Jenkins v. Talbot

170 N.E. 735, 338 Ill. 441
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 21, 1930
DocketNo. 19916. Decree affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 170 N.E. 735 (Jenkins v. Talbot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jenkins v. Talbot, 170 N.E. 735, 338 Ill. 441 (Ill. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court:

This appeal is from a decree of the circuit court of Cook county which dismissed the appellants’ bill of complaint for want of equity. The object of the bill was to enjoin the defendants from enforcing certain changes in the by-laws of the Modern Woodmen of America, constituting a re-adjustment of its plan of operation as a fraternal beneficiary society organized under the laws of this State. The cause was heard on bill and answer, and there is therefore no disagreement about any question of fact.

The Modern Woodmen of America was organized in 1883 and incorporated in 1884. The corporation is a defendant to the bill and the individual defendants are its executive officers and directors, who compose its executive council. The head banker is also a defendant though not a member of the executive council. The object for which the society is organized is not for profit but to promote fraternal relations among its members and furnish life indemnity or pecuniary benefits to persons or institutions in the event of death or of accident, as permitted by the laws of the State and of the society. The society has subordinate bodies called “camps” in forty-six States of the United States and four provinces of Canada. Its supreme governing and law-making power is the head camp, composed of officers and representatives elected by the members, which meets every four years and has jurisdiction over the subordinate camps and officers and members of the society.

The complainants in the original bill are Edward W. Jenkins, William H. Taylor, John Brauninger, Thomas Purviance and John W. Upchurch, who have been members of the society from twenty-three to thirty-four years and whose ages are from fifty-seven to seventy-one years. Each is the holder of a certificate for $2000 except Purviance, whose certificate is for $3000. An intervening bill joining in the prayer of the original bill was filed by leave of the court by Beatrice Camp No. 270 of the Modern Woodmen of America of Beatrice, Nebraska, D. C. Rambo, George W. Gamble, Edward McAlister, John William McKissick and Carl E. McAlister. The individual intervening complainants have been members of the society from two to thirty-six years, their ages being from twenty-three to seventy-four years, and have certificates for $1000 or $2000 each. Walter S. Canfield and D. W. Wright also filed an intervening bill by leave of the court, joining in the prayer of the original bill. The bill is filed and relief is prayed on behalf of the complainants named and of all other members of the society similarly situated.

The answer sets out the facts in the history of the order which are relied upon as justifying and requiring the changes in the by-laws made at the meeting of the head camp in June, 1929, constituting the plan of re-adjustment which is the subject matter of the present litigation. Originally the articles of association provided that the funds for the ordinary expenses of business should be raised by assessments on the members, thus creating a general fund, and the funds for the payment of death losses from assessments of surviving members, which should constitute the benefit fund. This fund was to be collected from the surviving members of the fraternity by the proper officers of the local camps, forwarded to the head camp to be disbursed by its officers, and could be appropriated for no other purpose. By-laws were enacted for the payment of death benefits by the levy of an assessment upon the surviving members and its collection from them at rates fixed according to the respective ages of the members at the daté of entry into membership, as often as might be necessary to pay the agreed amount of benefits to the beneficiaries of deceased members. These provisions continued until June, 1917, when the head camp amended the articles of association by providing that the fund for the payment of "death losses and permanent disability claims should be created and maintained by assessments on the members and by interest on or other accretions to said fund and should be known as the benefit fund, no part of which should be used for the payment of the expenses of the society; and that the head camp should have power to determine the number, regulate and fix the rate of assessments and their payment, create, maintain and disburse a reserve fund, and do all other acts by it deemed essential to the welfare and perpetuity of the society in conformity with the laws of the State of Illinois. At the same time the by-laws were amended by the adoption of section 100, providing that any member seventy years or more of age who had become disabled so that he could not perform the ordinary duties of life should be entitled to receive from the benefit fund a disability benefit equal to all beneficial assessments paid by him on account of the benefit certificate surrendered.

Upon the organization of the association a code of laws for its government and the management of its affairs was adopted, which has been amended and added to from time to time. Although the original articles of association provided that the benefit fund for the payment of death losses should be derived from assessments collected from surviving members, no such assessment was ever made. From three to twelve assessments a year were made from time to time and were enough to pay the death losses. The bylaws required every member, as soon as admitted, to deposit one benefit assessment and three months’ general fund dues, and there were always sufficient funds to pay death losses without the levy of assessments on surviving members. Since 1912 a by-law has provided that for meeting the mortuary liability a benefit assessment be levied for each calendar month upon each beneficial member, to be paid during the calendar month. The rate of assessment originally provided in the by-laws was thirty cents for each thousand dollars included in the beneficiary certificate for ages from eighteen to twenty years, thirty-five cents from twenty to twenty-four .years, forty cents from twenty-four to twenty-eight years, and higher for greater ages. In 1885 these rates were changed, the rate for ages from eighteen to twenty-eight years being fixed at forty cents a thousand. In 1903 the rates were revised and substantially increased, requiring every beneficial member to pay after January 1, 1904, death benefit assessments, according to his age at the date of his certificate, of fifty cents for ages from eighteen to twenty-five years, fifty-five cents from twenty-six to twenty-seven years, sixty cents from twenty-eight to twenty-nine years, and at proportionally, increased rates for greater ages. These rates continued in force until by the action of the head camp in June, 1919, in adopting a by-law designated as section 42, a new table of rates was created, effective July 1, 1919, which increased the rates from fifty to one hundred per cent, based upon the age of the member on his birthday nearest the date of his original- certificate, as had been the case with previous tables of rates. Under this table the rates at ages of seventeen and eighteen years were seventy-five cents, increasing with greater age to two dollars at forty-five years, except that the rate for any member admitted before July 1, 1919, who was over thirty-seven years old at his birthday nearest the date of his original certificate, should be $1.50 for each $1000 instead of the rates provided for the ages from thirty-eight to forty-five years, inclusive.

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Bluebook (online)
170 N.E. 735, 338 Ill. 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jenkins-v-talbot-ill-1930.