Protected Home Circle v. Tisch

1 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 185
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1903
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 185 (Protected Home Circle v. Tisch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Protected Home Circle v. Tisch, 1 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 185 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

Nell A. Tisch, wife of defendant in error, became a member of Rockcreed Circle of the Protected Home Circle, August 1, 1894, and died September 10, 1900, by committing suicide; whether sane or insane does hot appear. When she became a member she obtained a benefit certificate for the sum of $1,000 and designated her husband, Perry P. Tisch, as her beneficiary. In the written application which she signed to obtain the benefit certificate she stated:

[186]*186“I do hereby agree that compliance on my part with all the laws, rules, regulations and requirements now in force or that' may hereafter be enacted by the association is the express condition upon which I am to be entitled to participate in the beneficiary fund to the amount named in the constitution and laws of the association.”

The Protected Home Circle is a beneficiary association organized under the laws of the state of Pennsylvania. The fifth clause of the charter provides :

“Said corporation shall have power to institute a supreme and •such state, district and local circles as may be deemed necessary in accordance with its constitution and law; and also to draft a constitution and laws for their government' which shall determine the time, place, and manner of election of officers, their number, names and terms of service; the reception of members, their rights, privileges, obligations, duties, dues, fees, and penalties; the right to control all funds raised for the prosecution of its work in accordance' with its laws; to determine the qualifications of its own members and also have the right to h'ave and use a common seal.”

Under the charter, the original incorporators adopted a constitution and by-laws. This constitution provided for a supreme circle, which is the legislative and governing body of the corporation; a grand circle which is a state organization, and local circles. The supreme circle is composed of the supreme officers of the corporation and of delegates elected by the grand circle; the grand circle is composed of delegates elected by the local circles, and the local circles are the divisions to which all the membership must belong. The supreme circle meets biennially, and at such meetings does all the legislating for the association, as provided by the fifth clause of the charter shall be done. The membership in 1902 was about fifty thousand and the number and amount of benefit certificates very large.

The first' constitution and by-laws were made by the original incorporators soon 'after obtaining a charter in 1886, and this constitution and by-laws were adopted at the first meeting of the supreme circle, with the amendments at that' meeting enacted, as the constitution and by-laws for the government of the supreme circle, grand circle, local circles, and the membership of the society. [187]*187Ever since the organization began the constitution and by-laws have contained the provision that the same might be altered or amended by the supreme circle in the manner therein directed. The. manner of making the alteration or amendment by the supreme circle has been changed at different meetings of the supreme circle.

Three years after the certificate was issued to defendant in error to-wit, in 1897, at its meeting in Detroit, Michigan, the supreme circle for the first time made provision against death by suicide. At that meeting, in accordance with the manner provided in the constitution and by-laws for alterations and 'amendments, it provided in the constitution as follows:

“The benefit certificate issued to a member shall become void and all benefits thereunder shall be forfeited in case the insured shall die by suicide, felonious or otherwise, sane or insane, or by his own hand sane or insane, provided that in such case there shall be refunded to the beneficiary named in said certificate the amount of all payments made, together with interest thereon at the rate of three per cent, per annum.”

Immediately after the death of the member, Nell A. Tisch, proofs of death were filed with the corporation at its home office, which proofs of death showed that she came to her death by suicide. The association denied liability for any sum except the 'amount of payments made, with interest at three per cent, upon the ground that the proofs showed that the member died by suicide. The beneficiary instituted suit, recovered a judgment for the full amount of the certificate, and this proceeding in error is to reverse the judgment. The whole contention is upon the amendment respecting suicide. It is practically admitted by plaintiff in error that, if the constitution and laws of the society contained no provision respecting suicide, that the plaintiff should recover, ■and such we understand is the law of this state, where there is no showing that the assured was sane at the time of the commission of the act.

Defendant in error contends that the amendment is of no validity as against him, for the reasons:

First. The supreme circle had no authority to make the amendment; that it was not the act of the corporation, and that the [188]*188corporation alone could make such amendment to the constitution or by-laws, under it's charter.

Second. That the corporation could not make such an amendment affecting certificates already issued.

Third. The amendment upon its face does not refer to certificates previously issued.

Fourth. The amendment is unreasonable and against public policy.

The court below held with defendant in error upon the first proposition and instructed the jury that the supreme circle had no authority to make the amendment and that it was therefore invalid.

The theory of the'defendant in error is that the corporation alone could make the amendment under its charter; that this association is analogous to an ordinary corporation, and in ordinary corporations the legislative power is lodged in the stockholders; that the membership constitute the stockholders, and that, in order to enact or amend the constitution and by-laws, the membership must act upon the same directly, either in person or by proxy given for that special purpose. This position is wholly untenable. We must look at the whole scheme of the association, as shown by the charter and as developed under the charter. It' is a beneficiary association. It was so incorporated. Such 'associations for many years prior to the issuing of this charter had a generally acknowledged place among the financial and social institutions of the country, all of them having supreme bodies which are the legislative and governing bodies of the society, made up of delegates selected by the members generally at meetings of the subordinate bodies with which the entire membership are connected. The charter of this association recognized this controlling characteristic of the order.

“Said corporation shall have power to institute a supreme, and such state, (district and local circles as may be deemed necessary, in accordance with its constitution and law.”

The membership make their will known through their delegates, selected by them, to the supreme body, as the elector makes his will known through the representative he sends to the General [189]*189Assembly. These fifty thousand members, call them stockholders if you please, could manifest their will in no other way, and in our judgment it was never intended by the power that created the association, by giving it a charter, that they should act in any other way.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Ohio C.C. (n.s.) 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/protected-home-circle-v-tisch-ohiocirct-1903.