Stevens v. Woodmen of the World

71 P.2d 898, 105 Mont. 121, 1937 Mont. LEXIS 124
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 1937
DocketNo. 7,660.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 71 P.2d 898 (Stevens v. Woodmen of the World) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stevens v. Woodmen of the World, 71 P.2d 898, 105 Mont. 121, 1937 Mont. LEXIS 124 (Mo. 1937).

Opinions

The appellant society is not a corporation selling insurance for profit. It is a mutual society whose members agreed to contribute to each other through a corporation formed with peculiar statutory limitations as to its powers and the protection which it furnished its members. The statute under which it was organized — Colorado — and the laws of the state where the certificate was delivered — Montana — become important. These states, for reasons of their own and a public policy thus expressed in the statute, limited the persons who could be made beneficiaries. The statutes of the two states are identical. They provide: "The payments of death benefits shall be confined to wife, etc. (relatives enumerated); within the above designations each member shall have the right to designate his beneficiary *Page 124 and from time to time have the same changed in accordance with the laws," etc. (Sec. 2604, Comp. Laws, Colo.; sec. 6311, Rev. Codes.) Thus are definitely fixed by the statutes of the two states the limitations as to legal beneficiaries for death certificates. It would seem that a statutory limitation would be sufficient without further citation of authority; however, the following text, among others, states it clearly, "As a general rule, however, either a statute of a particular jurisdiction or the charter, articles of association, constitution or by-laws of the order provide that the benefits of the society shall be extended only to certain enumerated classes of individuals and where this is the case no one is eligible as a beneficiary who is not a member of one of the classes thus specified." (19 R.C.L. 1280; see, also, 45 Cyc. 171; 2 Couch on Insurance, 818-820.)

An innumerable list of cases could be cited supporting these text quotations. However, we shall content ourselves here with citations that are particularly applicable because the statutes under consideration were practically verbatim with those here involved. (Thomas v. Locomotive Eng. Mutual Life Assn.,191 Iowa, 1152, 183 N.W. 628, 15 A.L.R. 1240 at 1256, 1258;Ginsberg v. Butler, 217 Cal. 467, 19 P.2d 790, 92 A.L.R. 906 at 909; Grigsby v. Russell, 222 U.S. 149, 32 Sup. Ct. 58,56 L.Ed. 133; Travelers' Ins. Co. v. Lampkin, 5 Colo. App. 177,38 P. 335.) The contract between the members of the society, commonly called its constitution, was equally clear in its limitations as to who could be a beneficiary of a death benefit certificate.

From our studies, we venture the assertion that not a single case of concubine beneficiary permitted recovery can be found where the state statute specified the beneficiary or the statement of relationship is a warranty and the warranty was found to be false. In all insurance cases, life, accident, fire, surety, etc., where the warranty is a consideration for or part of the policy, recovery is denied if the warranty is false. Here we have a false warranty in a case where it is essential to the issuance of a certificate and part of it when issued. The question of insuring for a paramour or concubine or mistress is not new to the *Page 125 law. With the old line companies, where insurance is a commodity, sometimes purchased for creditors, friends, paramours or whatnot, paramours have been successful in collecting on the policies; however, the courts have tried every way to avoid even these, where it is plainly a concubine, common adulteress or paramour, upon the theory that in such an action, the courts are asked to become a party to compensating for such services. As one court says: what "was intended as a recompense for services odious in law and abhorrent to society." (See West v. Grand Lodge,14 Tex. Civ. App. 471, 37 S.W. 966; Di Messiah v. Gern, 10 Misc. 30,30 N.Y. Supp. 824, 825; Carter v. Employes' Ben. Assn.,212 Ill. App. 213, 214; Grand Lodge v. Hanses,81 Mo. App. 545; Grand Lodge v. Elsner, 26 Mo. App. 108-118; ElectricalWorkers' Benefit Assn. v. Brown, 26 F.2d 981 at 982, 983;Simpkins v. McDermott, 65 App. D.C. 123, 81 F.2d 257 at 258, 259; 2 Couch on Insurance, sec. 371.)

As to plaintiff's claim that her status was changed, because, on or about the 15th day of November, 1931, by some process of "mutual consent," she became Stevens' wife. As to her claim for a changed status, we find an apt quotation from 19 R.C.L. 1281: "It has also been laid down that the designation in a benefit certificate of a person not eligible as a beneficiary, under existing laws, is not validated by a subsequent status making such person eligible." Couch on Insurance, citing a great list of cases, says: "That an insured cannot change the beneficiary after the enactment of a statute defining those eligible, and name one not within the statutory class, although he could have named such person at any time prior to such enactment." (2 Couch on Insurance, 815.) In other words, by reason of this fraud, there never was and never could be a legal certificate issued, hence, there was no legal certificate in existence that could be the basis for a claim by her after becoming Stevens' wife, and this is without regard to the by-law provisions that specify the method of changing beneficiary.

Respondent claims that the certificate in question was incontestable. We submit that this question cannot properly be *Page 126 raised at this time for two reasons; first, because there never was a certificate, and, secondly, because the incontestability, if relied on, should have been set up in an appropriate pleading when the contest was asserted.

The first proposition is based upon the fact that no legal certificate was or could be issued; hence, if no certificate could be legally issued to Marie Cushing, the certificate is not being contested because it never was in existence. To say that a certificate is incontestable, presupposes a legal certificate, and in this case there was no legal certificate, nor could there be any such under the statutes involved. There was fraud abinitio. As to a benefit certificate that never became effective (just as we urge here), it has been expressly held that the incontestable clause has no effect. (Sovereign Camp, Woodmen ofthe World, v. Wernette, (Tex.Civ.App.) 216 S.W. 669;Bernier v. Pacific Mut. Life Ins. Co., 173 La. 1078,139 So. 629.) So, too, it has been held that the term "incontestable" means that the provisions of the policy would not be contested, not that the insurer agreed to waive the right to defend itself against a risk which it never assumed. (Scarborough v.American Nat. Ins. Co., 171 N.C. 353, 88 S.E.

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Bluebook (online)
71 P.2d 898, 105 Mont. 121, 1937 Mont. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevens-v-woodmen-of-the-world-mont-1937.