceased’s wife and sister were ■ present, and there deceased signed his name to the paper indorsed On the certificate. This was about ten o’clock in the morning. At about eleven-thirty the same morning Stillman delivered the certificate and indorsement to Mr. Sherry. About twelve-ten o’clock the same afternoon Sherry, president, and Gerber, secretary of branch 44,. went t-o. the' lodge ■ room. Gerber put his name as a witness to the indorsement signed by deceased, and -affixed the seal of the branch to it and -handed the ce-r[229]*229tificate and indorsement to Sherry, and at five-twenty-five -o’clock the same afternoon Sherry delivered the same to Mr. Kelly, one of-the grcmd trustees of the defendant association. Mr. Kelly wrote a letter to Mr. Cameron, supreme recorder of the association, inclosed the certificate and indorsement duly attested and sealed, and mailed the same about five-twenty-five o’clock the same afternoon to him at Hornellsville where he resided. Deceased died at seven-twenty-five o’clock the same evening. The letter and certificate with indorsement were' received by Mr. Cameron the next morning, April 30, 1902, at nine-ten o’clock, and he at once issued a.new certificate naming'the new beneficiaries as indicated in the paper signed by the deceased. Gerber, the secretary of branch 44, did not'in fact see the deceased’s signature made to the indorsement on the back of the certificate. The grcmd secretary of defendant-association for the State of New York was a Mr. Ryan of Syracuse, N. Y. The certificate and indorsement signed by deceased were not sent to -such grand secretary.

The court, upon these facts, found that the beneficiary was properly changed, and that the wife and daughter- of deceased were entitled to the insurance money, and the plaintiff had judgment for' her $1,000.

The defendant association was subject to article 7, chapter 690,: Laws of 1892, and section 238 -of such chapter (as amd. by Laws of 1901, chap. 397) provided: Membership in any siieh society, order or association shall give to- the member the right at any time, upon the consent of such society, order or association, in the manner and form prescribed by its by-laws, to make a change in its payee or payees, beneficiary or' beneficiaries, without requiring the consent of such payees or- beneficiaries.” And the association provided by title 1, section 5, of its by-laws: “A member may at any time change, alter or amend the designation of person or persons, to whom the -benefits named in his certificate are payable, by surrendering said certificate after having filled or caused to be filled the blank which shall be provided for that purpose, on the back of the same, providing for new designation, and attaching his signature to- it. The Secretary of- his branch shall attach his signature as witness, and the seal of his branch, and forward it to the Grcmd Secretary, if in his immediate jurisdiction.

[230]*230Upon the receipt of the same, by the Supreme Recorder, he shall issue a new Certificate in accordance with such change of designa- ■ tion.” It appears that the supreme council is the controlling body of the whole association, and the supreme recorder is its • officer, that the grand council has jurisdiction over the branches in any one State, and the gra/nd secretary is its officer; that when the grand secretary receives an application for a change of beneficiaries, he has no duty to perform with reference to it, except to pass it over to the supreme recorder; that these applications are received in the usual course of business of the association not only from the grand secretary, but from other sources, even from the-insured direct, and in either case the .supreme recorder issues the new certificate as requested. The section of the by-laws above quoted does not require that the branch secretary shall actually see the signing of the application, but that he shall attach his name as a witness to the paper, and also the seal of the branch. There, is to be this proof on the face of the paper that it has passed through the hands of the branch officer. The branch has no real duty to perform except to see that it comes from the insured and to pass it along to the superior governing power of the association.

It will be seen, therefore, that the deceased had in this case done all that was in his power, before he died, to make this change in the beneficiaries under his certificate. The association had no reason for refusing the new certificate, and no interest in so refusing. ' No discretion in the matter. Its action in receiving the application and issuing the new certificate was merely formal and related back to the time when the application was delivered to the secretary of the branch of the association.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 A.D. 226, 83 N.Y.S. 659, 1903 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donnelly-v-burnham-nyappdiv-1903.