Mutual Aid Union v. Blacknall

185 S.W. 465, 123 Ark. 377, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 473
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 17, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 185 S.W. 465 (Mutual Aid Union v. Blacknall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mutual Aid Union v. Blacknall, 185 S.W. 465, 123 Ark. 377, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 473 (Ark. 1916).

Opinion

Smith, J.

Appellee, as the beneficiary under a cer- ' tificate of membership in the appellant company, recovered judgment against appellant for the amount of this certificate. The suit was brought in the circuit court of Logan County, where the decedent and the beneficiary lived, and a motion to quash the summons was filed upon the ground that the company is a mutual aid society organized and existing for the mutual aid of the beneficiaries of its members, in case of death, and that said organization is not based upon a subscribed or paid-up capital, either in whole or in part, but alone upon membership dues and pro rata assessments upon its members, and that its principal office and place of business is in Rogers, in Benton County, where its chief officers reside, and that appellant does not have or maintain any branch or agency in the county of Logan, and that the sureties upon appellant’s bond, who were also made defendants, were also resident citizens of Benton County at and prior to the time of the filing of the complaint, and that service was had upon all parties who were made defendants in Benton County.

(1‘) It is insisted that unless the provisions of section 4377 of Kirby’s Digest apply, this action could have been properly brought only in Benton County. Proof was offered on the motion to quash the service in support of the allegations of that motion showing the character ■of business done by appellant and to sustain appellant’s contention that it was not such a company as was described in that section. This section provides (insofar as its provisions are material here) that when any death has occurred of a person whose life shall have been insured that the beneficiary, or his assigns, may maintain an action against the insurance company in the county of the residence of the party whose life was insured, or in the county where the death of such party occurred.

Section 4379 of Kirby’s Digest provides that in all actions against assessment or mutual insurance companies, or against the bonds of such companies, by any policy holder or beneficiary, it shall be sufficient to bring such -company into court by the usual summons on the secretary, or president, or managing agent thereof, and in suits upon the bond 'by ordinary summons as in other cases upon the several bondsmen sued.

Section 4377 of Kirby’s Digest was first enacted on March 2, 1887, and beeamé section 4142 of Sandels & Hill’s Digest. As so enacted it did not apply to suits on life insurance policies, but the act was amended on February 27,1897, to read as it now appears in Kiiby’s Digest. By the amendment the statute was made applicable to actions on life and accident policies.

A very similar question to the one now before us was presented in the case of Neimeyer v. Claiborne, 87 Ark. 72. That was a suit in Garland County for a loss which occurred there against a mutual fire insurance company whose place of business was in Pulaski County and the sureties on the bond of that company who also resided in Pulaski County. It was there insisted that a suit against the company and the bondsmen jointly could only be maintained in Pulaski County, the home of the sureties, but in disposing of that contention it was said:

“Third. The appellant contends that the Garland Circuit Court had no jurisdiction over him because he’ neither resided nor was summoned in that county. Section 4376 of Kirby’s Digest provides: ‘That the sureties on the bond of an insurance company may be made parties defendant, and final judgment rendered against them at the same time and in like manner as against the company.’ Section 4377 of Kirby’s Digest expressly authorizes a suit upon a fire insurance policy to be brought in the county where the loss occurred. It is not contended that the Garland Circuit Court did not have jurisdiction of the insurance company, the principal defendant, and of the subject-matter. The loss occurred in Garland County, and the suit was brought there. Under the above sections, the suit was properly brought against appellant in Garland County, and the circuit court of that county had jurisdiction of his person. This spécial statute applies to suits against sureties on tñe bond of fire insurance companies, and not section 6072, Kirby’s Digest, which applies to other actions. The sureties under the above statute may be made parties defendant in the suit against the principal, and service had upon them in any county in which the principal may be served, i. e., in any county of the State. The words ‘in like manner’ evidently refers to the process or procedure for bringing the defendants, sureties, into court, as well as any and all other procedure necessary and incident to obtaining final judgment against them.”

(2) Appellants also say the service is bad by reason of the portion of section 4348 of Kirby’s Digest which provides that the insurance laws of this State shall be so construed as not to apply in their operations and requirements to any mutual aid society in this State for the relief of the members thereof in case of pecuniary loss by fire or otherwise, and for mutual aid of the beneficiaries of such members in case of death, and which is not based upon a subscribed or paid-up capital, in whole or in part, but alone upon membership dues and pro rata assessments upon its members. This section provides for the .bonds to be given and the periods of their renewal for the insurance companies to do business in this State, but does not undertake to deal with the subject of service upon such mutual companies and can not, therefore, be held to. provide for a different manner in which such companies may he sued and served with process.

(3) It is insisted that the policy was procured through the fraud of the insured in regard to the statement of his age. The by-laws of the company provided that no person shall be eligible to membership who is past sixty years of age, and it is undisputed that the insured was sixty-six years of age at the time his application was taken. It is said, however, in behalf of appellee that the answers to the questions contained in the application were written by appellant’s agent, and that a truthful answer to the questions concerning age was given by the insured, and that if the answers were not correctly written, this failure was the fraud of appellant’s own agent, and it was charged with his knowledge and became liable upon the death of the insured. In support of this position appellee cites the eases of Gray v. Stone, 102 Ark. 146.

Appellant requested a number of instructions which dealt with the question of fraud in the procurement of the policy. These instructions were to the effect that if the insured induced the company to issue him the membership certificate by falsely representing that he was only sixty years of age, when, in fact, he was sixty-six, or that if he falsely stated that his age was only sixty, when in fact he was sixty-six, or that he knew the agent had incorrectly stated his age in the policy, there could be no recovery.

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Bluebook (online)
185 S.W. 465, 123 Ark. 377, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutual-aid-union-v-blacknall-ark-1916.