Henry v. Imperial Council of Order of United Friends

52 N.J. Eq. 770
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 52 N.J. Eq. 770 (Henry v. Imperial Council of Order of United Friends) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henry v. Imperial Council of Order of United Friends, 52 N.J. Eq. 770 (N.J. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

Green, V. C.

The Order of United Friends is a beneficial society, having a parent organization called the “imperial council,” with jurisdiction over grand councils in ten states, including New York and New Jersey, which grand councils have power to establish subordinate councils in their respective states.

The imperial council is incorporated under the laws of the State of New York, under an act entitled “An act for the incorporation of societies and clubs for certain lawful purposes,” passed May 12th, 1875, and also “An act concerning charitable, benevolent and beneficial associations and societies as a corporation,” passed May 12th, 1881.

Among the objects of the association, as appears by its certificate, is one to promote benevolence and charity, by establishing a relief fund from which a member of the association, who has complied with all the laws, rules and regulations, or a person or persons by such member lawfully designated, or the legal heir or heirs of such member, may receive a benefit, in a sum not exceeding $3,000, which shall be paid * * * upon satisfactory evidence of the death of a member, and when all the conditions regulating such payment shall have been complied with.

Provision is made by the laws of the order for the payment, * * * to a designated beneficiary, or the heirs of a member, of the amount of insurance guaranteed to members of his class, on the death of any such member. The amount of the benefits and insurance to be paid is provided for by a relief fund which is under the exclusive control and management of the imperial council and its officers. The order and the different councils are governed by the provisions of the articles of incorporation, the constitution and general laws promulgated by the imperial council.

The relief fund is created and maintained by assessments made upon each member of the order. Calls for these assessments are made by the imperial recorder and forwarded to the subordinate councils; and it is the duty of the financier of the subordinate council to receive all moneys for the relief fund, and [772]*772keep an account of the same in separate books provided for that purpose. The law provides that every person, on becoming a, beneficiary member of the order, shall pay the amount prescribed in a table of assessments for the relief fund, and the same amount-on each assessment called thereafter while he or she remains a. member of the order. The financier is required to keep the date when such payments are made, and credit the member with the same. From this fund $1,000 is to be paid on the death of a member of the first class, $2,000 on that of a member of the second class, and $3,000 on that of a member of the third class.

The imperial recorder is required on the first day of each month, if there is less than $3,000 in the relief fund, to pay death and disability losses, to notify each subordinate council to forward to him the amount of one assessment within fifteen days, and when more than one assessment is necessary in one-month, the other is to be dated the 15th and to be forwarded within thirty days.

He is also required, at the time of issuing such notice,-to make such assessments as may be necessary to provide for the payment of all losses of the relief fund, which the imperial council may be liable to pay at either date, and forward to each recorder of subordinate councils a sufficient number of notices thereof, to-notify each beneficiary member of his council. Such subordinate council recorder is required, within eight days, to serve the-notice upon each beneficiary member of his council, and each beneficiary member is required to pay the amount due on the notice, at the council-room of his council, at a regular meeting thereof, to the financier of his said council, or to the financier personally at a place designated, and

“ any member who fails or neglects to pay such assessments within thirty days from the date of said notice, shall stand suspended from the order and forfeit all his rights, benefits and interests of, in and to the relief fund.”

Mr. Shedd, the imperial recorder, says that the way assessments are called in, that having ascertained the amount of money in the relief fund, they estimate the probable number of deaths [773]*773in the ensuing month on the basis of the deaths which had occurred in the previous month, and regulate the number of assessments in accordance therewith.

The financier of a subordinate council was required to report to the recorder thereof, at the next meeting of his council, the names of such persons as have become suspended, with the date of such suspension, which the recorder is required to enter on the minutes of the council.

When a member was suspended for non-payment of an assess-' ment, he could by the mere payment, within one month after his suspension, of all dues and assessments, reinstate himself, without ballot or medical examination. If, however, he failed to so reinstate himself, it was necessary for him to apply to the council for reinstatement, and, as a condition thereof, pay all dues and assessments past due as well as those which had been called after his suspension, and furnish the council with a physician’s certificate as specified, and he could then be reinstated by a ballot taken, if a majority should be found in favor thereof.

Thomas Henry was a member of Erie Council, Ho. 47, of Jersey City. He, as a member of the third class, obtained relief certificate Ho. 1,998, dated March 4th, 1885, for $3,000, to be paid to his wife, Maggie Henry, on his death. By the relief fund table each assessment to be paid by him, as a member of his class, was $1.05.

He died February 19th, 1890, after a short illness.

On the day of his death, his widow, the complainant, was waited upon by some of the officers of the Erie council, who requested her to change the time of her husband’s funeral from Saturday, as she had determined, to Sunday, in order that the council, of which,” they said, he was an honored member,” might more conveniently attend.

She did, in accordance with such request, alter her arrangements, and Thomas Henry was buried on Sunday. The members of Erie council attended the funeral in a body, the council paid for the advertisement and some other incidentals attending the funeral, which was conducted under the supervision of Mr, Davis and Mr. Sweeney, the officers of the council.

[774]*774By a report made by the officers of Erie council to the imperial recorder, under date of February 24th, 1890, Mr. Henry was returned as in good standing, having been reinstated February 11th, 1890, on a suspension, and the return included the amount which Mrs. Henry had paid to the financier the day before Henry’s death. The report of his reinstatement was afterwards erased and the paper returned by the imperial recorder to the Erie council, to deduct the amounts credited to Mr. Henry.

Trouble arose almost immediately after Mr. Henry’s funeral, as to whether he was, at the time of his death, a member of Erie council in good standing or suspended for the non-payment of assessments.

After much controversy and negotiation, his widow finally settled with the defendant for $500, and she now seeks to set aside a release, which she then executed, of all claims against it by reason of the relief fund certificate, and to recover the balance of $2,500.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 N.J. Eq. 770, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henry-v-imperial-council-of-order-of-united-friends-njch-1894.