Luhrs v. . Luhrs

25 N.E. 388, 123 N.Y. 367, 33 N.Y. St. Rep. 688, 78 Sickels 367, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1742
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 28, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 25 N.E. 388 (Luhrs v. . Luhrs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Luhrs v. . Luhrs, 25 N.E. 388, 123 N.Y. 367, 33 N.Y. St. Rep. 688, 78 Sickels 367, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1742 (N.Y. 1890).

Opinion

*370 Peckham, J.

The facts in this case are undisputed and are substantially as follows:

John Lulirs, in the year 1881, became a member of the Supreme Lodge, Knights of Honor, a charitable organization of the state of Kentucky, doing business in Hew York state. It had a branch lodge in the city of Brooklyn and he joined that lodge. He received a certificate from the Supreme Lodge, by which it was promised that if he should comply with all the- rules and regulations of the Supreme Lodge and should be in good standing at the time of his death, the Supreme Lodge 'would pay to such member or members of his family, or person or persons dependent upon him as lie should direct or designate by name, a sum not to exceed $2,000, as provided by general law. He designated his wife as the beneficiary, and the certificate which he originally received from the Supreme Lodge, and which was dated on the 22d of September, 1882, contained her name as such. In the constitution of the organization, it is provided that every lodge shall forward to the supreme reporter all applications for membership, and that each application shall have the name of the person to whom the benefit is to be paid inserted therein, and where no more than one certificate is issued, the beneficiary named in the last shall alone be entitled to the- benefit.

It is further provided in the constitution that a member desiring to change his beneficiary may at any time while in good standing surrender to his lodge his benefit certificate, which, together with a fee of fifty cents, shall be forwarded by the reporter of his lodge to the supreme reporter, who shall thereupon cancel th% certificate and issue a new one in lieu thereof to such member, payable as he shall have directed, within the limitations prescribed by the laws of the order; said surrender and direction to be made on the back of the benefit certificate surrendered, signed by the member and attested by the reporter of the lodge.

On the 8th day of March, 1887, while Luhrs was a member in good standing, an indorsement was made upon the certificate which had been issued to him, and which contained the *371 name of his wife as the beneficiary, and such indorsement was in the following words: “I hereby surrender to the Supreme Lodge, Knights of Honor, the within benefit certificate, and direct that a new one be issued to me, payable to my sister, Anna Luhrs.” At the end of this indorsement, John Luhrs signed his name. On the same day, the certificate thus indorsed and signed was placed in an envelope and sent to Edward Cook, who was the reporter of the Brooklyn lodge, and it was received by him on the ninth of March, and the words “Attest, Edward Cook, Reporter ” were placed together with the seal of the lodge on the certificate at the end of the indorsement. The reporter' Ooolc sent the certificate thus indorsed by mail to the Supreme Lodge at St. Louis, on the morning of the tenth of March. It does not appear in the case that any claim was made upon the trial that the sister Anna Luhrs was not a person dependent upon her brother, within the meaning of the constitution and by-laws of the organization, and I think it can be assumed that she was and was so regarded upon the trial. She was with her brother at the time he died, and no one else was, and he died on the 10th of March, 1887.

The certificate, thus forwarded to the Supreme Lodge at St. Louis was received at the home office on the twelfth of March, and on that day it was formally canceled and another certificate, with the name of Anna Luhrs as the beneficiary, and signed by the supreme director and the supreme reporter, was sent from the St. Louis oifice. At the end of the old and new certificates the words, “ I accept this certificate upon the condition herein named,” wrere printed, and at the bottom of such acceptance on the old certificate John Luhrs had signed his name. Of course there was no signature of his attached to the new certificate. Hor does it appear that this written acceptance was called for by the constitution, or by any by-law of the association. The Supreme Lodge kept the old certificate thus canceled as the authority for the issuing of another.

After the death of John Luhrs his sister Anna made a demand upon the Supreme Lodge for the payment to her of *372 the $2,000 mentioned in the second certificate. The plaintiff, the widow of the deceased, also demanded of the Supreme-Lodge the payment of the $2,000 mentioned in the first certificate. The Supreme Lodge acknowledged an obligation .to pay to one or the other of the parties, but not to both. The widow, therefore, commenced an action against the Supreme Lodge to recover the amount named in her certificate, and upon motion the defendant Anna Luhrs, the sister, was substituted as defendant in place of the Supreme Lodge, which deposited the money in the court to await its order as to the proper disposition of such-sum, and the Supreme Lodge was,, thereupon, discharged from further liability in the matter. By this equitable proceeding the widow and the sister of the deceased have been brought together to litigate the question which of them has the better right to the fund in question.

Upon the trial the court directed a verdict in favor of the defendant. Upon appeal the General Term reversed the judgment entered upon such verdict and granted a new trial. The General Term held that there had never been a valid and complete change of certificates within the life-time of the deceased, and that, hence, the widow was entitled to .the sum.

The defendant has appealed to this court from the order reversing the judgment entered in her favor and granting a new trial, and has given the usual stipulation for judgment •absolute against her in case such order be affirmed.

The question is not at all one which'is free from doubt, and about all that can be said in favor of either view has been said by the learned judges who have written at the Special and General Terms. Upon the whole, and with some hesitation, we are inclined to favor the opinion pronounced at the Special Term, and to hold that the sister, the beneficiary named in the new certificate, is entitled to the fund.

The deceased had expressed his desires in' the premises as fully as it was possible for him to do. He had himself complied with all the requirements imposed by the Supreme Lodge as necessary for him to perform in order to obtain another certificate. He had directed in writing to whom he wished *373 the certificate payable, and he had surrendered his old certificate to the authorized agent of the Supreme Lodge, which •agent had accepted such surrender and attested it by the signature of its reporter and the seal of the lodge. The person designated as the new beneficiary was one of those mentioned in the by-laws of the organization as a proper person to be named as such, and there was no discretion resting in the officers of the Supreme Lodge to refuse to issue a new certificate in accordance with the direction of the deceased upon receipt of the old one.

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.E. 388, 123 N.Y. 367, 33 N.Y. St. Rep. 688, 78 Sickels 367, 1890 N.Y. LEXIS 1742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luhrs-v-luhrs-ny-1890.