Grand Lodge of Ancient Order of United Workmen v. Beath

114 N.W. 662, 150 Mich. 657, 1908 Mich. LEXIS 796
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 1908
DocketDocket No. 84
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 114 N.W. 662 (Grand Lodge of Ancient Order of United Workmen v. Beath) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grand Lodge of Ancient Order of United Workmen v. Beath, 114 N.W. 662, 150 Mich. 657, 1908 Mich. LEXIS 796 (Mich. 1908).

Opinions

Ostrander, J.

Complainant was organized under the provisions of 2 Comp. Laws, §§ 8017-8057. It paid into court the sum of $2,000, the amount due upon a benefit certificate issued to Abraham Neilands, who died October 5,1905. Defendants, claimants of the fund, interpleaded, and from a decree distributing the money, the son and the widow of the deceased have appealed.

In the certificate first issued to Abraham, his wife Jane was named as beneficiary. She died in 1898. A new certificate was issued, naming the son, Charles, as beneficiary. To this certificate after it was issued Abraham attached a writing, by the terms of which he professed himself indebted to Sarah Cumming in the sum of $500, which sum he desired paid out of the proceeds of the certificate by his son, the beneficiary. Later this second certificate was canceled and a third one issued, in which Sarah Cumming was named as beneficiary, her relation to Abraham being therein falsely stated to be that of cousin. -Pending the issue of this certificate, after consulting with defendant Beath, an arrangement for the purpose of securing payment of $500 to Sarah was entered into by Abraham, Sarah, and Beath. Two instruments were drawn and executed, one by Sarah and Beath, in which she assigned and set over to Beath all her right, title, and interest in the certificate and fund and empowered Beath to collect and receipt for the money, in consideration that he pay to her out of the fund $500; one by Abraham and Beath, by the terms of which Abraham appointed his attorney, Beath, to dispose of the money coming to his hands by paying his, Abraham’s, just debts, etc., by purchasing a gown for a person named, and by keeping the remainder for one year in trust for the son, Charles, leaving it discretionary with said attorney to pay the balance to Charles if he was regarded as worthy, otherwise to pay it to Sarah Cumming. He also gave to Beath a paper in form a demand note for $1,000, payable out of said certificate. Discovering that she had been represented to be a cousin, Sarah called the attention of Beath to the matter, told [659]*659him she was not a cousin nor in any way related. Upon the suggestion of some one, Abraham and Sarah were thereafter married. When the ceremony was performed, Abraham was sick in bed, the marriage was never consummated, and, a few weeks later, Abraham died. Meantime, after the marriage, a new certificate had been applied for and had issued, naming Sarah (Cumming) Neilands, wife, as beneficiary. It is admitted that the member had the right to change the beneficiary as often as he pleased. It seems to be assumed that because of a limitation upon this power of appointment, Sarah Cumming was not a proper beneficiary. The court below sustained the assignment and the trust and ordered the balance of the money, some $861, paid .to the son. Both the wife and the son claim all of the fund. The case is a proper one for interpleader, since both the wife and the son are within the statute classes and if no later proper change of beneficiary was made the last valid designation of a beneficiary is found in the certificate in which the son is so named.

The son attacks the validity of the marriage. The apparent purpose of the marriage was to insure the payment of the sum of $500 to Sarah. Whatever the purpose, it was a valid marriage, and Sarah Cumming Neilands became, what Sarah Cumming was not, a lawful beneficiary. The last certificate,issued after the marriage, in which she was named as sole beneficiary, entitled her to receive and to keep the entire fund unless she is bound by the arrangement to which she, her husband, and defendant Beath were parties. It is her contention that the said trust arrangement was made with reference to the certificate then to be issued to Sarah Cumming, cousin, and was abrogated by the subsequent issuing of a new certificate to herself as wife. She insists, further, that a creditor could not be a beneficiary, and that he could not be, indirectly, made such by directions of the insured concerning the disposition of the fund, or by the agreement [660]*660of the beneficiary to dispose of the fund in a particular way.

I have not found the articles of association or the bylaws of complainant or the certificate in the record. Omissions of this nature may and sometimes do lead to what appears to be a curious condition in the law. It is at least a reasonable inference that the by-law set out in the opinion in Grand Lodge A. O. U. W. v. McKay, 149 Mich. 90, was in force when the certificate in this case matured by the death of Mr. Neilands. The statute powers of complainant are to provide relief of the families and heirs of deceased members. By amendment to the statute, made in 1899 (Act No. 130), a section is added which is here set out:

“Sec. 12. The money or other benefit, relief, aid or sick benefit fund to be paid, provided or rendered by any corporation formed in pursuance of this act, shall not be liable to attachment, garnishment or other process and shall not be seized, taken, appropriated or applied by any legal or equitable process or by operation of law, to pay any debt or liability of the deceased member, or of any certificate holder, or of any beneficiary named in any certificate, or of any person who may have any rights thereunder.”

Trustee Beath and those he represents are none of them, excepting only the son, of the statute classes. The trustee cites and relies upon Woodruff v. Tilman, 112 Mich. 188; Cowin v. Hurst, 124 Mich. 545, and Great Camp K. O. T. M. M. v. Deem, 143 Mich. 652, upon the authority of which cases he contends the trust arrangement, unless rescinded, was enforceable. It is clear that Great Camp K. O. T. M. M. v. Deem is not in point.

Generally, the member of a benefit society has no property in the benefit but has the power to designate a bene: ficiary. Most often this power of appointment is limited, in the statute or in the articles of association or the bylaws of the association. Whether, the statute containing no prohibitory or restrictive words, such a limitation is to be found in the statute statement of the general purposes [661]*661of the organization, is a question of construction of the language employed. It is held in Massachusetts that the statement of general purposes is such a limitation. Supreme Council Am. L. of H. v. Perry, 140 Mass. 580; Daniels v. Pratt, 143 Mass. 221. See, also, Supreme Lodge K. of H. v. Nairn, 60 Mich. 44. An opposed conclusion is reached in Pennsylvania. Maneely v. Knights of Birmingham, 115 Pa. 305. See, generally, 1 Bacon on Benefit Societies and Life Insurance, §§ 236-265. I think it cannot be said that Woodruff v. Tilman, supra, decided the question here presented. And see Michigan Mut. Benefit Ass’n v. Rolfe, 76 Mich. 146; Wolf v. Grand Lodge, 102 Mich. 23. In Cowin v. Hurst, supra, a legal beneficiary was designated. At the instance of the member, she entered into an agreement to pay the entire proceeds to one who could not be a beneficiary and who, unless he could be treated as a creditor, does not appear to have had any insurable interest in the life of -the member. The beneficiary was compelled, at the suit of this third person, to turn over the proceeds of the certificate which had been paid to her by the association.

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Bluebook (online)
114 N.W. 662, 150 Mich. 657, 1908 Mich. LEXIS 796, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grand-lodge-of-ancient-order-of-united-workmen-v-beath-mich-1908.