Order of Railway Conductors v. Koster

55 Mo. App. 186, 1893 Mo. App. LEXIS 276
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 21, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 55 Mo. App. 186 (Order of Railway Conductors v. Koster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Order of Railway Conductors v. Koster, 55 Mo. App. 186, 1893 Mo. App. LEXIS 276 (Mo. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

Rombauer, P. J.

This is a contest between the respondent and the appellants as interpleaders for a certain fund paid by plaintiff into court. The trial court awarded the fund to 'Ella Koster. Sarah E. Lally and her husband, John Lally, who prosecute this appeal, assign for error that upon the evidence the court should have awarded the fund to Sarah E. Lally.

We find the facts to be as follows. The plaintiff is a mutual benefit association or order, organized under a statute of the state of Iowa, which proyides among other things:

“Section 7. No corporation or association organized or operating under this act shall issue any certificate of membership or policy to any person under the age of fifteen years, nor over the age of sixty-five years, nor unless the beneficiary under said certificate shall be the husband, wife, relative, legal representative, heir or legatee of such insured member, nor shall any such certificate be assigned, except an endowment certificate; and any certificate issued or assignment made in violation of this section shall be void. Any member of any corporation, association or society, [189]*189operating under this act shall have the right at anytime, with the consent of such corporation, association or society, to make a change in his beneficiary without reqidring the consent of such beneficiary.”

The laws of the order contain the following provisions :

“Article 2. Its object is to aid and benefit disabled, and the families of deceased members of the Order of Railway Conductors.”
“Article 18. An applicant may designate in his application some person or persons to whom benefit shall be paid in the event of his death, and the secretary shall enter such designated, name or names upon the register of the department, and also upon the certificate of membership. Any person! desiring to change the name or names of the person or persons to whom benefit is payable shall make the request in writing upon a blank provided for that purpose, which request must be certified by the division secretary under the seal of the division, and forwarded to the secretary with the certificate of membership. Upon receipt of such request in proper form, the secretary shall make the requested change on the register, provided no benefit shall be made payable to any one not having an insumable interest in the life of the member.”
“Article 20. In case the designated- payee of a member should not survive him, the benefit shall be paid to the first named who shall survive him, as follows:
“First. In accordance with the provisions of the lawful will of the deceased, should one be left.
“Second. To the widow of the deceased.
“Third. To the child or children of the deceased.
“Fourth. To the mother of the deceased.”

H. A. Koster made application for membership in the order in November, 1886, when the present [190]*190Sarah E. Lally was his wife. His application, among other things, contained the following: “In the event of my death, I hereby direct that the sum, to which my heir or heirs may be entitled to by my membership, be paid to my wife, Mrs. H. A. Koster;” also the following: “I agree to conform in every respect to the by-laws, rules and regulations now in force, or which may he lawfully adopted hereafter. ” "When Koster made this application, the last clause of article 18 hereinabove set out in italics was not in force.' The same was adopted only in January, 1891. That fact, however, in view of section 7 of the statute, and that part of the application of the assured which is italicised above, is immaterial. The plaintiff on this application issued to the assured a certificate, stating among other things: “In event of his death, benefit is to be paid to Mrs. H. A., the person named, in the application, who bears the relationship of wife to the member holding this certificate.” Subsequently the order becoming incorporated, this certificate was recalled and another certificate issued in lieu thereof, the material portions of which are as follows :

“This is to certify that the Mutual Benefit Department of the Order of Railway Conductors,, in consideration'of the statements and representations made in the application of H. A. Koster for membership therein, a copy of which application is hereto attached, and the sum of $2.50, and the payment of $1 for each expense assessment, and the further payment to the Mutual Benefit Department of the Order of Railway Conductors of the sum of $1 for each and every claim for the death or disability of a member of class ‘A,’ of the department for which an assessment is made, so long as he shall remain a member of said class ‘A,’ said payments to be made within sixty days from the' date of notice, do promise and agree to and with the [191]*191said H. A. Koster, to pay or cause to be paid to wife-or in case the person or persons named therein do not survive him, then as provided in article 20 of the by-laws governing the department, $1 for every member of class ‘A7 who shall pay the assessment for the death of said H. A. Koster after due notice and satisfactory evidence of such death is received.”

This certificate was in force at the date of H. A. Koster7 s death, which occurred March 26, 1891.

We further find that the Mrs. H. A. Koster named in the’ application was the then Sarah E. Koster, now Sarah E. Lally, and that she separated from Koster in December, 1889, and obtained a decree of divorce from him a vinculo matrimonii on the sixth of March, 1890, such decree being silent on the question of alimony but restoring to Mrs. Koster, at her request, her maiden name. Within two months thereafter Mrs. Koster was married to her present husband, Lally, and ever since that date the feelings of Koster towards here were exceedingly bitter. On March 1, 1891, while Koster was residing with his sister Ella (one of the inter-pleaders) in'Yincennes, Indiana, he caused a letter of the following tenor to be written by a friend to the grand secretary of the order, who resided in Cedar Eapids,-Iowa:

“Enclosed please find my policy, which I wish transferred from my wife to my sister, Ellen Koster. Kindly return as early as possible and oblige,” etc.

On the seventh of March the grand secretary replied to him, acknowledging the receipt of the letter, and adding:

“I enclose herein a blank upon which please make your request for change of beneficiary, and, after having it certified by your secretary, return to me, and the requested change will be promptly made, and your [192]*192certificate returned to you through the secretary of your division.”

The term your secretary used in this letter refers to the division secretary of the division in which Koster was. This secretary resided in Texarkana, Texas. The letter of the grand secretary was by mistake directed to Koster at Little Rock, Arkansas, which was his former place of residence, and did not reach him at Vincennes, Indiana, where he then was, until about the sixteenth of March, 1890.

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Bluebook (online)
55 Mo. App. 186, 1893 Mo. App. LEXIS 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/order-of-railway-conductors-v-koster-moctapp-1893.