Mee v. Bankers' Life Ass'n

72 N.W. 74, 69 Minn. 210, 1897 Minn. LEXIS 253
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 9, 1897
DocketNos. 10,509—(167)
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 72 N.W. 74 (Mee v. Bankers' Life Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mee v. Bankers' Life Ass'n, 72 N.W. 74, 69 Minn. 210, 1897 Minn. LEXIS 253 (Mich. 1897).

Opinion

COLLINS, J.

This was an action upon two certificates of membership in defendant life insurance association upon the assessment or co-operative plan, issued simultaneously in April, 1892, to one Edward W. Mee; the beneficiary therein named being a brother, Harry Mee. The former died April 2, 1894, and the latter died intestate soon after the institution of this action, whereupon the administratrix of his estate was substituted as plaintiff. At the trial the court below ordered a verdict .in favor of defendant, and on appeal from an order [212]*212denying plaintiff’s motion for a new trial the principal assignments of error relate to the ruling on which the verdict was based.

The defense relied upon by the association was that by reason of a neglect to pay a mortuary assessment or call made December 1, 1893, and which, according to the articles of association, had to be paid within 30 days thereafter, Edward W. Mee ceased to be a member of said association, and said certificates became null and void long prior to his decease, it being provided in said articles that default in payment should operate to terminate a membership without any further act or ceremony whatsoever. A full history of various matters which occurred in relation to and subsequent to this December assessment, and also in relation to an assessment made on April 1 following, was set forth in the answer, but the plaintiff made these matters and circumstances a part of her case in chief. So that, when the instruction we have mentioned was given to the jury, all of the facts fully appeared; those upon which the' association rested its defense as well as those upon which plaintiff relied. It was conceded that the amount due upon the December mortuary call was not paid when due, and as to what transpired in reference to it we shall have occasion to allude further on, as well as to other facts.

1. The first point made by plaintiff’s counsel is that the so-called December assessment was invalid for two distinct reasons: (a) Because all steps looking toward the assessment were taken prior to a time specifically prescribed by the by-laws; (b) because no complete assessment was made by the board of trustees or by its resolution, what was relied on being largely the acts of the secretary or of some clerk under his direction.

We do not think it worth while to discuss this point at length. It stood admitted that ten death losses had actually occurred when on November 6, 1893, an assessment being necessary and obligatory upon the association, the board of trustees, by resolution, made and levied the regular December assessment upon all members, to be collected according to the articles of the association. From that •time on until the last day of November the secretary and one or more clerks were engaged in preparing, causing to be printed, and in getting ready for mailing the necessary notices of assessment or mortuary calls for over 12,000 members. These notices were dated [213]*213December 1, and mailed on the last day of November. The articles provided that all assessments for the payment of death losses should be made by resolution of the board of trustees, and a by-law had been adopted, which read “until and unless otherwise ordered by the board of trustees, mortuary assessments” shall be made only on the first secular days of April, July, and December in each year, and by special resolution. Although the resolution in question was adopted November 6, it was expressly made for the December assessment. It was necessary for the resolution to be made and adopted prior to the first secular day in December, long enough before, at least, to prepare the notices for mailing, and this is what was done. That the secretary and his clerks performed a large amount of clerical work incident upon the adoption of the resolution is of no consequence whatsoever. The articles and the by-laws were substantially complied with, and the assessment regularly and properly made.

2. It is contended that, although the member failed to pay the amount of the December assessment within the specified time, and was in default, that the association had in its possession funds belonging to him exceeding the amount required, and which, by the terms of the articles of association as they stood when he became a member, were held in pledge for the purpose of meeting assessments, and for this reason the association could not treat the contract as forfeited, for there was no forfeiture. After the certificates were issued, and prior to the December assessment, the articles were amended, so that as to all members subsequently joining the above claim could not be made; but the claim is that, as to members who had previously joined, these amendments did not apply. It is immaterial whether they did or did not.

Article 4 of the original articles provided that each member, upon being admitted, should deposit with and to the credit of the association as many dollars as he was years of age — counting to his nearest birthday — in pledge to secure payment of all assessments, occasioned by death of members, made against him during his life, and to be known as the “guaranty deposit.” Time might be granted to make this deposit, and it was granted in this case by the execution' and delivery of a note for each membership, — one for $45, due in [214]*214one year; the other, for the same amount, due in two years. The first matured April 4, 1893, and was paid. The second matured April 4, 1894, two days after the maker died. The claim we have mentioned is based on the payment of the first note.

By article 7 it was provided that a member should continue and be a member only so long as he should pay all annual dues and mortuary assessments, and in case of default all moneys by him paid or pledged “will nevertheless be used and applied to the purposes for which the same were so paid and deposited.” A part of article 10 was as follows:

“All amounts pledged to this company to secure payment of assessments occasioned by death of its members shall be used only for that purpose, and meanwhile the same shall be and remain invested in United States registered bonds, and shall constitute and be known as the ‘Guaranty Trust Fund’.”

And a part of article 11 was in the following words:

“All losses occasioned by death of members shall be collected by this company from its members, and, in case of default on the part of any member, the amount of his assessment on account of such loss shall be paid out of his guaranty deposit.”

There were no provisions in the articles for a subsequent payment by a member of any assessment on which he was in default, and which had been made good out of the money pledged, so that, if the claim of counsel was sustained, any member might default in payments with impunity so long as the amount pledged covered the total of the assessments made against him. Not only would he remain a member, but the amount of his deposit would be absorbed in meeting assessments without any provision for making it good at any time, either while the depositor remained a member or at his decease, through a deduction from the sum to be paid to the beneficiary named in the certificate, although it was provided that the amount due on a guaranty deposit should be deducted from the sum paid in all cases where the member died without having paid in full.

We cannot construe these articles as counsel insists.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 N.W. 74, 69 Minn. 210, 1897 Minn. LEXIS 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mee-v-bankers-life-assn-minn-1897.