Doscher v. Vanderbilt

177 A.D. 813, 164 N.Y.S. 264, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5730
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedApril 5, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 177 A.D. 813 (Doscher v. Vanderbilt) 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
Doscher v. Vanderbilt, 177 A.D. 813, 164 N.Y.S. 264, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5730 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Laughlin, J.:

The Teachers’ Mutual Life Assurance Association, a voluntary unincorporated association, consisting of more than seven [814]*814members, was organized in May, 1869. Margaret Doscher, who was one of the original members, died on the 26th day of April, 1915, having performed all obligations and paid all assessments which she was called upon by said association to perform and pay until her death.

. Article 7 of the by-laws of the association provided for the payment upon the death of a member of $500 to the assignee of the member. The plaintiff was the duly designated assignee of the decedent, and she brought this action against the president of the association under section 1919 of the Code of Civil Procedure to recover said death benefit.

The pleadings were oral. The plaintiff merely alleged generally a liability under said by-law. The answer was a general denial with the defense that the association has been dissolved and gone out of existence.

A preamble to the constitution provided that the object of the association to be formed was “ to give to each and every member * * * the opportunity to leave at death, to a properly designated assignee, a sum hereinafter to be named, ” and said section of the by-laws fixed the sum as stated.' Article 4 of the by-laws, from the inception of the organization, provided as follows: “ Upon receiving from the Treasurer notice of the decease of a member, the Financial Secretary shall notify each Ward Collector of such death, and of the levy of an assessment of fifty (50) cents to be collected from each surviving member by the several Department Collectors.

“ The money in excess of five hundred dollars ($500) shall be allowed to accumulate, and whenever it shall amount to one thousand and twenty dollars ($1,020) there shall be no call for assessment on the occurrence of a death.”

Article 2 provided that the members should make “ all proper provision to meet the prompt payment of assessments as they are levied.” Article 3 provided that the membership of any person failing to pay an assessment should be forfeited ipso facto, and that he should be given notice thereof; but that where a membership was thus forfeited or any member “resigned ” he might be reinstated as therein provided. . There is no other provision in the constitution or by-laws relating to the termination of a membership in the organization. The [815]*815by-laws provided for the election of a collector by the members in each department into which the organization was divided, and that the collectors should elect ward collectors who should constitute a board of managers, who should have power “to choose their officers, to remove derelict or unfaithful collectors, and to make, alter, amend, or abolish by-laws ns they may see fit.” The officers provided for by the by-laws were a president, vice-president, recording secretary, financial secretary and treasurer. The defendant became the president of the association in 1911. Thereafter the membership diminished through many deaths of the older members and resignations of younger members and the inability to obtain new members. On the 30th of November, 1914, a letter was sent to all of the members by the chairman of a special committee, which evidently had been considering what it was advisable for the association to do in the circumstances by which it was confronted with financial disaster. The letter stated, in substance, that the board of managers had determined that it was advisable and necessary to discontinue the present plan of death benefits, and that a plan had been negotiated with the Travelers Insurance Company by which all members under sixty-five years of age could be insured by that company for the amount of death benefit provided by the by-laws of the association at a cost much lower than a policy could be obtained from the insurance company by any individual and at lower cost than assessments in the organization; that members of sixty-five years of age and upwards could obtain a policy in smaller amounts stated at less than their assessments; that the benefits prescribed by the by-laws of the association would lapse and become ineffective on a date to be fixed by the board of managers, and it was suggested that members apply to the insurance company in accordance with the plan thus negotiated. Thereafter and on the 20th day of January, 1915, a notice in writing, signed by the president and recording secretary, was mailed to each member of the association, inviting them all to attend a meeting to be held on the thirtieth day of the month to take action along the lines recommended in said circular letter of November thirtieth. This notice stated quite fully and clearly the circumstances which led the managers to believe that it was [816]*816impossible to continue the payment of death benefits by the association; and, in substance, that it was intended to pay all accrued death claims and liabilities of the association, and to eliminate from the constitution and by-laws the death benefit provisions, and to continue the fraternal features of the association. At that time the membership numbered between 1,300 and 1,400. The meeting called was attended by more than 200, but the decedent, although duly notified, did not attend, or, so far as appears, send any communication.

At that meeting a resolution, the object of which is not apparent, was adopted, providing that no ward collector should ‘ dismiss from membership, any member whose name was on the roll, Dec. 1, 1914,” and thereupon, after full and free discussion, a preamble and resolution was adopted as follows:

“Whereas, it is the judgment of our officers and managers that this association is not upon a safe, sound and enduring basis as respects its benefit or insurance features, and that to secure to the surviving members thereof and to those who may hereafter join this organization certain definite insurance benefits that this organization be reorganized, and that the members concur therein, and
Whereas, with respect to such insurance it is the j udgment of all that this organization be reorganized into a group of insured having relations with The Travelers Insurance Company.
“ Now, therefore, be it Resolved, a quorum of the board of managers of this organization being present and concurring therein that the benefits of all living members in this organization be and they are hereby terminated and are hereby declared to have lapsed and become ineffective as of this 30th day of January, 1915, and be it further
“Resolved, that this association be continued only for the purpose of collecting from the members and distributing to the assigns of deceased members any death benefits that may have accrued and remain unpaid.”

Thereupon another resolution was adopted providing for the auditing of the books and the termination of the liability of all fiscal officers and agents on the payment of accrued death benefits, and on their accounting in accordance with the audit. The meeting thereupon adjourned sine die.

[817]*817At the close of that meeting those in attendance formed the “ Teachers’ Group Insurance Association of Greater Hew York,” for membership in which 483 applications had been received. The decedent refused to join the new association.

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Related

Knopp v. Sherwood
239 A.D. 475 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1933)

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Bluebook (online)
177 A.D. 813, 164 N.Y.S. 264, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doscher-v-vanderbilt-nyappdiv-1917.