Jory v. Supreme Council American Legion of Honor

26 L.R.A. 733, 38 P. 524, 105 Cal. 20, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 1103
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1894
DocketNo. 15565
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 26 L.R.A. 733 (Jory v. Supreme Council American Legion of Honor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jory v. Supreme Council American Legion of Honor, 26 L.R.A. 733, 38 P. 524, 105 Cal. 20, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 1103 (Cal. 1894).

Opinion

Garoutte, J.

The right of ownership to the proceeds of a two-thousand-dollar benefit certificate, issued by a mutual benefit society, known as the American Legion of Honor, forms the subject of this litigation. The society is not an active party to the litigation, having paid the money into court, and being entirely satisfied with the court’s adjudication as to whom it belongs. The respondent and appellant are brother and sister, and the beneficiary certificate was taken out by the mother, Emily Kate Jory, and made payable upon her death to the daughter appellant, or any other member of the mother’s family whom she might thereafter ■ in her lifetime designate.

The by-laws of the society provide that members may, at any time when in good standing, surrender their benefit certificates, and have new ones issued, payable to such beneficiary dependent upon them as they may direct, subject, however, to the provisions of section 2: “ Such change to be made upon petition to the supreme secretary, signed by the member desiring to make the change, attested by the secretary of the subordinate council, and having the seal of the subordinate council attached, substantially in accordance with the form prescribed in this section.....The fee to be paid for a new certificate issued shall be one dollar, and must [25]*25accompany the petition. No change of beneficiary shall be made in any other manner than herein prescribed; . . . . provided, that in case of the loss or destruction of the old certificate satisfactory evidence of such loss or destruction shall be produced by affidavit or otherwise before a new certificate be issued.....No act of a subordinate council in the admission of any member to membership in this order, and no act of any member done for the purpose of changing his or her beneficiary, shall be recognized by or deemed binding upon the supreme council, or as entitling the person admitted, or the new beneficiary named, to any benefits from this order, unless such acts shall be in strict accordance with the provisions contained in the laws and constitution prescribed by the supreme council, nor until such acts have been ratified and approved by the supreme council.”

Several years after this certificate was issued the mother became desirous of changing the beneficiary named therein, to wit, the appellant daughter, and to substitute therefor the respondent son; and in furtherance of such desire, and for the purpose of complying with the laws of the society, she attempted to secure control of the original certificate which was then in the keeping of her daughter appellant, in order that she might surrender the same to the society; but she was unsuccessful in this endeavor. Upon this question the court found the fact to be that “ she (the daughter) refused to redeliver the same to the said Emily Kate Jory, although frequently requested so to do by her as alleged in said amended complaint, but kept and concealed the same for the purpose of endeavoring to prevent her said mother from designating the plaintiff herein as the beneficiary thereunder, and securing the said two thousand dollars herself, and so kept and concealed it until after her mother’s death, as alleged in the amended complaint on file herein.” And this finding is supported by the evidence.

[26]*26Being unable to secure the original certificate, the mother regularly took all the other steps required by the laws of the order for the purpose of changing the béneficiary, and accompanied her application for a change with an affidavit stating the reason why the original certificate was not surrendered, and further stating therein that she made her son, the respondent herein, her sole beneficiary under said certificate. The society still refused to issue the new certificate upon the ground that the original was neither lost nor destroyed, and yet had not been surrendered. Matters remained in statu quo until the death of the mother, when this litigation arose between the children, and was decided by the trial court in favor of the son.

Laying aside any question of interest in the original beneficiary certificate resting in the daughter by virtue of matters arising in parol between the mother and the daughter, we are clear that as between the original beneficiary, the daughter, and the proposed new beneficiary, the son, the proceeds of this policy belong to the son. As between them there was a substitution of beneficiaries in the eyes of a court of equity. If the Legion of Honor was here as an aggressive party, insisting as against the claims of the son upon a strict compliance with its by-laws before it could be compelled to take money from its treasury, possibly a different question would be presented; but, as between these parties litigant, the court will administer justice from the standpoint of equity, and bring to the solution of this question those broad principles upon the basis of which equity always deals. The general rule unquestionably is that a change of a beneficiary cannot be made by the insured unless a substantial compliance with the laws and regulations of the society is had; yet courts of equity have recognized various exceptions to this "general principle, and the facts of this case bring it squarely within one of the well-recognized exceptions. This exception is build ed upon the principle that equity does not demand impossible things, and a [27]*27will consider that done which ought to have been done; and is embraced within the proposition that when the insured complies with all the requirements of the rules for the purpose of making the substitution of beneficiaries, with which he has the power to comply, he has done all that a court of equity demands. (See Supreme Conclave v. Cappella, 41 Fed. Rep. 1, approved in McLaughlin v. McLaughlin, 104 Cal. 171; Grand Lodge v. Childs, 70 Mich. 104; Isgrigg v. Schooley, 125 Ind. 95; Marsh v. American Legion of Honor, 149 Mass. 512.)

The present case comes squarely within this exception, and in principle is identical with some of the cases we have cited. For the purpose of changing the beneficiary, the insured complied in detail with every rule of the society, save the single one of surrendering the certificate, and this she was unable to do after using due diligence to that end. Impossibilities are not required, and if the certificate had been lost or destroyed, and thus the surrender made impossible, equity would have treated the surrender as duly made; and in legal effect the certificate was lost in this case. But there is another well-settled principle of equity equally fatal to appellant’s claims. No person can take advantage of his own wrong. No man is allowed to come into a court of equity, and reap beneficial results from his own iniquity. If Mrs. Jory had the right to make the change of beneficiaries, and did all that it was possible for her to do toward making such change, but was prevented by the acts of appellant from a consummation of her intentions, then appellant will not be allowed to derive any benefit from her fraudulent conduct. If a fraud of her own practicing prevented a legal substitution of beneficiaries, then as against her an equitable substitution will be held to have taken place.

If the insured, Mrs. Jory, had a legal right to make a change of beneficiaries at the time she attempted so to do, then the maxims of equity which we have applied to the facts of the case dispose of this litigation fully and entirely. But, as a further ground of defense to [28]*28the action, it is insisted by appellant that her mother had no such right.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 L.R.A. 733, 38 P. 524, 105 Cal. 20, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 1103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jory-v-supreme-council-american-legion-of-honor-cal-1894.