Flowers v. Sovereign Camp, W. of the W.

90 S.W. 526, 40 Tex. Civ. App. 593, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 207
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 18, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 90 S.W. 526 (Flowers v. Sovereign Camp, W. of the W.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flowers v. Sovereign Camp, W. of the W., 90 S.W. 526, 40 Tex. Civ. App. 593, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 207 (Tex. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

SPEER, Associate Justice.

This suit was instituted by appellant, Lucy M Flowers, to recover the sum of $1,000 from the appellee, the Sovereign Camp W. O.'W., upon a beneficiary certificate issued to J. B. Flowers in her favor as his wife on the 23d day of Uovember, 1898. She alleged all facts necessary to show a liability upon the part of the defendant, and also that Cleo Humphries was claiming some interest in said certificate, and made her a party defendant to the suit. Mrs. Humphries answered alleging in substance that for ten years prior to J. B. Flowers’ death she had been a member of his household and was dependant upon him for a support, and that upon the 26th day of March, 1904, three days prior to his death, he had designated her as the beneficiary in said certificate in lieu of his wife, Lucy M Flowers, in accordance with the constitution of the defendant company. The Sovereign Camp W. O. W. admitted in its answer that it was liable on said certificate for the sum sued for, but was unable to determine to whom the same should be paid, and paid the $1,000-into court to abide its judgment. The case was tried by the court and resulted in a judgment in favor of Cleo Humphries.

In the view we take of the case, the entire controversy is determined by the interpretation to be given to section 64 of the constitution of the Sovereign Camp W. O. W., which is as follows: “Should a member desire to change his beneficiary or beneficiaries he may do so upon payment to the Sovereign clerk of a fee of 25 cents, which sum together with his certificate he shall forward to the Sovereign clerk with his request written on the back of his certificate giving the name or names of such new beneficiary or beneficiaries. Upon receipt thereof the Sovereign clerk shall issue and return a new certificate subject to the same conditions and rate as the one surrendered, which conditions shall be a part of the new certificate, in which he shall write the name or names of the new beneficiary or beneficiaries and shall record said change in the proper books of the Sovereign Camp.

“In the event the beneficiary’s certificate is lost or the possession thereof is for any reason withheld from the member desiring such change of beneficiary, before the change shall be made the member shall furnish the Sovereign clerk satisfactory proof under oath of the facts of the loss of the certificate, or proof under oath of the facts and circum *598 stances of the withholding of such certificate from its possession, as the case may be, and waiving for himself and beneficiary'or beneficiaries all rights thereunder, whereupon on payment of twenty-five cents the Sovereign clerk, if such proof is satisfactory to him, shall issue to said members a new certificate in lieu of the old one with the desired change of beneficiary.”

On March 26, 1904, J. B. Flowers made out and swore to the following application for change of beneficiary: "Application is hereby made to the Sovereign clerk of the Sovereign Camp, Woodmen of the World, for the issuance of a duplicate certificate of membership in said fraternity. There was delivered to me on or about the 8th of December, 1898, Beneficiary Certificate No. 28535 for the amount of $1,000, payable to Chas. N. and A. C. Flowers who are dependent children of the undersigned. I was at that time a member of Lone Star Camp No. 2, located at Fort Worth, State of Texas. Said certificate has been lost or (destroyed) and after diligent search I have been unable to find same. I hereby certify that said certificate has not been by me assigned to secure payment of any sum of money to any person whatsoever, and has not been otherwise disposed.of by me. To the best of my knowledge and belief it is not in existence.

"In consideration of the delivery to me of a duplicate I do hereby waive for myself, my heirs, assigns and devisees all rights and payments of benefits or payments due, or which may become due under and by virtue of said lost or destroyed certificate, and agree to accept said duplicate in lieu of and as substitute for same, and do for myself, my heirs, assigns, and devisees hereby relinquish all claims for payment by said Sovereign Camp, Woodmen of the World, of any sum or sums in excess of the amount stated in said duplicate certificate, in case of my death. Witness my hand at Fort Worth, State of Texas, this 26th day of March, 1904. (L. S.) J. B. Flowers,
Attest: J. A. Todd, Clerk.
(Lone Star Camp.)
"You are hereby authorized to malee my new certificate issued in place of certificate lost or destroyed, payable to Mrs. Cleo Humphries, who bears relationship to me as dependent. (State wife, children or dependent, as you desire), and I hereby revoke my former direction or designation of beneficiary. J. B. Flowers.
"Sworn to and subscribed before me by J. B. Flowers this the 26th day of March, 1904. (L. S.)
T. W. Dunn, Notary Public in and for Tarrant Co., Texas.”
(Ón back) : "Received by Sovereign clerk, April 1, 1904, Cts. Fee paid.”

This application was delivered by Flowers to one J. T. Todd, clerk of the local camp W. O. W., to which Flowers belonged, with the request that he send it to the Sovereign clerk, and Todd mailed the same to Yates, the Sovereign clerk at Omaha, Nebraska, the home office of the appellee company, on April 1, 1904, but after the death of J. B. Flowers. It is the contention of appellee Humphries, and the court *599 so found as a fact, that it was contemplated by the Sovereign Camp W. O. W. and Flowers at the time the certificate was issued that the United States mail should be employed in order to forward to the W. O. W. any application made by Flowers to change the beneficiary in his certificate, and the application in this case having been deposited in the United States mail prior to the death of Flowers, that therefore the change of beneficiary was perfected before Flowers’ death. This contention and finding has no basis whatever in the evidence unless it is supported by the provisions of that section of the constitution of appellee order heretofore quoted.

An examination of the section in question will disclose that a method of change is prescribed, first, where the member is in possession of his certificate, and second, where such certificate is lost or its possession withheld from the member desiring such change of beneficiary. In the first case it is provided that the change may be made “upon payment to the Sovereign Camp of a fee of twenty-five cents, which sum together with his certificate he shall forward to the Sovereign clerk with his request written on the back of his certificate, giving the name or names of such new beneficiary or beneficiaries.” Here the authority to “forward” the request might support the contention that the United States mail, the customary agency, was the means intended to be used. The Camp might be willing in such case, where the certificate itself was forwarded to it, to treat'the United States mail as its agent, and a delivery to such agent as a delivery to it. But in the event the beneficiary certificate is lost or otherwise out of the possession of the member, an entirely different method of changing the beneficiary is prescribed in which the authority to “forward” is not given.

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Bluebook (online)
90 S.W. 526, 40 Tex. Civ. App. 593, 1905 Tex. App. LEXIS 207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flowers-v-sovereign-camp-w-of-the-w-texapp-1905.