Hill v. Hill

130 Ill. App. 278, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 617
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 27, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 130 Ill. App. 278 (Hill v. Hill) 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
Hill v. Hill, 130 Ill. App. 278, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 617 (Ill. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Puterbaugh

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee filed a bill in chancery against appellant, which alleges in substance, that a benefit certificate was theretofore issued to one W. S. Hill, the husband of the complainant, by the Court of Honor, a fraternal beneficiary society of which he was a member, for the sum of $2,000; that complainant was designated in said certificate as the beneficiary; that said Hill paid all dues and assessments required to be paid thereon until the month of August, 1904, at which time he permitted said certificate to lapse and was suspended from membership in said society; that he then agreed with complainant that if she would furnish the money necessary to reinstate him in the society, and then and thereafter pay all dues and assessments necessary to revive said certificate and keep the same in force, he would relinquish all interest therein, and all authority to control the beneficiary; that acting upon said agreement, complainant did furnish the money required and said Hill was reinstated and said certificate became again in force; that thereafter, with occasional assistance from said Hill, complainant paid the dues and assessments upon the certificate until his death; that by reason thereof, she acquired a vested interest in ■the same and said Hill became estopped from making any other person as beneficiary thereunder. That shortly before his death, in violation of the rights of complainant, said Hill surrendered the certificate to said society and procured another to be issued in its stead in which his sister, Mattie V. Hill, who had knowledge of the rights of complainant in the premises, was named as beneficiary. That upon the death of said Hill, the said Mattie V. Hill, surrendered such new certificate to the society and as beneficiary thereunder was paid the sum of $1,000, but that she received the same for complainant, who was, in equity, entitled thereto. The bill prays that a decree be entered requiring Mattie V. Hill, who is made defendant thereto, to pay said sum so received by her to complainant. The answer to said bill denies, inter alia, that the complainant paid the dues and assessments upon said certificate until the time of the death of said Hill and avers that she failed to do so, but that on the contrary, under an agreement between Hill and the defendant, entered into about four months prior to his death, she, the defendant, thereafter paid the same; that pursuant to such agreement, and at the 'time of making the same, the said Hill surrendered the certificate and procured another to be issued in which the defendant was named as beneficiary, and that thereafter the complainant never claimed any interest in the same. The answer admits that the defendant received from the Court of Honor the sum of $900, the whole amount due under the terms of the same.

Upon replication being filed to said answer, the chancellor heard evidence in open court upon the issues joined, and rendered a decree against the defendant for the sum of $900, to reverse which decree this appeal is prosecuted by the defendant.

It is urged by appellant that the chancellor erred in finding the equities to be with the complainant, and in not dismissing the bill for want of equity.

The evidence discloses that the assessments upon the certificate in question were paid by the assured from the date of its issuance until August, 1904, at about which time he and appellee ceased living together and divided their property, he going west; that under an arrangement made about this time, substantially as alleged in the bill, the certificate was delivered to appellee by her husband and that with his assistance she thereafter paid all assessments up to and including the month of February, 1905. That the assessment for March was not paid by any one and that April 1, 1905, the assured was suspended from membership and his certificate declared forfeited for nonpayment of the March assessments. That about May 13, 1905, the assured and appellant entered, into an agreement, substantially as alleged in her answer, and that pursuant thereto appellant paid the money for his reinstatement and thereafter paid all assessments until the death of the assured, by suicide, in July, 1905. The evidence further shows that after February 1905, appellee made no effort to pay the assessments, but that she relied, as she states, upon his statement to her that he would pay and had paid the same. That about June 1, 1905, appellee filed a bill for divorce against her husband, at about which time, as she testified, he asked her for the policy which she delivered to him, without her asking or his volunteering any explanation as to why he wanted it. She also testified that she did not learn until after her husband’s death that a new certificate had been issued. The evidence further shows that the assured thereafter surrendered the certificate to the society, and that on June 14, 1905, another was issued in its stead, bearing the name of appellant as beneficiary. The local recorder of the Court of Honor testified that on December 20, 1904, appellee inquired of him as to a raise in the assessments which had been ordered by the society, and that upon his informing her that said assessment had been increased from 85 cents to $1.44, she remarked that she did not know whether she would pay it or not," but that if she decided to “keep it up” she would send the money in due time; and that thereafter witness never heard from her again nor was any money paid to him by her. R. C. McCauley testified that he had a conversation with appellee shortly after her husband’s death, in which she stated that she did not know how many policies her husband had kept up; that she did not have any money to keep them in force and was afraid he had not done so. Albert Hill testified that he was present and heard the foregoing conversation, and that appellee further stated therein that she feared her husband had. no insurance because the last she knew “he was behind” and that “it looked like a shame that she carried the policies in the Woodmen' and Court of Honor until she could carry them no longer and had to drop them.” Mrs. Albert Hill testified that after the funeral appellee was asked in the presence of witness, of what lodges her husband was a member, and she replied- that she did not know whether he was a member in good standing or not; that she had carried the policies in the Woodmen and Court of Honor until she could do so no longer and she had to drop them. Appellee does not in her testimony deny that .she made the foregoing statements.

Counsel for the respective parties at bar join issue in argument upon the question as to whether or not, where the beneficiary under a certificate of the kind and character here involved, under an agreement with the member, pays, or assists in paying, the assessments, said beneficiary acquires such a vested right or interest in the certificate as to prevent the member from effectually changing the beneficiary. We think the true rule applicable in such case, may be gathered in the language of the court in Royal Arcanum v. Tracy, 169 Ill. 28, where it is said: “It may be stated that in the absence of a contract existing between the member and the beneficiary named in the certificate, as a general rule the beneficiary, before the death of the member, has no vested interest in the certificate. But the case made by appellee, as we understand the record, stands upon different ground. While a certificate like the one in question is not assignable at law, the beneficial interest therein may be transferred in equity.

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Bluebook (online)
130 Ill. App. 278, 1906 Ill. App. LEXIS 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-hill-illappct-1906.