Farmer v. State

7 S.W. 220, 69 Tex. 561, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 896
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 1888
DocketNo. 2379
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 7 S.W. 220 (Farmer v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmer v. State, 7 S.W. 220, 69 Tex. 561, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 896 (Tex. 1888).

Opinion

Willie, Chief Justice.

This was an information in the na[563]*563ture of a quo warranto, instituted in the court below for the purpose of ousting the appellants from certain corporate franchises which they were claiming to exercise under the name of the “Masonic Mutual Benevolent Association of Texas.” The result of the trial below was a judgment of ouster against the appellants, upon the ground that they were acting together as an insurance company under the above name, without having been incorporated in accordance with the laws of our State regulating the incorporation of insurance companies. From this judgment the appellants have appealed to this court.

The appellants claim to be a corporation under a charter dated September 3, 1883, amended February 23, 1885, obtained under title 20 of the Revised Statutes. The charter states the object •of the association to be “to provide for its members during life, and their families after death, by issuing to its members certifi-, cates payable from one to three thousand dollars at death; and also for the purpose of issuing endowment certificates payable ■during life at intervals to its members; and other charitable purposes set forth in the constitution and laws governing the ■body.”

The only purposes set forth in its constitution are “to give financial aid and benefits to members during life, and to their families or those depending upon them after death, and to pay weekly sick benefits to its members,” etc.

The evidence disclosed that the original incorporators were seven in number, and that five of these were by the charter made directors. The constitution provides that the incorporators of the association shall be its directors, and that its officers :shall be chosen from its incorporators. Rone others but master masons in good standing, or those who had demitted, and their wives, their widows and unmarried daughters, were made eligible to membership in the association; and if from age or infirmities the husband could not become a member, the wife anight do so.

The theory of the Constitution was that three forms of certificate might be issued, but in practice only two were issued. One of these — Form A — was issued to each member for one thousand dollars, upon consideration of seven dollars cash, and the payment of an advance assessment thirty days thereafter, and an agreement to pay the mortuary assessments for each month thereafter till death, within ninety days from the required proof of death, payment was to be made' to th© [564]*564beneficiaries as follows: If the death occurred within one year, one-fifth — two hundred dollars; if after one, and before two years, two-fifths — four hundred dollars; if after the second, but before the expiration of third year, six hundred dollars.

Form B entitled each member to two hundred dollars death benefit fund for his heirs, and permitted him to participate in, the “Endowment Fund” of one thousand dollars by instalment of two hundred dollars each, during his life from ti’me to time, as the five coupons attached thereto matured. Thi& form too seems to have fallen into disuse. No person could become a member who was under twenty-one years of age, or who suffered from age or infirmities. The application for membership provided that it should form part of the contract with the association, and the agreement of the association to make payments is based upon the consideration óf the payments made and to be made by the member. The assessments upon these certificates were graduated according to the age of the member holding one, the younger member being required to pay less than those of more advanced age. The- same rule was observed in the collection of assessments upon the death of a member. If assessments were not paid within thirty days after notice to a member, he was to be suspended from the benefits of the association.

What is termed a “Permanent Fund” was provided from the admission fees and by taking at the rate of twenty-five cents out of each assessment paid by a member upon one thousand dollars, and this was to be invested by the directors and used,, first, to defray the necessary expenses of management, and second, to insure stability and perpetuity by paying claims in Forms A and B, where the rate of mortality was so great that that twelve assessments per annum would not suffice.

General traveling agents were to be appointed to solicit members; and the membership fee generally went to pay for their services. Twenty per cent of assessments went to pay expenses of the association, including salaries of officers. The president received a salary of forty dollars per month, the secretary, sixty, and the treasurer two and one-half per cent of the money received and paid out. Members totally incapacitated for work from sickness, or who were in actual distress, received three-dollars per week during their sickness, if sick not less than one week nor more than five. Persons applying for nfembership were required to be examined by a physician, and could [565]*565not be received unless they certified that they were in good health. These are some of the leading features of the association; and the first question we are to determine is, whether it was entitled to be incorporated under Title 20 of our Revised Statutes. This title defines corporations to be of three kinds: First, religious; second, corporations for charity or benevolence; and third, corporations for profit. This corporation is not of a religious character, and it is admitted by the appellants that its purposes are not charitable. It is claimed, however, that it was established for a benevolent object, and its incorporation was therefore legal under this title, and it should be allowed to exist without interruption from the State authorities.

It is clear from the division into classes made by the statute, taken in connection with subsequent articles under the same title, that corporations for benevolence are entirely distinct from those whose main object is pecuniary profit. In article ■566 are enumerated in twenty-seven subdivisions the different purposes for which corporations may be chartered under that ■title. Under the second subdivision only can the present body ■claim to be chartered as a benevolent association. In none of the other subdivisions is the subject of benevolence referred to; and in all which relate to corporations of profit, the special object of the charter is particularly stated, except in the twenty-seventh subdivision, which seems intended to cover all purposes of mutual profit or benefit not embraced in the preceding portions of the article. This twenty-seventh subdivision was repealed by act of March 27, 1885. In other titles of the Revised Statutes are found special provisions for the incorporation of insurance and railroad companies, and these must be followed in all cases when it is sought to have these institutions chartered by general law. If the body under consideration is a benevolent institution, it was properly incorporated under .title 20; but if its object is profit, then its incorporation under that title will be valid or not accordingly as it comes under any ■of the heads named in article 566 to which we have referred.

What, then, are the purposes of the body under consideration? Its charter makes its object to provide for its members during life and their families after death.

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Bluebook (online)
7 S.W. 220, 69 Tex. 561, 1888 Tex. LEXIS 896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmer-v-state-tex-1888.