Lister v. Lister

73 Mo. App. 99, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 25
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 10, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 73 Mo. App. 99 (Lister v. Lister) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lister v. Lister, 73 Mo. App. 99, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 25 (Mo. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Ellison, J.

David P. Lister was a member of the order of the Grand Lodge of Locomotive Engineers at the time of his death, and held a beneficiary certificate for $1,500, payable to plaintiff Helen, his mother. Defendant is David’s widow, and the lodge having-paid into court the amount of the certifi- "*■ cate, these two parties' interplead for it. The trial court gave judgment in favor of plaintiff, the mother, she being the beneficiary named as aforesaid. When the certificate was issued David was unmarried and was living with Helen, his mother. Afterward he married defendant Ida, and they thenceforth lived apart from the mother, the latter residing at her own home on her own resources in the same city and not depending on David for support or maintenance. The mother now claims the money by reason of being the person named as beneficiary in the certificate, contend-' ing that the fact of her not being a member of her son’s immediate family and not being dependent upon him for support, does not incapacitate her under the bylaws governing the lodge. The widow claims that the foregoing facts intervening since the certificate was issued prevent the mother from recovering the money and that under the by-laws aforesaid she is entitled to it.

It is recited in the preamble of the constitution and by-laws of the lodge :

“Realizing the fact that our vocation involves ceaseless peril, and that it is a duty we owe ourselves and our families to make suitable provision against those disasters which almost daily overtake us on the rail, the necessity of protecting our interests as firemen, of extending to each other the hand of charity, and [103]*103"being sober, industrious and honorable men, becomes self-evident; and hence the brotherhood has adopted as its cardinal principles the motto: Protection, Charity, Sobriety and Industry.”

, ties: family: ben enciary: icado?.eofre"

Sections 47 and 48 of the constitution are as follows:

“Sec. 47. The beneficiary department of this ■order, established to provide substantial relief to members and their families in the event of death or total ■disability, shall be known as the Beneficiary Department of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen.

“Sec. 48. All members shall be required to participate in the beneficiary department, subject to the laws, rules and regulations by which it is now, or may be hereafter, governed, except such members as may have failed to pass the required medical examination.”

Section 50 provides for issuing a certificate and its form, and directs that at his death the amount named therein “shall be paid to-his-whose residence is-.”

It is apparent from the foregoing parts of the constitution that the object of the organization of the lodge was, in case of the death of the member, to provide for his family.

We decided in Keener v. Grand Lodge, 38 Mo. App. 543, that the beneficiary of the fund must be of the class named in the law of its organization. In that case the law provided that the associations should be 4 4for the relief and aid of the families, widows, orphans, or other dependents of their deceased members.” And we held that a member could not name as beneficiary a woman living with him as his mistress. That if he did so name a person sustaining such relation, she could not receive the fund, but that it would go to the class intended by the law. From that case and the authori[104]*104ties cited therein, together with those gathered by counsel in this case, it is quite clear that plaintiff, the mother, though named as the beneficiary in the certificate, can not be allowed to take the fund unless she can be held to be a member of her deceased son’s family in the sense contemplated by the by-laws of the order. The word “family” may be of narrow or broad meaning as the intention of the parties using the word, or the intention of the law in using it, may be made to appear. It is not easy to disassociate ourselves from the notion that the mother is always and under all circumstances of the family of the child. Yet in point of fact it is a part of the course of nature for the child (generally) when grown into manhood, to separate from the mother and establish a separate and independent family which is dependent upon him and which, primarily, he seeks to protect and provide for. The mother or other relative may be a portion of such family by remaining with it and being dependent upon the relation. In this case the son separated from the mother and each thereafter maintained a separate household, the mother in nowise being dependent upon her son. When such condition came about, she placed herself, or was placed, outside the object and intention of the order, as evidenced by its by-laws; and under the authorities above referred to, she became thenceforth incapacitated to receive the protection of the order.

We then have this condition of case: The mother was a member of the deceased’s family when the certificate was issued and was then fully capacitated to take the fund, if the contingency of her son’s death had happened while the relation existed. But before the son’s death, as we have seen, she ceased to be a member of his family. The question, therefore, presents itself, whether she must have sustained the proper re[105]*105lation at the time o£ death when the certificate became effective. We think she should. For, as we have seen, the object of that order is to protect persons of a certain description or class and no others can be named by the member who takes out the certificate. If the member can only name one capacitated under the laws of the order, it would appear reasonable and proper to hold that no other should finally receive the benefit of the provision made by the order, and that therefore the capacity to take the fund is determined as the status may be at the death of the member. And so it has been repeatedly held that the provision made by the certificate is testamentary in its character. Masonic Ben. Ass’n v. Bunch, 109 Mo. 580. In the case of Railway Conductors v. Koster, 55 Mo. App. 186, St. Louis Court of Appeals, in an opinion by Judge Rombauer, it was held that,'where the certificate was taken to “be paid to my wife, Mrs. H. A. Koster,” who afterward became divorced from the member and re-married, she could not recover the fund, for the reason that she did not fill the proper relationship at the time of the member’s death. The same was held in the case of Tyler v. Mut. Relief, 145 Mass. 134.

■ We do not overlook the fact that in this case plaintiff remained, of course, the mother of the member at his death. But it must be remembered she was not capacitated to be named as the beneficiary at the time the certificate was taken out by reason of being the mother, but rather by reason of being a member of the family. And while she did not cease to be the mother, she did cease to be a member of the family. So, in the case of Sanger v. Rothchild, 123 N. Y. 577, the member, then unmarried, took out a certificate (legal at the time) for the benefit of his uncle and aunt; afterward he married and then died without making any disposition or change in the certificate, it was held that [106]*106the uncle and aunt were not entitled to the fund. The case of Elsey v. Mut. Relief Ass’n, 142 Mass. 224, was where the certificate was taken out in the name of the wife. Afterward the member had it changed to his mother. The court declared the mother had no interest in the fund. The by-law under which the wife claimed was as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
73 Mo. App. 99, 1898 Mo. App. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lister-v-lister-moctapp-1898.