Meyers v. Supreme Lodge of the Order of the Golden Chain

2 Balt. C. Rep. 52
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedJuly 11, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Balt. C. Rep. 52 (Meyers v. Supreme Lodge of the Order of the Golden Chain) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meyers v. Supreme Lodge of the Order of the Golden Chain, 2 Balt. C. Rep. 52 (Md. Super. Ct. 1899).

Opinion

STOCKBRIDGE, J.—

Amelia E. Meyers, the plaintiff, who was at the time of his death a member in good standing of the Order of the Golden Chain, a mutual benevolent association. By the terms of his certificate of membership his widow was entitled upon his decease, and the furnishing to the Order of satisfactory proofs thereof, to receive from the Widow and Orphans’ Benefit Pund of the Order a sum not exceeding $3,000, in accordance with the laws of the Order. By the agreed statement of facts it appears that the proof was duly furnished, but Mrs. Meyers was not paid $3,000, or any other sum by the Supreme Council, and she has filed the present bill alleging the insolvency of the Order, and by an amendment to the bill, that its capacity to collect from its members has become impaired ; that it is now powerless to raise sufficient money by this means to pay the accrued and accruing death claims against it, and praying that the corporation may be dissolved, and its effects placed in the hands of receivers, and applied to the payment of its liabilities.

The answer admits the plaintiff to be the widow of a deceased member; that the proofs of death have been duly filed; that the claim of the plaintiff has not been paid, and then proceeds to show that the amount in the widows and orphans’ fund is utterly inadequate to pay the claim of the plaintiff, and those of others in like position, and sets forth that such has been the condition of the Order for nine years, and that the Association, by the action of its Supreme Lodge, taken on the 9th of May, 1899, proposes to divide the amount now in its widows’ and orphans’ fund pro rata among those holding death claims against it. It denies the insolvency of the Order and that the plaintiff is a creditor of the Order, insisting that she merely has a claim against a particular fund of the Order, and not against the Order itself.

An agreed statement of facts was filed, and this was supplemented by proofs taken in open Court.

With regard to the status of the plaintiff, whatever may be the rule in other States, there can be no question in Maryland that she is a creditor.

Failey vs. Fee, 83 Md. 96.

B. & O. Relief Assn, case, 77 Md. 566.

The position of the beneficiary named in the certificate of a member and that of the member himself with regard to such an association is entirely different. The latter occupies the position both of insurer and insured, and in such dual position is not deemed a creditor. That is declared distinctly in the case of Condon vs. Mutual R. F. L. Assn., 42 Atl. Rep. 950, and numerous others elsewhere.

When, however, the death takes place the dual relation ceases to exist, the connection of the member with the association is severed, and the beneficiary named in the certificate of the member becomes a creditor. The status of the plaintiff being thus established, the next question is as to the solvency or insolvency of the Order of the Golden Chain, and if it be insolvent, the power of the Court to intervene is conceded, but under the averments of the answer the cases of Barton vs. Fraternal Alliance, 85 Md. 14, and Condon vs. Mutual R. F. L. Assn., 42 Atl. Rep. 950, are relied on as authority for the position that the Order of the Golden Chain is not insolvent in law. In considering these cases, however, the manner in which they came before the Court must not be overlooked.

In the Barton case the cause was disposed of upon bill and answers, and the answers denied all allegations of fraud and swore away all the equities of the bill; the Condon case came up as [53]*53between a mutual beneficial association and a member, one wlio was therefore not a creditor, upon demurrer. The present case, however, is ' before the Court upon bill, answer and evidence.

It is urged that since the money in this case is payable out of a particular fund that no matter what may be the deficiencies in the Widows’ and Orphans’ Fund, or from what series of events those deficiencies may have arisen, so long as the order has sufficient money in its general treasury to pay the salaries of its officers, its rent, postage and stationery bills, it cannot become insolvent; that it is a mere collection agency as regards its mortuary fund, in no way liable in respect thereto save to pay what it receives over to those holding maturity death claims. This is based upon the language used by the Court of Appeals in the Condon case, and is perhaps the logical statement of the position of such an association as to its members, but it by no means follows that its position is the same with respect to creditors, those who are the holders of matured death claims. One of the objects of the order as set out in its constitution, and according to the evidence the principal object of the order was “to establish a Widows’ and Orphans’ Benefit Fund, from which on the satisfactory evidence of the death of a beneficial member of the order * * * a sum not exceeding $3,000, shall be paid to his family or those dependent on him as he may direct.” With this avowed object, when it is borne in mind that the policy of the Courts of this State is to regard the contracts of indemnity provided by such associations in the event of the death of a member as having all the essential qualifies of ordinary life insurance furnished by the so-called standard mutual companies (Thomas vs. Cochran, The Daily Record, June 24), it will not do to say at the suit of a creditor, that the Order is nothing more than a collecting agency, without responsibility. It can not as regards holders of mature claims thus separate and hold itself aloof from one or all of the purposes for which it exists, and claim a solvency when it is not in possession of the means to carry out the object of its being.

But it is further insisted in behalf of the Order that the association is not and can not be insolvent for the reason that it has never levied a specific assessment to meet this claim arising from the death of Benjamin Meyers; that it has the power of unlimited assessment, and, therefore, it can never become in legal contemplation insolvent, and the case of Barton vs. Fraternal Alliance, 85 Md., is relied upon as maintaining this proposition.

The power of levying assessments is contained in Section 128 of the Supreme Lodge Laws, as follows:

“Whenever the condition of the Supreme Treasury shall make it necessary to call an assessment to pay a death benefit, the Supreme Secretary shall at once notify every lodge to forward immediately to the Supreme Treasurer the assessment due from every member at the date of said call, in accordance with the form prescribed by the Supreme Lodge, which notice shall include a list of all deaths that have occurred subsequent to the last assessment.”

The agreed statement of facts discloses that there are matured and unpaid death claims against the Order to the amount of $110,000; that the amount in the Widows’ and Orphans’ Fund out of which they are payable, is but $10,000, and that the total additional assets of the corporation, apart from its right to assess its members, is but $1,800. It is further in evidence that the membership of the Order has decreased from 10,281 on December 31, 1895, to 4,722 on July 16th, 1898, -and to 3,464 on April 5th, 1809; that since

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Related

Baltimore & Ohio Railroad v. Baltimore & Ohio Employes' Relief Ass'n
26 A. 1045 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1893)
Failey v. Fee
32 L.R.A. 311 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1896)
Barton v. International Fraternal Alliance
36 A. 658 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1897)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Balt. C. Rep. 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyers-v-supreme-lodge-of-the-order-of-the-golden-chain-mdcirctctbalt-1899.