Northwestern Life Ass'n v. Stout

32 Ill. App. 31, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 70
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedNovember 23, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 32 Ill. App. 31 (Northwestern Life Ass'n v. Stout) 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
Northwestern Life Ass'n v. Stout, 32 Ill. App. 31, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 70 (Ill. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Pleasants, P. J.

This was an action of assumpsit brought by defendant in error in the Circuit Court of Greene County, upon a certificate issued by plaintiff in error stating, in substance, that John H. Stout was entitled to all the rights and privileges of membership in the association, and to participa te in its beneficiary or relief fund to the amount of $2,000, which sum, or such part thereof as may be collected as specified in the constitution and by-laws of the association, should; within sixty days after his death and upon the condition therein mentioned, be paid to his wife, the defendant in error, which was dated and purported to be executed at Blooming-ton, Illinois. The declaration averred that the defendant was a body corporate, existing and “doing a life insurance business ” under the laws of this State; sets forth the certificate inhœc verba with what purported to be the constitution and by-laws, counted on it as a “ policy of insurance,” and alleged the other facts required to fix the liability claimed. The summons was directed to, and served and returned by the sheriff of McLean county.

Thereupon the defendant, by its attorney in fact, filed a plea to the jurisdiction of the Circuit Court of Greene County, averring that the defendant “is a corporation aggregate, organized under an act of the General Assembly of the State of Illinois, entitled “an act concerning corporations; ” that it is, and at all times since its organization has been, an association intended to benefit the widows, orphans, heirs and devisees of deceased members thereof, and no annual dues are required, and the members receive no money for profit or otherwise. * * * That the location and principal place of business of the said association is, and ever since the organization thereof has been in the city of Bloomington, in the said county of McLean, and not at any time in the said Greene county; and that the defendant, nor its president, nor any clerk, secretary, superintendent, general agent, cashier, principal, director, engineer, conductor, station agent or any agent of said association was found or served with process in the said action in the said county of Greene, but was found and served with process in said action in the said county of McLean.” To this plea the plaintiff demurred “ specially,” assigning the following causes: “1st. The plea is not sufficient in law. 2d. The plea is in conflict with matters set forth in the policy, constitution and by-laws set forth in the declaration. 3d. The plea presents an objection which, by the provisions of the by-laws set forth in the declaration and the law, the defendant is stopped from making in this court.” This demurrer was sustained, and the defendant abiding by its plea, a judgment by nil elicit was entered for the plaintiff for §2,000 damages assessed and the costs.

We presume the causes secondly and thirdly assigned for the demurrer are abandoned, as they are not urged in the argument here. And obviously the matters therein respectively set forth are not available on this demurrer. The plaintiff may be bound by the material averments in the declaration, and therefore she could not claim, as against the plea, that for aught it shows this might be a local action, since the declaration conclusively shows it is not. Humphrey v. Phillips, 57 Ill. 137. But the defendant is not so bound, further than it admits by the plea; and the plea here admits none of them, either expressly, or by implication from the denial of some-It presents only matters of fact which do not appear in the declaration, as the basis of its contention thereon, that what, ever the declaration may contain, and whether true or false, the Circuit Court of the county in which the action is brought should not take cognizance of it. If any allegation of fact material to the support of this contention is to be denied, or if there is any matter of fact that in law would avoid the prima facie effect, of the plea or estop the defendant from making such allegation, whether it appears or does not appear in the declaration, it should be presented by replication. The record shows that the court below ignored these causes, and sustained the demurrer upon the finding that the plea was “not sufficient in law.” That was a finding as upon a general demurrer. Its soundness is the only question here argued or really in the case. The substantial defect alleged against the plea is that it fails to bring the defendant within the terms or meaning of the statute relied on, or to show that it is not a life insurance company within the meaning of Sec. 3 of the practice act. By the second section of that act it is declared to be unlawful to sue any sole defendant in a transitory action out of the county where such defendant resides or may be found. A later act, approved April 3,1873, and now arranged as Sec. 3 of the practice act, provides that “the Circuit Court of the county wherein the plaintiff or complainant may reside shall have jurisdiction of all actions hereafter to be commenced by any individual against any fire or life insurance company.” Under that provision this action was brought.

In 1869 the legislature provided by separate acts for the incorporation and regulation of fire and life insurance companies, respectively, which acts, with the amendments made from time to time, have ever since been in force and constituted the 73d chapter of the Revised Statutes. They define the powers, duties and liabilities of such companies, and regulate the business in this State of those exercising like powers under the laws of other States and countries.

By an act approved April 18, 1872, entitled “ An act concerning corporations,” the legislature authorized the formation of corporations for any lawful purpose, except banking, insurance and some others specified, for which provisions were made by other acts. It classified them as corporations for pecuniary profit, corporations not for pecuniary profit, and religions corporations, and prescribed the proceedings for their incorporation and defined their powers, rights and duties, respectively; and byan amendment of May 22, 1883, (L. 1883, p. 74) the 31st section, relating to corporations not for pecuniary profit, was made to declare that “ associations and societies which are intended to benefit the widows, orphans, heirs and devisees of deceased members thereof, and members who have received a permanent disability, and where no annual dues or premiums are required, and where the members shall receive no money as profit or otherwise, except for permanent disability, shall not be deemed insurance companies.”

"Whether the associations and societies here described are or are not, in fact, in any sense insurance companies, is immaterial. The legislature could not change the fact by declaring them to be or not to be such. Nor has it assumed to do so, but simply declared they shall not be “deemed” such. That declaration is not limited or qualified in any way, and can mean nothing else than that they are not to be held subject to any law that is specially and peculiarly or exceptionally applicable to insurance companies. . From the language employed this is plain, beyond dispute, or any qualification by construction. No judicial decision is required to establish it, but it is so assumed and held by the Supreme Court throughout the cases of the Commercial League v. The People, 90 Ill. 166, and the Golden Rule v. The People, 118 Ill. 497.

Appellee “deemed” appellant an insurance company.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance v. Murphy
271 N.W. 899 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1937)
Bankers Life Co. v. Richardson
218 P. 586 (California Supreme Court, 1923)
Covenant Mutual Benefit Ass'n v. Baldwin
49 Ill. App. 203 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1893)
Union Mutual Accident Ass'n v. Riel
38 Ill. App. 414 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1890)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 Ill. App. 31, 1889 Ill. App. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwestern-life-assn-v-stout-illappct-1889.