Supreme Council of the Order of Chosen Friends v. Bennett

47 N.J. Eq. 39
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1890
StatusPublished

This text of 47 N.J. Eq. 39 (Supreme Council of the Order of Chosen Friends v. Bennett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Supreme Council of the Order of Chosen Friends v. Bennett, 47 N.J. Eq. 39 (N.J. Ct. App. 1890).

Opinion

Van Fleet, V. C.

The litigants now before the court are the defendants to this suit. The suit was commenced by bill of interpleader. A decree having heretofore been made directing the defendants to interplead in this court, they are now before the court demanding judgment as to which of the two sets of claimants is entitled to the fund in controversy. The hostile claimants are Martha O. Bennett on the one side, and Alonzo Van Riper, Peter Van [40]*40Riper and Adaline Marshall on the other. The three last named were children of Alonzo Van Riper, senior, deceased. The fund in dispute is $2,000. This sum became payable by the death of Alonzo Van Riper, senior. He died in February, 1888. At the time of his death he was a member of the Supreme Council of the Order of Chosen Friends. This is a charitable or benevolent corporation organized under laws of Indiana. One of the objects of its organization was, as its articles of association declare, to establish a relief fund from which members, who have complied with all its rules' and regulations, or persons by such members lawfully designated, or the legal heirs of such members, may receive a benefit in a sum not exceeding $3,000. The articles of association provide, that this benefit shall become payable either on the death of a member, or when he reaches seventy-five years of age, or when he shall, in consequence of disease or accident, become permanently disabled from following any occupation. Alonzo Van Riper, senior, died before he reached the age of seventy-five years, and also before his benefit became payable to himself in consequence of his disability. If his benefit became payable at all, it became so by reason of his death. Under the by-laws of the corporation, each member has power to designate to whom his benefit shall be paid on his death, provided he designates a person related to or dependent upon him. But a designation by a member of a person to take his benefit on his death does not cut off the member’s right to the benefit in case he subsequently attains the age of seventy-five years or becomes permanently disabled. And a member may change his beneficiary as often as he sees fit, provided he selects a person related to or dependent upon him. The method which a member must pursue in effecting such change, is to surrender the relief fund certificate previously issued and ask that a new certificate be issued in the name of the new appointee. The by-laws also provide, that if the beneficiary designated by a member shall die before the member, and no subsequent disposition of the benefit be made, the benefit shall, in that case, be jpaid, on the member’s death, to his heirs dependent upon him; but if there be no person entitled, by the laws of the corpora[41]*41tion, to receive the benefit, it shall, in that case, revert to the corporation.

The first beneficiaries appointed by Alonzo Van Riper, senior, after he became a member of the corporation, were his two sons, Alonzo and Peter. He afterwards, in December, 1887, surrendered the certificate in which his two sons were named as his beneficiaries, and procured a certificate to be issued in which his grandson, Raymond Van Riper, was appointed his beneficiary to the extent of $1,000, and Martha C. Bennett in the sum of $2,000. Mrs. Bennett is\ called in the certificate his grandniece, but she was not, in fact, related to him in any degree by blood. She was the wife of his nephew, so that the only relationship existing between them was that of affinity. There were no ties of blood between them. On the death of Alonzo Van Riper, senior, hostile claims were asserted to the $2,000. His children claimed the whole of it to the exclusion of Mrs. Bennett, and Mrs. Bennett asserted a like claim as against the children. She attempted to enforce her claim by a suit at law against the corporation. It was when affairs reachechthis state that the corporation sought the protection of this court by filing a bill of interpleader and paying the fund in dispute into court.

By becoming the complainant in an interpleader suit and prosecuting such suit to a decree, requiring the defendants to interplead and settle among themselves the conflicting claims which they make to the fund in controversy, the complainant corporation ^has effectually extinguished any right which it might otherwise have asserted to the fund in litigation. Hence,' it is wholly unnecessary to consider whether the complainant might not, by force of the by-law last recited, have asserted a right to the fund in question worthy of very careful consideration, if it be true, as is contended, that Mrs. Bennett was incompetent to become the beneficiary of Alonzo Van Riper, senior, and if it also be true, as it seems to be, that Mr. Van Riper died 'without leaving any person dependent upon him who stood to ‘ him in the relation of his heir. The complainant having effectually cut itself off from all right to assert a claim to the fund in dispute, by the position which it has voluntarily assumed in' [42]*42this litigation, the only duty now devolving on the court— indeed, the only thing the court can do in the present posture of the case — is to decide whether the fund belongs to Mrs. Bennett or to the other three claimants. The fund must be awarded to-the one or the other.

The question, which of the two conflicting claims is entitled to-prevail in this contest, must be decided by the contract which-Alonzo Van Riper, senior, made with the complainant corporation. That contract is to be found in the complainant’s articles of association, its by-laws and the relief fund certificate issued to Mr_ Van Riper. The articles of association declare, it will be remembered, that one of the purposes for which the corporation was-created was to establish a relief fund for the benefit of members,, or such persons as might be lawfully designated by members, or-the legal heirs of members. It thus appears that the money in dispute constitutes a part of a fund which was established for the-benefit of three distinct classes of persons, namely, members, persons designated by members, and the heirs of members. The-fund having been established for the benefit of the persons-embraced within these classes, and for no others, each part of the-fund must, as it becomes payable, be paid, according to the plain* letter of the contract, to one or more of such persons. No other person can acquire a right in the fund, and an attempt by a member to give any other person a right in it must be treated as-an attempt to make a misappropriation. Whether or not any part of the relief fund can be diverted from those for whose benefit, it was established, where both the member and the corporation consent to a diversion, is not a question which this case presents for decision, for the certificate issued to Mr. Van Riper in favor-of Mrs. Bennett shows, on its face, that the corporation issued, it upon a representation that she was related to Mr. Van Riper-as niece. The corporation undoubtedly accepted that representation as true, and its act, therefore, in issuing a certificate in favor-of Mrs. Bennett, cannot be regarded as a consent by it that any part of its relief fund should be paid to a person not related to- or dependent upon a member; on the contrary, it is obvious,, that the corporation issued the certificate under the belief that [43]*43Mrs. Bennett was qualified to be Mr. Van Riper’s beneficiary by, reason of her relationship to him.

Mrs. Bennett’s claim is founded on a designation regularly made. She is the person whom Mr. Van Riper appointed to be his beneficiary of the fund in dispute. If she stood, when the-appointment was made, in such a position towards Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
47 N.J. Eq. 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/supreme-council-of-the-order-of-chosen-friends-v-bennett-njch-1890.