Flannery v. Gleason

133 Ill. App. 398, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 280
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 18, 1907
DocketGen. No. 13,172
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 133 Ill. App. 398 (Flannery v. Gleason) 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
Flannery v. Gleason, 133 Ill. App. 398, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 280 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Brown

delivered the opinion of the court.

In this case the question is; Who is entitled to the proceeds of a death benefit of Johanna Condon in the Women’s Catholic Order of Foresters?

A certain certificate of membership in that Order, numbered 71,784, dated February 1, 1905, was issued by the Order to Johanna Condon as a member of Nativity Court No. 14. It provided that on certain conditions—one of which was that the member complied in the future with the laws, rules and regulations then governing or that might thereafter be enacted by the Order—the Women’s Catholic Order of Foresters would pay to Johanna Condon’s sister, Sarah Gleason, one thousand dollars upon satisfactory evidence of the death of said Johanna and upon the surrender of the certificate, provided that said member should be in good standing in the Order at the time of her death, and provided also, that this certificate should not have been surrendered and another certificate issued at her request in accordance with the laws of the Order. The certificate never seemed satisfactory to Mrs. Condon. It was issued in substitution for a previous one, presumably from the evidence, in favor of a different beneficiary, and the beneficiary to he named in this certificate, No. 71,784, was a subject of discussion and dispute between Mrs. Condon and some other persons. It was finally issued, at her orders, payable to Sarah Gleason; but Mrs. Condon notified Nellie Cooney, the secretary of the local court, Nativity No. 14, to keep it for her, and as Miss Cooney swears, “refused to take it, as she had left the Gleasons and wished to change it— said she was never satisfied.”

July 1, 1905, Mrs. Condon was ill, and an inmate of an institution for the indigent and aged, managed by The Little Sisters of The Poor. She sent for Miss Cooney on that day. Miss Cooney carried with her the certificate, and Mrs. .Condon told her that she wished to change her certificate and leave $200 to her son, John Simon Condon, $300 to Mrs. Mary Flannery, her half-sister, $250 to her second cousin, Mrs. Mary Ensworth, and $250 for masses and funeral expenses in care of Mrs. Mary Ensworth. Miss Cooney thereupon filled out a printed form on the back of the certificate prepared for a change of beneficiary, and Mrs. Con-don signed it. When it was completed it read as follows, the italic words representing the manuscript portion of the indorsement:

“Chicago, July 1st, 1905.
Nativity Court No. 14, W. C. O. F.

To Mrs. J. McDonnell H. Sec’y H. C. W. C. O. F. I herewith surrender and return' to the High Court of the Women’s Catholic Order of Foresters the within Benefit Certificate No. 77,754, and direct that a new one be issued to me payable to her son John Simon Condon $200, Mrs. Mary Ensworth, guardian, sister Mary Flannery $300, her

1328 W. 50th St.
cousin, Mrs. Mary Ensworth ($250) and $250 for masses
792 W. 39th St.
and funeral expenses in care of Mrs. Mary Ensworth.
Johanna Condon X her mark.
Attest: Member’s signature.
Nellie Q. Cooney,
Secretary.”

Miss Cooney then mailed the certificate with this indorsement to the High Court of the Order at its headquarters in Chicago, asking them to issue a new certificate and send it to her. The recording secretary of the High Court afterward explained her delay in complying with this request by saying that “they had trouble with their printer and had no blank forms for certificates in 'the High Court.”

Ho new certificate was issued before the death of Johanna Condon, which occurred five days afterward, on July 6, 1905.

Divers claims being made on the Order for the amount of the certificate, it filed a bill of interpleader in the Superior Court of Cook county, making parties defendant thereto John Simon Condon, who was a minor, Charles P. Lowy, his guardian, Mary Ensworth, Mary Flannery, Sarah Gleason and Frank P. McGinn. The bill set forth the foregoing facts, and that Sarah Gleason had made and executed an assignment to Frank P. McGinn of one-half of whatever amount he might recover from the said Order for her, and that Sarah Gleason and McGinn together claimed the $1,000 provided for in the certificate, and that Charles P. lowy as guardian for John Simon Condon claimed the whole of it; that the Order had expended costs and charges of $115, which it had a right, under the by-laws of the Order, to deduct from the certificate, and that the defendants should interplead as to $885 which it offered to pay into court.

A decree was entered in accordance with the prayer of the bill and $885 was paid into the registry of the Superior Court. On further litigation between the interpleading parties the Superior Court entered a decree in favor of Sarah Gleason, finding that on February 1, 1905, the Women’s Catholic Order of Foresters issued and delivered to Johanna Condon the certificate for $1,000, No. 71,784, as described, payable at her death to Sarah Gleason; that Johanna Condon died on July 6, 1905, without having made any complete and effective change of beneficiaries; that therefore certificate No. 71,784 was in full force and effect at the time of Johanna Condon’s death, and that Sarah Gleason was entitled to the fund payable thereunder. The decree ordered that $885 in the clerk’s hands be therefore paid to Sarah Gleason or her attorney.

From this decree Mary Flannery and Mary Ensworth appealed to this court. Here they assign for error the failure of the chancellor in the Superior Court to make a great variety of findings—the result of which would have been to have recognized the attempted change of beneficiaries in the certificate, instead of holding it in full force as to Sarah Gleason.

It is difficult in this case to reconcile legal rights with ideal justice. The latter would seem to demand that regard should be had to the evident desire of the member deceased, who seems to have used all the means open to her to change the beneficiary. She tried to make a disposition of the $1,000 (which she evidently looked on as her own, and which in a certain sense, but not in a legal one, might be so considered) in a manner not inconsistent, so far as appears, with right reason and.as her desires led her. We should like to give effect to such a disposition of the fund, rather than to cause it to go where Mrs. Condon did not wish it to go, and where one-half of it is, by the pleadings, shown to be already devoted to the expense of this litigation. And to some points strenuously urged by the appellee against the rightfulness of such a disposition according to the wishes of Mrs. Condon, we think there are sufficient answers.

We are not impressed, for example, with the importance of the point made by appellee that she had a vested interest in the certificate and its proceeds.

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Related

McGough v. Hogan
185 N.W. 174 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1922)
Rizzo v. Catholic Order of Foresters
176 Ill. App. 165 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1912)
Cunat v. Supreme Tribe of Ben Hur
157 Ill. App. 138 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1910)

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Bluebook (online)
133 Ill. App. 398, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flannery-v-gleason-illappct-1907.