Mutual Reserve Fund Life Ass'n v. Bolles

120 Ill. App. 242, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 637
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedApril 20, 1905
StatusPublished

This text of 120 Ill. App. 242 (Mutual Reserve Fund Life Ass'n v. Bolles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mutual Reserve Fund Life Ass'n v. Bolles, 120 Ill. App. 242, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 637 (Ill. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Baume

delivered the opinion of .the court.

Hiram O. Bolles died August 8, 1901, and. this suit in assumpsit was instituted by appellees against appellant, to recover the amount of a benefit certificate for a sum not exceeding $5,000, upon the life of said Bolles, issued by the Covenant Mutual Benefit Association, payable to appellees as beneficiaries. A jury being waived, the cause was tried by the court, resulting in a finding and judgment against appellant for $2,216.25.

The stipulation in the case, together with oral and documentary evidence introduced and considered upon the hearing, disclose the following state of facts: On February 5, 1884, the Covenant Mutual Benefit Association issued to Hiram O. Bolles, a certificate of membership for an amount not exceeding $5,000, payable at his death to the beneficiaries therein named. The insured paid all assessments levied against him under the terms of said certificate up to March 1, 1898, when a certain assessment known as Ho. 149, greatly in excess of the amount authorized, was levied, payable March 31, 1898. This assessment the insured, Bolles, refused to pay, whereupon the. said Association dropped him from its roll of membership and thereafter treated said certificate as lapsed and forfeited. Thereafter, on Hovember 4, 1898, Wilson M. Duggans, with Hiram O. Bolles and others similarly situated, filed their bill inequity for relief, resulting in the entry of a decree April 9, 1900, declaring the said assessment Ho. 149 null and void and restoring complainants to all their rights of membership in the Association upon the payment by them respectively on or before May 1, 1900, of the amounts found to be due.

December 29,1899, the Covenant Mutual Benefit Association—whose corporate name had been changed to Covenant Mutual Life Association—entered into a transfer or reinsurance contract with the Horthwestern Life Assurance Company, a corporation organized under the laws of Illinois, whereby the Covenant Mutual Life Association tendered to the Horthwestern Life Assurance Company as members of said Company, each and all of its living members in good standing, except such as should file a written notice of his or her preference to be transferred to some other corporation, in accordance with the provisions of section 16 of an act to incorporate companies to do the business of life or accident insurance upon the assessment plan, etc., approved June 22, 1893, in force July 1, 1893, and the Northwestern Life Assurance Company accepted the members so tendered upon condition that said members accede to and be bound by the provisions of the certificates of membership and the by-laws of. said contracting corporations then in force or thereafter to be enacted.

On April 26, 1900, one Steward G-oodrell, named as trustee for certain purposes in said contract, sent to Bolles, a notice to pay to him (Goodrell) as such trustee the sum of §205.40, being the amount found by the decree of April 9, 1900, to be due from Bolles to the Covenant Mutual Life Association for assessments in arrears; and further notifying Bolles, that upon payment of said amount he (Bolles) would be restored to membership in said Association and that all assessments subsequently levied against Bolles, would be levied by and payable to the Northwestern Life Assurance Company. In pursuance to such notice and the terms of the decree therein referred to, Bolles, on April 30, 1900, remitted to Goodrell, trustee, the sum of §205.40.

On August 21, 1900, the Northwestern Life Assurance Company entered into a transfer or reinsurance contract rvith appellant, a corporation of the State of New York, conducting a life insurance business upon the assessment plan and authorized to do business in the State of Illinois, Avhereby the Northwestern Life Assurance Company tendered to appellant, each and all of its living members, who, by its books and records, were in good standing, except such as should file written notice of a preference to be transferred to some other corporation, in accordance with the provisions of section 16 of an act to incorporate companies to do the business of insurance upon the assessment plan, etc., approved June 22, 1893, in force July 1, 1893, and appellant accepted the members so tendered,'and expressly disclaimed the assumption of any policy or certificate, or any liability on account of any, which did not appear to be in good standing by the books and records of said Northwestern Life Assurance Cpmpany. By the terms of the contract, all the members thereby transferred became bound by the provisions of the certificates or policies of appellant corporation, and by its by-laws then in force or thereafter to be adopted.

On September 1, 1900, at a meeting held for that purpose, this contract of transfer was duly ratified by the members of the Northwestern Life Assurance Company, pursuant to, and in the manner provided by said section 16 of the act before mentioned, but Bolles was neither given nor received any notice of such meeting.

Bolles was not in good standing upon the books and records of the Northwestern Life Assurance Company, neither his name, nor his certificate of membership appearing thereon. No call for the payment of any premium or assessment was ever made by appellant upon Bolles, or on account of the certificates held by him, and said Bolles never paid or tendered to appellant any dues, premiums or assessments upon the certificate of membership sued upon in this case.

The judgment of the trial court was predicated, as appears from the propositions of law held upon the hearing, upon findings, as follows: That the payment by Bolles to Steward Groodrell, trustee of the Covenant Mutual Life Association, of the amount found to be due from him by the decree of April 9, 1900, on account of accrued and unpaid assessments, reinstated him to membership in that Association; that the contract of transfer between the Covenant Mutual Life Association and the Northwestern Life Assurance Company, having been negotiated and executed during the pendency of the suit by Bolles to establish his right to membership in the Covenant Mutual Life Association, he must be held to have become a member in good standing in the Northwestern Life Assurance Company by virtue of such contract of transfer, under the doctrine of Us pendens; that appellant as the transferee corporation in the contract of transfer with the Northwestern Life Assurance Company, consummated September 1, 1900, was at that time bound to take notice of the record of the decree of April 9, 1900, and was in law presumed to have knowledge of its contents, as well as of the bill in chancery, in pursuance to the hearing upon which said decree was entered; that the contract of transfer of September 1, 1900, was effected and consummated under the provisions of section 16 of the act before mentioned, approved June 22, 1893, in force July 1, 1893 (Hurd’s Stat. 1903, par. 245, p.

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Parvin v. Mutual Reserve Life Insurance
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Bluebook (online)
120 Ill. App. 242, 1905 Ill. App. LEXIS 637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mutual-reserve-fund-life-assn-v-bolles-illappct-1905.