Royal League v. Kavanagh

84 N.E. 178, 233 Ill. 175
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 84 N.E. 178 (Royal League v. Kavanagh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Royal League v. Kavanagh, 84 N.E. 178, 233 Ill. 175 (Ill. 1908).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellant filed its bill in the circuit court of Cook county for an injunction to restrain the appellee from bringing an action in the State of Missouri against the appellant upon a benefit certificate issued by it to Thomas W.- Kavanagh, in which the appellee was named as beneficiary. The circuit court sustained a demurrer to the -bill, which was thereupon dismissed for want of equity, and that decree having been affirmed by the Appellate Court, this further appeal is prosecuted by the appellant.

It appears from the bill that the appellant is a fraternal insurance society organized in 1883 under the laws of the State of Illinois, having the object, among other things, of establishing a fund for the benefit of the widows and orphans of deceased members. It operates and conducts its business under the provisions of the laws of this State and has always done so, and its principal office is, and has' always been, in the city of Chicago. It operates through subordinate councils, which are authorized to admit acceptable persons to beneficiary membership, one of which councils, known as Lake Shore Council No. 59, located in the city of Chicago, in September, 1895, admitted to membership Thomas W. Kavanagh, who was then a citizfen of Illinois, residing in Chicago. He signed an application containing the following agreement: “If accepted as a member I agree to comply with, and that my membership and all interests of the persons entitled to such benefits shall be subject to, all laws, rules and usages now in force in the order or which may be hereinafter adopted by it.” Having passed a medical examination his application was approved, he was admitted to membership and received a benefit certificate providing that “upon condition that the statements made by him in his application for membership in said council, the representations and agreements made and subscribed to by him in the medical examiner’s blank, * * * be made a part of this contract, and upon condition that the said member complies, in future, with the laws, rules and regulations now governing the said council and fund or that may hereafter be enacted by the supreme council to govern said council and fund, all of which are also made a part of this contract. These conditions being expressly assented to and complied with, the supreme council of the Royal League hereby promises and binds itself to pay out of its widows’ and orphans’ benefit fund to Anna Sexton Kavanagh, wife, a sum not exceeding $4000, in accordance with and under the provisions of the law governing said fund, upon satisfactory proof of death of said member and upon the surrender of this certificate, provided that said member is in good standing in this order at the time of his death,” etc. Kavanagh’s acceptance of the certificate was evidenced by an endorsement upon the bottom thereof, signed by him, as follows: “I accept this certificate on the conditions named herein.”

In March, 1893, there was enacted a by-law as follows: “If any member shall, within two years subsequent to his admission into this order, die by his own act or hand, sane or insane, his beneficiary or beneficiaries shall receive only one-half of the face value of his benefit certificate,” which by-law went into effect on April 1, 1893. In April, 1895, this by-law was amended by extending the time therein mentioned to five years, the amendment going into effect on May 1, 1895. In 1897 the time limit was stricken out of the by-law, and in 1899 it was extended to apply to all members, whether theretofore or thereafter admitted. In 1903 it was again amended, and in April, 1905, it was amended to read as follows: “No member, whether admitted heretofore or hereafter, shall die by his own act or hand, sane or insane; and if any member, whether admitted heretofore or hereafter, shall die by his own act or hand, sane or insane, such death shall forfeit all rights and claims to the amount agreed to be paid on his death and specified in the benefit certificate of such member, and his beneficiary or beneficiaries shall receive and be paid in lieu thereof a sum equal to the total amount actually paid by such member to the widows’ and orphans’ benefit fund of the order.” The by-law, as amended, went into effect on July 1, 1905, and has continued in effect from thence hitherto. On August 29, 1905, Kavanagh committed suicide in New York, leaving surviving him the appellee, Anna Sexton Kavanagh, his widow, who was named as beneficiary.

It is alleged that when Kavanagh joined the order, and until his death, he and the appellee were residents of the State of Illinois and the appellee is now a citizen of Illinois and a resident of the county of Cook; that under the law of the State of Illinois the said by-law, although enacted after Kavanagh joined the order, was valid and binding upon him and the appellee as his beneficiary, and that by reason of the suicide of Kavanagh the liability of the appellant to appellee upon the death w.as for the sum of $322.84, which constituted the actual amount paid into the widows’ and orphans’ benefit fund by said Thomas Kavanagh.

The bill further alleged that by the opinion and decision of the Court of Appeals of the State of Missouri in the case of Sitpreme Council of the Royal League v. Morton, 100 Mo. App. 76, it has been settled as the rule of law in that State that suicide by-laws adopted subsequent to the date when the member joins the order are not binding upon him or his beneficiaries, although by the terms of the contract of membership there is an agreement contained therein that such member and his beneficiary shall be bound thereby, so that the rule of law which obtains in the State of Missouri is directly contrary to the rule of law of the State of Illinois ; that appellant is licensed to do business in the State of Missouri and has there subordinate councils and agents upon whom service may be had, so that the appellee would be able to procure service upon appellant if she went into that jurisdiction and began a suit upon the benefit certificate; that the contract entered into was made between two citizens of Illinois; that the certificate was delivered in Illinois ; that the assessments were paid in Illinois; that under the law the place of performance was and is Illinois, and therefore said contract is an Illinois contract, into which the laws of Illinois entered and formed a part, and the appellant is therefore entitled to have its rights and liabilities under said contract adjudicated and determined under and in accordance with the laws of Illinois; that if.

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Bluebook (online)
84 N.E. 178, 233 Ill. 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/royal-league-v-kavanagh-ill-1908.