McClement v. Supreme Court

88 Misc. 475, 152 N.Y.S. 136
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 88 Misc. 475 (McClement v. Supreme Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McClement v. Supreme Court, 88 Misc. 475, 152 N.Y.S. 136 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

Emebson, J.

The defendant is a fraternal insurance association, duly incorporated under the laws of the dominion of Canada, having its head office in the city of Toronto. It was originally incorporated in the province of Ontario, but was reincorporated by the dominion parliament in the year 1889. The supreme court is the governing body and it has a constitution and by-laws adopted by that court for conducting the business of the association. Its system of insurance is conducted upon the assessment plan and is carried on by means of subordinate courts established by it pursuant to the terms of its charter.

In the year 1892 the defendant applied for and obtained permission to do business as an insurance company in the state of New York, which permission still continues. Having obtained such permission, it organized a subordinate court in the city of Watertown, known as Court Watertown No. 465, and thereafter and on December 29, 1892, the plaintiff, who then resided in the city of Watertown, became a member of that court. On the 7th day of January, 1893, the defendant issued and on January 16, 1893, delivered to the plaintiff its certificate or policy of insurance, which stated in substance that, in consideration of the statements and representations contained in the application for membership, the statements and, answers contained in the medical examination papers, the provisions of the constitution and by-laws prescribed from [478]*478time to time by the supreme court of the Independent Order of Foresters, all of which were assented to by plaintiff and were made part of said contract, and also in consideration of the statements and declarations contained in the obligations of subordinate courts, upon the faith of all of which said certificate was issued, said supreme court of the Independent Order of Foresters agreed to pay to the plaintiff on his reaching his seventieth birthday and on each subsequent birthday an annuity benefit of $200 until the full sum of $2,000 was paid, less any sum paid on account of total and permanent disability. It further agreed to pay, on satisfactory proof of total and permanent disability, as provided in the constitution and laws prescribed from time to time by said supreme court, a benefit of $1,000, and it further agreed'to pay to the widow or other beneficiary therein designated, or to the personal representatives of the plaintiff, on due and satisfactory proof of his death, an endowment benefit of $2,000, less any sum previously paid on ac-. count of total and permanent disability or on account of the annuity benefit.

The plaintiff, at the time said certificate was issued, was nearing his thirty-sixth birthday and he thereby became a member of the ordinary class and required to pay the monthly assessment fixed by said by-laws to be paid by members of the age of thirty-six in said ordinary class.

The by-laws of said defendant in force at the time the plaintiff joined the order and said certificate or policy of insurance was executed and delivered provided that the monthly rate of assessment which every member in the ordinary class should pay who was of the age of thirty-six at the time of his registration should be eighty cents on each $1,000, or the sum of $1.60 on a policy for $2,000, and that he should pay the [479]*479same rate of assessment thereafter as long as he remained continuously in good standing in the order and in the same class. Said by-laws further provided that whenever there were no available funds to pay the endowment or other benefits of the order the executive council should order a special assessment which should be paid by each member into his subordinate court within thirty days from the date of the call and the subordinate courts should forthwith transmit the same to the supreme secretary and when such special assessment should be ordered and paid by the members it should be refunded to them as soon as the funds of the society would permit, by the executive council remitting their monthly assessments till the extra sums paid by the members were fully repaid to them.

On joining the defendant the plaintiff was required to pay an initiation fee of $6.50 and the first assessment of $1.60 upon his policy, and he was required by said by-laws and did pay the annual dues of said local court which were fixed at the sum of forty-five cents per month. He thereafter complied with all the rules of defendant society and at all times remained a member in good standing and paid all dues, assessments and charges against him which were levied by the defendant down to October 1, 1913, and the same were received and accepted by defendant.

In the year 1898 the defendant amended its by-laws by providing for an increased rate of monthly assessments as to those who should thereafter join the order, those who were of the age of plaintiff when he joined being required to pay $1.44 per month on each $1,000 insurance, or a total monthly assessment on a certificate for $2,000 of $2.88, but such amendment provided that it should not apply to members who joined before December 31,1898, and who are, therefore, termed prerdnety-nine members, all of whom, so long as they re[480]*480mained in good standing, should pay the rates which existed before such amendment.

In the year 1908 the defendant caused a valuation to be made of its assets and liabilities and it was found that the present value of the certificates of insurance then outstanding exceeded the surplus mortuary fund on hand, together with the present value of future monthly assessments by the sum of $55,000,000, which sum represented a valuation deficiency according to standard mortality tables and the actuarial methods which were adopted. The defendant thereupon amended its by-laws by raising the monthly assessment rates of all pre-ninety-nine members, or those who joined before December 31,1898, by which amendment the plaintiff was required to pay a monthly assessment of $1.72 on each $1,000 insurance, or a total monthly assessment on a certificate for $2,000 of $3.44. The rates of monthly assessments to be paid by members joining subsequently to December 31,1898, was left as fixed by the amendment of 1898. The plaintiff, however, seems to have acquiesced in this increase of his monthly assessment and has paid the same ever since.

In the year 1912 the defendant caused a further valuation of its assets and liabilities to be made, and it was found that the present value of the policies then outstanding was the sum of $91,288,417, or, including death claims then unsettled, $92,355,091. This left, after deducting the present value of future monthly assessments and the surplus mortuary fund on hand, a valuation deficiency of $23,830,402, thus showing that the valuation deficiency of $55,000,000 which existed in 1908 had, because of the increase of assessments made in that year, been reduced about sixty per cent, during the preceding four years. It was however, found by the actuarial methods used that the valuation deficiency for the pre-ninety-nine members was $25,-[481]*481555,448, thus leaving a valuation surplus to members who joined after December 31,1898, of $1,725,046. The same-valuation showed that on December 31,1912, the defendant had a surplus fund of $20,559,911, of which sum $6,245,661 arose from payments made by preninety-nine members.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 Misc. 475, 152 N.Y.S. 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcclement-v-supreme-court-nysupct-1914.