Metropolitan Safety Fund Accident Ass'n v. Windover

27 N.E. 538, 137 Ill. 417, 1891 Ill. LEXIS 1051
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedMay 13, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 27 N.E. 538 (Metropolitan Safety Fund Accident Ass'n v. Windover) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Metropolitan Safety Fund Accident Ass'n v. Windover, 27 N.E. 538, 137 Ill. 417, 1891 Ill. LEXIS 1051 (Ill. 1891).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bailey

delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was a suit in assumpsit, brought by Phoebe Windover against the Metropolitan Safety Fund Accident Association, to recover the amount claimed to be due upon a membership certificate issued by said association to George Windover, the plaintiff’s son. The defendant is an association incorporated in January, 1885, under the act of the General Assembly of this State, entitled, “An Act to provide for the organization and management of corporations, associations or societies for the purpose of furnishing life indemnity or pecuniary benefits to widows," orphans, heirs, relatives and devisees of deceased members, or accident or permanent disability indemnity.to members thereof, ” approved June 18, 1883. The objects for which said association was formed, as declared in its certificate of organization filed with the Secretary of State, are, in substance, to operate a purely mutual accident association; to furnish substantial weekly indemnity to its members in case of accident at actual cost; to provide for the widows, orphans and legal heirs of its members in ease of accident that shall result in death within ninety days from the happening thereof; to provide substantial support for any of its members who through accident may be permanently disabled. The plan to be followed in carrying out said objects is declared to be as follows:

“It is the purpose of this association to create a fund with which to provide relief for its members in case of accident as hereinabove set forth. The funds for the payment of such accident indemnity are to be realized from assessments of members. Every member of the association is assessed whenever a loss occurs, the amount of the assessment being graded or classified according to the occupation or amount of member’s policy. Members are required to deposit all money assessed for losses in the Illinois Trust and Savings Bank in Chicago, which said bank is the treasurer of the association. The funds deposited with said bank by the members of the association can only be paid out by authority in writing of • the trustees of the Benefit Fund, and bearing the signature of the chairman of the Trustees of Benefit Fund and the secretary of the association, and no money shall be drawn from the bank for any other purpose than the payment of losses. Membership is secured by solicitors. Applicants for membership are classified according to their occupation, the association having adopted the preferred, ordinary, medium, hazardous, extra-hazardous and extra special hazardous classes.”

Said association, soon after its organization, adopted a table or schedule of assessments, in which was fixed and determined the amount which each member was to be assessed quarterly as his contribution to the benefit fund, the rate of assessment varying according to the class to which the member belonged, and according to the face value of his membership certificate, and at the same time fixed the amount of the membership fee and annual dues to be collected of each member. It also

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adopted a constitution and by-laws providing, among other things, that no part of the benefit fund or fund arising from assessments upon the membership should be appropriated for expenses of the payment of salaries of officers or the compensation of agents, but appropriating the fund arising from membership fees and annual dues to t|ie payment of such expenses, compensation and salaries. It was further provided that said assessments should be paid j quarterly, on the first days of January, April, July and Octoljer of each year.

Said by-laws provided that notice of assessments and dues, either written or printed, should be mailed to each member at his last given post-office address, and that when deposited in the post-office at Chicago, should be deemed a legal and sufficient notice, and that any failure to pay, as per said notice, within thirty days from the date thereof, should work a forfeiture of all claims the member might 'have against the association by reason of his certificate.

It was further provided that all sumsÜpaid by‘way of indemnity under any certificate of membership should -be accounted in diminution of the principal sum or face of the certificate,. whenever by reason of death it should become a claim against the association, so that the entire amount to be paid by way of benefits or indemnity should in no case exceed the principal sum named in the certificate.

The by-laws further provided that, in case of injury to any member, he should report the same to the home office of the association at Chicago, and to the surgeon or secretary of the local adjusting board at once, stating full particulars of the accident, and that a failure to give such notice forthwith should work aJ forfeiture of all claims against the association. And also that “unless direct and affirmative proof of the death or duration of total disability be furnished in seven months of happening of such accident, then all claims under such certificate shall be waived and forfeited to,the association.”

The constitution provided for annual meetings of the association for the election of directors, and for the transaction of such other business as might come before the association, at which meeting each certificate holder was expected to be present, either in person or by proxy, and take part in the deliberations and have a right to vote upon all questions coming before the meeting. Also, that the certificate holders should have a -right to alter or amend the constitution and by-laws of the association by a majority vote of those present, “provided that all the members of the association shall have had previous notice by mail or otherwise of such purpose to alter or amend, and any-changes thus made shall not be subject to any alteration or change of the board of directors.” Said constitution and by-laws were in force at the time the certificate of membership in question in this case was issued,

•Said certificate was dated August 17, 1885, and was for the sum of $1500, in the class known as “medium.” George Windover, at the time it was issued, and up to the time of his death, was a resident of Oswego, Oswego county, New York. After reciting that, for certain considerations particularly ■enumerated, said association thereby issued said certificate to said George. Windover in the principal sum of $1500, it was provided.that- said sum,-less the amount of all weekly in-demnity previously received, should be paid to Phoebe Windover whose relationship to said member was that of mother, or her legal representatives, within ninety days after satisfactory proofs should be received at the home office, setting forth that the member, during the continuance of said contract, had sustained bodily injuries from external, violent or accidental causes, within the intent and meaning of said certificate and the conditions thereto annexed, and that such injuries alone-had occasioned death within ninety days from the date of such accident.

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Bluebook (online)
27 N.E. 538, 137 Ill. 417, 1891 Ill. LEXIS 1051, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/metropolitan-safety-fund-accident-assn-v-windover-ill-1891.