Ebert v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Ass'n

81 Minn. 116
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 8, 1900
DocketNos. 12,154, 12,248—(236, 110)
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 81 Minn. 116 (Ebert v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ebert v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Ass'n, 81 Minn. 116 (Mich. 1900).

Opinion

LEWIS, J.

Defendant company was incorporated under the laws of the state of New York for the purpose of transacting the business of life insurance upon the assessment or co-operative plan. In September, 1885, plaintiff signed an application and took out a policy fori $3,000, he then being fifty-eight years of age. Upon the back of this policy was a table of rates, as follows:

[118]*118TABLE OE RATES.
Admission Pee: — $1,000—$8; $2,000 — $12; $3,000 — $15; $5,000 — $20; $10,000— $30.
Dues.
Tlie dues for expenses are $2 on each $1,000, payable annually in advance.
Assessment Rate Table.
No assessments will be made while there remains in the death fund a sum-sufficient to pay the existing claims in full.
The basis of the assessment rate for each member according to the age taken at the nearest birthday, on each $1,000, is as follows:
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Plaintiff was assessed according to tbe rate fixed by this table as of tbe age of entry, fifty-eigbt years, until February, 1889, when a new table of rates was adopted, in wbicb tbe maximum rates were increased, and tbe rate opposite the age of fifty-eigbt years was made $6.03 bimonthly, and annually $18.36, for each $1,000. Plaintiff was assessed according to this table at tbe age of fifty-eight,. $18.09 bimonthly, until 1895, when call No. 81 was made on tbe basis of tbe age of sixty-tbree years, amounting to $27.33 bimonthly, although plaintiff was at that time sixty-eight years old. Plaintiff paid under protest this assessment and others, up to call No.., 86 which was made February 1, 189S, when the age of assessment was again advanced, and made upon the then current age, which, according to the plaintiff’s then age, seventy years, amounted to $46.50 bimonthly. This assessment plaintiff refused to pay, and [119]*119be tendered defendants tbe amount of tbe assessment as upon tbe age fifty-eight years, according to tbe table wbicb went into effect in 1889. Tbe tender was refused, and defendant cancelled tbe policy for nonpayment; and plaintiff brought tbis action to recover all tbe assessments be bad paid, with interest. Judgment was ordered for tbe defendant, and plaintiff appeals.

Tbis action is based upon tbe theory that the original contract was that plaintiff should pay future assessments upon tbe age of entry, fifty-eigbt years, and that tbe subsequent change of that age in 1895 to sixty-three years, and in 1898 to seventy years, was in violation of tbe contract, and tbe cancellation of plaintiff’s policy a fraud upon tbe rights, and that tbe measure of damages is the amount be has paid.

Defendant rests upon tbe proposition that tbe contract as to assessments was not absolute or fixed as of tbe age of entry, but that tbe application and policy must be construed in connection with tbe constitution and by-laws of tbe company. Defendant admits that the by-laws then in force did not contain authority to assess upon tbe basis of tbe rate table in force at tbe age of entry, fifty-eigbt years, but bolds that tbe contract of insurance between'itself and plaintiff contemplated and included tbe following considerations: That tbe nature of tbe insurance taken out was of tbe assessment or co-operative character wbicb implied mutual obligations among tbe members each to stand an equitable assessment according to tbe cost; that tbe amount of tbe assessments must necessarily vary from year to year according to changing circumstances, viz., tbe number of deaths, and tbe amount of business written; that for these reasons it would become necessary from time to time to change tbe rate to’ conform to tbe new conditions; that tbe constitution provided that amendments should be made in its rules and regulations to meet such contingencies; that tbe board of directors bad, by tbe constitution, general authority to adopt rules adapted to a determination of tbe amount of benefits for wbicb certificates of membership should issue, rates of assessments, admission fees, and annual dues, and to adopt such other rules and regulations as they may deem best for tbe interests of tbe association; that all of these matters were necessarily con[120]*120template»! by plaintiff when be became a member; that be contracted with reference to apd in anticipation of such conditions and contingencies, and, tbe increased rates being necessary and equitable, plaintiff could not complain.

To this argument appellant replies that, if all that respondent claims as to tbe nature of tbe contract be conceded, yet tbe change in tbe rate of assessment as to all members who entered prior,to 1890 was arbitrary, inequitable, and not witbin tbe most liberal construction possible of defendant’s powers. We are, therefore, necessarily first required to determine what tbe contract of insurance was.

Tbe application for tbe policy contained a provision that no statement or representation or information made or given by or to tbe person soliciting or taking tbe application should be binding upon defendant unless tbe same be reduced to writing and presented to tbe officers at tbe borne office at New York. Plaintiff made an inquiry of tbe local agent at Minneapolis, at tbe time be made tbe application, as to whether tbe age stated in tbe policy rate table referred to tbe age of entry, or tbe current age as each assessment was levied, and was told by him that it was the age of entry. This information on tbe part of tbe local agent was merely-voluntary, and, under tbe conditions of tbe policy, not binding upon defendant. Tbe contract must be construed according to tbe terms of tbe application, tbe policy, constitution, and by-laws then in force, as well as tbe New York statute under which tbe company was incorporated. As before stated, tbe table of rates then in force was upon tbe back of tbe policy. In connection with that table it was stated that no assessment should be made while there remained in tbe death fund a sum sufficient to pay tbe existing claims in full, and that tbe basis of tbe assessment rate for each member according to age taken at tbe nearest birthday, on each $1,000, was according to that table. In tbe body of tbe policy it was stated that, in case of tbe death of the insured, there should be paid to tbe proper representative $3,-000 from tbe death fund at tbe time of death, or from any moneys that should be realized to said fund from tbe next assessment to be made as thereinafter set forth. It was then provided as follows:

[121]*121“If, at sucb date as the board of directors of tbe association may from time to time fix or determine for making an assessment, tbe death fund is insufficient to meet existing claims by death, an assessment shall then be made upon every member whose certificate is in force at the date of the last death assessed for, and said assessment shall be made at such rates, according'to the age of each member, as may be established by the said board of directors; and the net amount received from such assessment, less' 25 per cent, to be set apart for the reserve fund, as provided in the constitution and by-laws of said association, shall go into the death fund.”

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Bluebook (online)
81 Minn. 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ebert-v-mutual-reserve-fund-life-assn-minn-1900.