Supreme Commandery of the Knights of the Golden Rule v. Ainsworth

71 Ala. 436
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by106 cases

This text of 71 Ala. 436 (Supreme Commandery of the Knights of the Golden Rule v. Ainsworth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Supreme Commandery of the Knights of the Golden Rule v. Ainsworth, 71 Ala. 436 (Ala. 1882).

Opinion

BBICKELL, C. J.

A contract of insurance is defined as “ an agreement by which one party, for a consideration (which is usually paid in money, either in one sum, or at different times during the continuance of the risk), promises to make a certain payment of money, upon the destruction or injury of something in which the other party has an interest. In fire insurance and marine insurance, the thing insured is property; in life or accident insurance, it is the life or health of a person.” Commonwealth v. Wetherbee, 105 Mass. 149. The instrument in writing upon which this suit is founded, and which is set out in full in the complaint, entitled a Knight’s Benefit Certificate,” has the elements and characteristics of a contract of life insurance. It purports to have been issued by the “ Supreme Commandery of the Knights of the Golden Buie,” which is averred to be a corporation, created and organized under a law of the State of Kentucky. The commandery thereby promises, on the death of the husband of the appellee, to pay her two thousand dollars, in consideration of the husband having become a member of the order, and having paid the fee for admission to membership, and of his payment in the future of all assessments levied and required by the supreme command-ery, upon the condition that he remained a member of the order, in good standing, and complied with all the laws then of force, or subsequently enacted. These are the essential elements of a contract of life insurance, made by a mutual insurance company with one of its members. Life is the risk, and death is the event upon which the insurance money is payable. There is not, as, in ordinary contracts or policies, a stipulation for the payment of premiums fixed and certain in amount, at the inception of the risk, and at periods, definitely appointed, during its continuance. The payment of the fee for admission to membership, and of the assessments levied and required by the commandery, are the equivalent of premiums, and form the pecuniary consideration of the contract. The condition expressed, that the assured shall remain a member of the order in good standing, observing its laws, is the expression of that which is implied in all insurance of members by mutual companies. The members of such companies are presumed to know the charter and by-laws, and to contract in reference to [444]*444them, though they may not be recited or referred to in the contract.-Bliss on Life Insurance, § 463 et seq.; May on Insurance, § 552. Nor is the character or legal effect of the contract varied, because the objects and purposes of the association are benevolent and charitable, rather than speculative, or the derivation of profits from the transaction of business. There are many such associations, having various names, and similar objects and purposes, which are, in contemplation of law, mutual life insurance companies, and as such their contracts are construed and enforced by the courts. Policies, or certificates, issued by them have the essentials and characteristics of such contracts; the payment by the-one party in some form, and under some designation, of a pecuniary consideration, and the observance of prescribed duties during the continuance of the risk; and the promise and obligation of the other party, when death happens, to pay the sum assured.-Commonwealth v. Wetherbee, supra; Bolton v. Bolton, 73 Me. 299.

The plea interposed does not deny the death of the assured; or that while living he paid the assessments levied and required by the supreme commandery; or that, at the time of death, he was a member of the order in good standing. The averments are, that he came to his death by taking his own life, and that, at the time of the issue of the certificate, there was a general law of the association, rendering it a condition upon which a certificate could issue, and upon which its benefits could be realized, that the member to whom, or upon whose life it was issued, should comply with the “ general laws of the order then in existence, or which might thereafter be enacted;” that the present certificate was issued and was by the assured accepted in writing, “subject to the laws of the order now in force, or which may hereafter be enacted by the supreme com-mandery.” On its face the certificate recited, among other things, that any violation of “ the requirements of the laws now in force, or hereafter enacted, governing the order or this class, shall render this certificate null and void.” And in another place it is recited as a condition upon which the obligation of the certificate depends: “ The full compliance with all the laws of the oi’der now in force, or that may hereafter be enacted.” The plea further avers the enactment or adoption of a law, by the terms of which a certificate of this class was forfeited, if the member, whether sa/ne or insane, should take his own life; the enactment of which was subsequent to the issue of the certificate. The point of controversy is, whether this law, by force of the recitals and stipulations to which we have referred, enters into and forms part of an antecedent certificate, avoiding it in the event a member, whether sane or insa/ne, should take his own life.

[445]*445The power to make by-laws for the government of the corporate body, fixing and regulating its own duties and that of its-members, not inconsistent with its charter, or the purposes and objects of its creation, not repugnant to the common law, or to the laws of the State, constitutional and statutory, is an attribute of every corporation. The power is regarded as of so much importance that it is seldom left to implication, but is in express terms conferred by the law from which corporate existence is derived.-2 Kent, 296; Ang. & Ames on Corporations § 110; 2 Wait’s Actions & Defences, 366. When duly enacted by the body to whom the corporate legislative power is delegated, by-laws are binding upon all the members of the corporation, who are presumed 'to know them, and to contract in reference to them.-Ang. & Ames on Corporations, § 325; Bliss on. Life Insurance, § 463. It is the existing by-laws which are presumed to be known, and in reference to which it is presumed corporate contracts are made; as it the existing municipal law of the place in which a contract is made, or is to be performed, that parties are presumed to be conversant with, and which incorporates itself into the contract, measuring their rights and duties. A corporation has not capacity, as the legislative power from which it derives existence has not competency, by laws-of its own enactment, to disturb or divest rights which it had created, or to impair the obligation of its contracts, or to change its responsibilities to its members, or to draw them into new and distinct relations.-Ang. & Ames on Corporations, § 399 Bliss on Life Insurance, § 463; Becker v. Far. Mut. Ins. Co., 48 Mich. 610; Hamilton Mut. Ins. Co. v. Hobart, 2 Gray, 543; Great Falls Mut. Ins. Co. v. Harvey, 45 N. H. 292.

The certificate is silent as to the consequence, if the member whose life was assured should die by his own hands; and the by-laws of the association, or order, when the certificate was issued, contained no provision declaring in that event an avoidance or forfeiture of the certificate. We are not aware that it has anywhere been expressly decided, that voluntary- self-destruction by one whose life was insured, and of whose sanity there was no question, would avoid the contract of insurance or rather, would not fall within its risk, though in that event there was not expressed an exception to the liability of the insurer.

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Bluebook (online)
71 Ala. 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/supreme-commandery-of-the-knights-of-the-golden-rule-v-ainsworth-ala-1882.