Seymour v. Mutual Protective League

155 Ill. App. 21, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 469
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 30, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 155 Ill. App. 21 (Seymour v. Mutual Protective League) 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
Seymour v. Mutual Protective League, 155 Ill. App. 21, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 469 (Ill. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Baume

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit brought by Emily V. Seymour, a minor, by Flora A. Seymour, her guardian, against the Mutual Protective League, a fraternal beneficiary society organized under the laws of this state, to recover an amount alleged to be due her by the terms of a benefit certificate issued by said society to her father, Edgar B. Seymour. The declaration alleges that on September 17, 1897, the defendant delivered to Edgar B. Seymour a certificate of membership whereby it accepted said Seymour as a member of said defendant society upon the faith of the warranty, statements and representations contained in his application and statements to the local medical examiner, a copy of which was thereto attached and made a part of the contract of insurance, and whereby said defendant society agreed upon the death of said Seymour, provided he had while a member complied with its charter, constitution, laws, rules and regulations, to pay from the benefit fund the amount of one assessment not exceeding the sum of $1,000 as follows: Two hundred dollars each to the widow and four children of said Seymour. The declaration sets out such certificate in haec verba, which certificate contains other provisions not now necessary to be noticed. The declaration further alleges that said Seymour continued to be a member of defendant society and to pay all assessments therein, and was such member on May 5, 1905, when, in order to change the beneficiaries named in said benefit certificate the defendant society and said Seymour by mutual agreement took up, cancelled and surrendered said benefit certificate, and the defendant then and there issued and delivered to said Seymour in lieu thereof another benefit certificate designated as a “Five Year Natural Life Form” whereby in consideration of the statements made and warranted by said Seymour in his application- and medical examination, both of which were thereby made a part of said contract of membership, and whereby it was provided that the said Seymour while in good standing should be entitled to the privileges of said society and his beneficiaries should be entitled to participate in the benefit and reserve funds of said society to the amount of $1,000, as follows: $333.34 to Lewis W. Seymour, $333.33 to the plaintiff Emily V. Seymour and the like sum to Amos E. Seymour, all of said beneficiaries being designated in said certificate as children of said Edgar B. Seymour. This certificate is set out haec .verba and the fifth clause thereof provides in part as follows: “If a member holding this certificate * * * should die * * * by suicide, whether sane or insane, intentional or unintentional, except it be committed while the member is under treatment for insanity, * * * or if any of the statements or declarations in the application for membership and upon the faith of which this certificate was issued shall be found in any respect untrue, this certificate shall be null and void and of no effect provided that in all such cases the amount of money contributed to the benefit fund by such member shall be returned, and shall be paid to the beneficiary out of such fund in lieu of the benefit.” The declaration further alleges that said Edgar B. Seymour continued to be a member of said defendant society and to pay all assessments and dues levied or assessed against .him until January 1, 1907, when he died and that proofs of his death were made and received by the defendant on December 7, 1907; that by reason of the premises the defendant became liable to pay to the plaintiff $333.33, but has not paid the same. To this declaration the defendant filed its plea of the general issue, except as to the sum of $18.65 with interest thereon. The defendant also filed its several special pleas, as follows: First, that the said sum of $18.65 and interest thereon amounting to $1.20, together with the costs of the suit amounting to $7.05, it is ready and willing to pay to the plaintiff and brings the same into court, said $18.65 being one-third of the sum of money contributed by said Seymour to the benefit fund of said defendant; that said Seymour agreed and states in his application that the defendant should not be responsible under the contract if he should “die by suicide whether sane or insane, except it be committed in delirium resulting from illness, or while the member is under treatment for insanity or has been judicially declared to be insane, but all money contributed to the benefit fund of the defendant by such member shall be paid to the beneficiary hereunder;” that the said Seymour committed suicide on January 1, 1907, and for the reason aforesaid the plaintiff should not recover except the sum so tendered. Second, that relying upon the said agreement in said application mentioned the defendant issued to said Seymour a certain benefit certificate, which on April 26, 1905, said Seymour by his written endorsement thereon surrendered to defendant and requested a new certificate to be issued to him in lieu thereof; that in compliance with such request the defendant on May 1, 1905, issued to said Seymour •a certificate which was in full force at the time of his •death and was the only certificate authorized to be issued. The plea further sets forth in haec verba clause five heretofore mentioned, of said certificate, and further avers that notwithstanding the provisions of said certificate said Seymour on January 1, 1907, committed suicide, and prays judgment if the plaintiff ought to maintain her action for a greater sum than the amount tendered. Other special pleas filed by the defendant are the same in substance as those mentioned. To the plea of the general issue the plaintiff filed her replication accepting the amount tendered and as to the residue claimed put herself upon the country, and to the several special pleas the plaintiff replied accepting the amount tendered and averring that she ought not to be barred of her action for the residue claimed by her, from anything stated in the pleas, because at the time the said Seymour became a member of the defendant society the constitution and laws of said society then in force and which were in force thence continuously until his death, provided, that “when certificates of membership shall be in force for two years they shall be incontestable for any cause except for violation of the constitution and laws of this order, or a failure to pay the assessments for the benefit and general fund as provided by the law.” A general and special demurrer interposed by defendant to said last replication was sustained by the court, and the plaintiff having elected to abide her said replication, judgment was entered in her favor against the •defendant for $26.90, being the amount tendered. To reverse such judgment the plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

In support of the action of the court in sustaining the demurrer to plaintiff’s replication to the special pleas, it is urged by defendant that the replication contravenes an established rule of pleading, in that, as it purports to be by way of confession and avoidance it does not confess the averment in defendant’s pleas that the insured committed suicide. The replication necessarily imported a confession of the averment of fact in the plea that the insured committed suicide, and was not, therefore, subject to the objection urged. In Waggeman v. Lombard, 56 Ill. 42, it is said, that “every pleading is taken to confess such traversable matter of fact alleged on the other side as it does not traverse.”

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

Related

Wilmington Trust Co. v. Mutual Life Ins. Co.
68 F. Supp. 83 (D. Delaware, 1946)
Byrd v. United States
106 F.2d 821 (Tenth Circuit, 1939)
Carter v. Standard Acc. Ins.
238 P. 259 (Utah Supreme Court, 1925)
Pold v. North American Union
180 Ill. App. 448 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1913)
Seymour v. Mutual Protective League
171 Ill. App. 114 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1911)
Arrowsmith v. Old Colony Life Insurance Co.
164 Ill. App. 44 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 Ill. App. 21, 1910 Ill. App. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seymour-v-mutual-protective-league-illappct-1910.