Robertson v. Security Benefit Assn.

114 S.W.2d 1009, 342 Mo. 284, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 625
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 1, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 114 S.W.2d 1009 (Robertson v. Security Benefit Assn.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robertson v. Security Benefit Assn., 114 S.W.2d 1009, 342 Mo. 284, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 625 (Mo. 1938).

Opinions

This cause has been reassigned. Plaintiff sued to recover $512.50, for what is termed old age benefits or endowment, under a certificate of insurance issued to plaintiff by the Knights and Ladies of Security, November 24, 1893. Later, the name of the insurer became The Security Benefit Association. For convenience we refer to plaintiff in error as defendant, and to defendant in error as plaintiff, as styled below.

Defendant was organized under the laws of Kansas and the home office is at Topeka. Plaintiff's original certificate for $2000 was issued in 1893, but in 1895, the amount was reduced to $1000. The certificate provided that when insured reached the age of sixty-two, he would be paid $512.50, whether disabled or not. Plaintiff arrived at the age of sixty-two November 24, 1934, and thereafter sought to collect the $512.50. Payment was refused and this suit followed, resulting in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff in the sum sued for, and defendant brought the cause to this court by writ of error.

We do not deem it necessary to refer at length to the petition. It is alleged that defendant is a Kansas corporation and that plaintiff regularly paid his dues and assessments from the time he became a member until he reached the age of sixty-two, and had in all things performed his part of the insurance contract.

The answer alleges that defendant is a fraternal beneficiary society organized and incorporated under the laws of Kansas, and authorized as such society to do business in Missouri (all of which was established by the evidence). It is admitted in the answer that plaintiff's certificate provided for the payment of the endowment when he reached the age of sixty-two, but defendant alleges that such provision was ultra vires and void. Defendant also pleaded the pertinent parts of its charter, by-laws, and certain statutes and Supreme Court decisions of Kansas, and these were introduced in evidence.

Defendant also alleges that on April 12, 1935, plaintiff made application to it for "a new form of certificate," and that in the application he agreed that "in consideration of the issuance of the new beneficiary certificate applied for under the plan specified above, I hereby surrender said Beneficiary Certificate No. 1948 (the one sued on) to The Security Benefit Association for cancellation and *Page 288 I hereby, for myself and my beneficiaries, and for anyone claiming any right in, through or on account of said certificate, release said The Security Benefit Association from all liability thereunder." And it is alleged that the new certificate was issued and delivered to plaintiff. Other references to defendant's answer will be made hereinafter when necessary.

In reply plaintiff alleged that the certificate sued on is a Missouri contract; that he entered into the contract in good faith; kept and performed all conditions without objections by defendant; that his cause of action "accrued on November 24, 1934," and that on that date "the contract of insurance upon his part was fully executed," and that defendant is estopped to pleadultra vires. He further alleged that if the new certificate was fraternal, it was void under Section 5996, Revised Statutes 1929, because, at the time, he was over the age of sixty years.

Plaintiff further alleges in the reply that if defendant "has any instruments executed by him and purporting to be a release" of the certificate sued on, then such instruments "were wrongfully procured from plaintiff by defendant and its agents, through and by deception and false and fraudulent representations made and practiced upon" him; that defendant, through its agent, represented to him that the instrument (application for new certificate) signed by him "was solely and merely an application for another and different insurance contract" based on a level rate; that "defendant did then and there represent and lead this plaintiff to believe that the making of said application" for the new certificate "did not in anywise" affect the certificate sued on "or release it from the payments of the benefits then and there accrued to him" under the certificate sued on; that he relied on defendant's agent and signed the application for the new certificate; that he signed the application for the new certificate ignorant of its purport and effect.

Defendant assigns error on the refusal, at the close of the whole case, of its instruction in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence, on the admission of evidence, and on instructions given for plaintiff.

[1] We are confronted at the outset with the question of jurisdiction. Plaintiff says that we do not have jurisdiction of the cause, while defendant says we have. One of the chief contentions of defendant is that the Supreme Court of Kansas, defendant's domicile, in Kirk v. Fraternal Aid Association,95 Kan. 707, 149 P. 400, and in effect, in Dey v. The Knights and Ladies of Security, 113 Kan. 86, 213 P. 1066, ruled that defendant exceeded its charter powers in contracting to pay plaintiff the endowment sought to be recovered. Defendant pleaded the Kirk and Dey decisions and certain Kansas statutes, and also pleaded that under Section 1, Article 4, U.S. Constitution, the courts of Missouri are bound to give full *Page 289 faith and credit to the Kansas Supreme Court decisions. This theory and contention was never abandoned.

Rechow v. Bankers Life Co., 335 Mo. 668, 73 S.W.2d 794, was an action for damages for an alleged breach of a life insurance contract. Defendant pleaded as res adjudicata of the matters urged by the plaintiff, a judgment of a district court of Iowa (domicile of the defendant), which judgment was affirmed by the Supreme Court of that state, and defendant pleaded that under Section 1, Article 4, Constitution of the United States, the courts of Missouri were bound to give full faith and credit to the Iowa judgment and decision. It was held that jurisdiction of the Rechow appeal was in this court.

In the Rechow case it appears that the Bankers Life Company, defendant in that case, was organized in 1879, under the laws of Iowa, as an assessment company, and under the name of Bankers Life Association. It remained an assessment company until 1911. The assessments were not fixed in the assessment policies, but depended on the amount necessary and were made quarterly. Failure to pay an assessment forfeited a policy. In 1907, the Iowa Legislature enacted a statute prohibiting the writing of assessment insurance except by fraternal benefit associations and by companies previously authorized to write such, and the statute authorized the latter mentioned companies, by proceedings set out in the statute, to transform themselves into legal reserve or level premium companies. As construed by the Supreme Court of Iowa in Wall et al. v. Bankers Life Company, 208 Iowa 1053,223 N.W. 257, the statute authorized assessment companies, when so transformed, to cease writing assessment insurance. The Bankers Life Association, the assessment company, changed to a legal reserve company in October, 1911, under the name of Bankers Life Company, and ceased writing assessment insurance. All assessment certificate holders were notified of the change and given an opportunity to exchange their certificates for insurance on the level premium plan, the premium for which was higher than under the assessment plan. Plaintiff in the Rechow case did not change.

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Bluebook (online)
114 S.W.2d 1009, 342 Mo. 284, 1938 Mo. LEXIS 625, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-security-benefit-assn-mo-1938.