Dunbar v. Royal League

184 Ill. App. 1, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 42
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 2, 1913
DocketGen. No. 17,893
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 184 Ill. App. 1 (Dunbar v. Royal League) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunbar v. Royal League, 184 Ill. App. 1, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 42 (Ill. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice F. A, Smith

delivered the opinion of the court.

The main question presented by the record is whether or not an affianced wife is an eligible beneficiary under appellant’s charter.- This question is presented by the pleadings and orders of court thereon.

The declaration alleged that appellant was an incorporated fraternal beneficiary society under the laws of Illinois, and that on April 25, 1896, it issued a benefit certificate to Alfred Gustav Henriques, one of its members, wherein it promised to pay out of its widows’ and orphans’ benefit fund, upon the death of the said member, four thousand dollars to appellee by name and style of Arabella Louisa Dunbar, affianced wife of said Alfred Gustav Henriques, in accordance with and under the provisions of the laws governing said fund; that at the date of the said certificate appellee was and remained to the time of the death of the member his affianced wife; .that the member died February 3, 1904, in good standing in the order and that appellee made and delivered satisfactory proofs of death to appellant whereby said four thousand dollars became due and payable to appellee, but appellant failed and refused to pay it. The common counts were also pleaded and a copy of the benefit certificate was attached.

A general issue and a first additional plea and replications thereto were filed, and afterwards withdrawn so that they are not now before the court. Appellant filed a second additional plea, which is the only plea now in question, and, therefore, all references to appellant’s plea hereafter made will refer to said second additional plea.' This plea alleges, so far as here material, that appellant is a corporation not for pecuniary profit, organized and existing under an act of the State of Illinois entitled, “An Act Concerning Corporations,” approved April 18, 1872, and in force July 1, 1872, (J. & A. ¶¶ 2418 et seq.), as a fraternal beneficiary society, and that it received in the year 1883, in accordance with the law, a charter or articles of association under which it has operated and conducted its business as such fraternal insurance society and continues to operate and conduct its business; that in said charter, in setting forth the business for which appellant is formed, it is recited as follows:

“2nd. The object for which it is formed is * * * to benefit the widows, orphans and dependents of deceased members thereof. * * *
To establish a widows’ and orphans’ benefit fund out of which shall be paid, on the death of a member, while in good standing in the order, to his family or those dependent upon him, as he may have directed, a sum not exceeding four thousand dollars, as may be provided in the constitution and laws of the order.”

That in 1901, the first paragraph above quoted was amended so as to read, “The object for which it is formed is * * * to benefit the widows, orphans, husbands • and dependents of deceased members thereof.”

The plea further alleges that Henriques was admitted to membership on April 18, 1896, and the benefit certificate referred to in the declaration was issued to him on April 25, 1896, on certain conditions therein set forth, and in which it was provided that these conditions being expressly consented to and complied with appellant thereby promised and bound itself to pay out of its widows’ and orphans’ benefit fund to appellee, Arabella Louisa Dunbar, named and described therein as the affianced wife of Henriques, a sum not •exceeding four thousand dollars; that at the time of the issuing and delivering to said Henriques of said certificate, appellee was not nor was she at the time of the death of said Henriques a member of his family nor did she come within the designation of widow or orphan nor was she dependent upon said Henriques within the meaning of the law and that she was not and is not eligible to take said fund or any part thereof.

To this plea appellee filed three replications. The first admits the charter provision to establish a fund to be paid to a member’s family or those dependent upon him and sets up the adoption of a constitution and law by appellant alleged to be declaratory of the objects of the order, wherein it was provided that a benefit certificate may be made payable to an affianced wife, among others, in which class of beneficiary no proof of dependency shall be required, that said charter, constitution and law were in full force and effect before and at the time said certificate was issued and so remained up to the member’s death; that said certificate was issued in pursuance of and in accordance with said charter, constitution and law, and by reason thereof the designation of appellee as the affianced wife of the member was a designation of a person dependent upon him within the terms and requirements of said constitution and law and objects stated in the articles of association of appellant, therefore she is eligible.

The second replication alleges that after the designation of appellee by the member as beneficiary and affianced wife, the member paid all dues and assessments required to be paid and continued in good standing in the order until his death, and that the members of the order, after the issuing of said certificate, paid into the widows’ and orphans’ benefit fund of said order dues and assessments therefor down to and prior to the commencement of this suit an amount exceeding four thousand dollars, which sum was payable to appellee and was then and there held in trust for the use and benefit of appellee in accordance with the constitution and law of appellant aforesaid.

The third replication alleges precludi non because before and at the time of the issuing of said certificate, appellee was and continued to be up to the member’s death the affianced wife of and dependent upon said member, and concludes to the country.

General and special demurrers were filed to each of these replications which were overruled, and, upon appellant’s election to stand by its demurrers, the judgment was entered from which this appeal was prayed.

The main question above stated is thus presented by the plea, replications and the demurrers thereto. We think it is a settled principle of law of this State that where a corporation is organized under a general statute, the powers of such corporation must he determined from its charter alone. Rockhold v. Canton Masonic Mut. Ben. Soc., 129 Ill. 440; Norwegian Old People’s Home Soc. v. Wilson, 176 Ill. 94; Grimme v. Grimme, 198 Ill. 265; Murphy v. Nowak, 223 Ill. 301.

In the Rockhold case, supra, the Supreme Court said at page 455: “ ‘The particular business and objects’ of the corporation, as declared in the certificate of the promoters filed in the office of the Secretary of State, are ‘to give financial aid and benefit to the widows, orphans and- heirs or devisees of deceased members, ’ and the certificate of incorporation is a license only for ‘the particular business and objects’ enumerated in the certificate of the promoters.”

So far as here material, the charter of appellant declared the objects of the corporation to be to benefit the widows, orphans and dependents of deceased members thereof, and to establish a widows’ and orphans’ benefit fund out of which should be paid, on the death of a member, to his family or those dependent upon him, as he may have directed, a sum not exceeding four thousand dollars.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
184 Ill. App. 1, 1913 Ill. App. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunbar-v-royal-league-illappct-1913.