Fischer v. Fischer

42 S.W. 448, 99 Tenn. 629
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 30, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 42 S.W. 448 (Fischer v. Fischer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fischer v. Fischer, 42 S.W. 448, 99 Tenn. 629 (Tenn. 1897).

Opinion

Wilkes, J.

This is a contest between a brother and sister over the proceeds of a benefit certificate in the order of Knights of 'Honor upon the life of their father.

[630]*630The father, William Eischer, had been a member of the order for quite a number of years and carrying insurance in it upon his life. The original certificate was for §2,000, and was payable to his wife. She died in 1889, and the certificate, in May, 1895, was surrendered and a second certificate was issued instead, for a like amount, but payable, §800 to John A. Eischer, §800 to Harriet B. , Eischer, and the remaining §400 to three other children. On December 23, 1895, this second certificate was surrendered to the lodge and in its stead a third certificate issued for the same aggregate amount, payable, §200 to John A. Eischer, §1,400 to Harriet B. Eischer, and the remaining §400 to the three children, as, provided in the previous certificates. On January 8, 1896, the father died.

On February 4, 1896, the complainant, John A. Eischer, filed this bill against his sister, Harriet, and the Supreme Lodge Knights of Honor, to compel the payment of the. §2,000 into Court, and its apportionment according to the second certificate, so as to give him §800 of the fund, as provided by that certificate. The Chancellor • granted the relief prayed, and directed that the daughter be refunded one-half the amounts she had paid out in nursing and caring for her father, in his last illness, in his burial expenses, and for a lot in the cemetery, and divided the costs. The defendant by appeal and the complainant by writ of error brought the case to this Court and it has been heard by the Court of [631]*631Chancery Appeals. That Court reversed the holding of the Chancellor, and directed the fund to be paid out as provided by the last certificate, that the son be not required to repay to his sister anything on account of nursing, expenses of last sickness after his removal to the hospital, or burial of the father, and directed that defendant, Harriet, pay one-half the costs in the Court below, and the complainant the other half, and all the costs of the appeal, and remanded the cause to the Court below, for the execution of the decree. The complainant, John A. Fischer, appealed to this Court, and has assigned errors. The Supreme Lodge, Knights of Honor, has been permitted to pay the fund into Court, and has no further interest in the controversy.

The questions presented for the consideration of this Court by the assignment of errors are (1) whether the parties to whom the second certificate was issued, were thereby clothed with a vested right, which the member could not afterward change or defeat without the consent of the beneficiaries in the certificate; (2) whether the complainant, John A. Fischer, if he had a vested right under the second certificate, forfeited his rights thereunder by abandoning or failing to comply with certain agreements made by him as to the maintenance of his father, which formed the consideration for the provisions in his favor in that certificate.

The facts, so far as necessary to be stated, are that the second certificate was issued upon an agree[632]*632ment entered into between the father, son, and daughter, that the brother would furnish the father with a home and maintenance, and pay half his dues to the order, and the daughter would pay the other half of dues, and furnish him all necessary clothing, and they would each, in consideration therefor, have eight hundred dollars of the proceeds of the insurance.

The Court of Chancery Appeals find that, in accordance with this mutual agreement, the father did live with the son for several months. He was then stricken with partial paralysis, and, after about two months, was removed to a hospital, where he became helpless and required much care and constant attention. ,The son was a poor man, working for daily wages, and his wife was out at service for a great part of the time, so that proper care and attention could not be given at the son’s house. That Court finds that the son was willing to do all he could, but recognized the fact that his circumstances were such as to prevent him from giving the constant attention and care required. By mutual consent, and on the advice of friends, he was taken to a hospital where he could be better cared for.

Up to this time the agreement had been carried out, so far as practicable, by the son and daughter, the latter contributing something more than the son toward the payment of assessments. The Court of Chancery Appeals conclude, that when the son agreed to the removal of his father to the hospital to be [633]*633kept and cared for, he abandoned his agreement to furnish him a home and maintenance, and thereby surrendered all contractual rights in the certificate, if he had any, and that the father had the right to change the beneficiaries, surrender the certificate, and take out a new one, and that the son had no vested right or interest in the proceeds of the second certificate that could defeat this right. The Court of Chancery Appeals find that when the fath.er took out the third or last certificate he was mentally capable of transacting such business, and did understand what he was doing, and the nature and effect of his act; that he made the change in certificates of his own volition, and his daughter was guilty of no fraud in relation thereto. The son did not know of the change in certificate until after it was accomplished, but before the death of the father, but there does not appear to have been any intentional concealment from him or bad faith towards him in the matter.

The first question presented is whether the son had any vested interest or right in the proceeds of the insurance upon the life of the father which would prevent the father from canceling the second and taking out the last certificate, thus changing the son’s beneficial interest in the proceeds. Under the constitution and general laws of the Knights of Honor, article 9, section 4, it is provided that “a member desiring to change his beneficiary may, at any time while in good standing, surrender to his [634]*634lodge his benefit certificate, which shall be sent to the supreme reporter, etc. And he shall thereupon cancel the old certificate and issue a new one in lieu thereof to such member, payable as he shall have directed, within the limitations prescribed by the laws of the order; said surrender and direction to be made on the back of the benefit certificate, surrendered, signed by the member, and attested by the reporter under the seal of the lodge.” The provisions of this section were strictly followed in surrendering the second and issuing the third, or last, certificate.

It is held in a number of cases, principally in New York and California, following the New York cases, that the beneficiary who pays assessments does acquire an interest which cannot be divested without his consent, when there is a special agreement to that effect, or that no substitution shall be made. See the cases cited in 3 Am. & Eng. Enc. L. (2d Ed.); 993, and note 4. But these cases are not in accord with the current weight of authority. Same, p. 990, and notes. The rule approved in the majority of cases is based upon the provisions and reservations contained in the charter and by-laws of the society, and this furnishes the distinction between ordinary life and mutual benefit insurance policies. Same, p. 991.

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.W. 448, 99 Tenn. 629, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fischer-v-fischer-tenn-1897.