Supreme Lodge Knights & Ladies of Honor v. Menkhausen

106 Ill. App. 665, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 321
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 2, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 106 Ill. App. 665 (Supreme Lodge Knights & Ladies of Honor v. Menkhausen) 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
Supreme Lodge Knights & Ladies of Honor v. Menkhausen, 106 Ill. App. 665, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 321 (Ill. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Creighton

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was .an action of assumpsit, in the Circuit Court of St. Clair County, by appellee against appellant, to recover the amount of a benefit which appellees claim accrued to them upon the death of their mother, who was a beneficiary member of the appellant order. The case was decided in the Circuit Court, upon appellant’s demurrer to appellees’ declaration. Appellant elected to stand by its demurrer and the court rendered judgment in favor of appellees for §1,000.

Appellant brings the case to this court, and assigns as error the action of the Circuit Court in the overruling of its demurrer and rendering judgment in favor of appellees.

The declaration avers, in'effect, that appellant is a corporation organized for the purpose of promoting benevolence and charity by establishing a relief fund by contribution from its members, from which, upon satisfactory proof of the death of a member who was a contributor to such fund at the time of death, and had complied with the lawful requirements of the order, should be paid a sum not exceeding $5,000 to such of the deceased member’s family, or those dependent upon or related to him or her, as he or she may have directed; that on the 22d day of March, 1893, Elizabeth Menkhausen -became a member of appellant order, and entitled to all the rights and privileges of membership, and to participate in the relief fund of the order to the amount of $1,000; that she directed that at her death this sum should be paid to her husbanfi, Gustav Menkhausen; that this direction was expressed in the relief fund certificate issued and delivered by appellant to her; that she complied with all the lawful requirements of the order; that she died on the 9th day of November, 1893, and that proofs of her death were duly made; that she died intestate and left her surviving as members of her family, Gustav Menkhausen, and appellees, her infant children.

That on the 6th day of August, 1895, Gustav Menkhausen instituted suit in the Circuit Court' of St. Clair County, Illinois, against appellant, to recover said fund for his own use, he being the beneficiary named' in the certificate of membership; that appellant appeared and defended and filed the following plea:

“ And the defendant, for a plea in this behalf, says that the plaintiff ought not to have his aforesaid action against this defendant, because this defendant says that on the 9th day of November, A. D. 1893, at the city of Belleville, in said county of St. Clair, the said plaintiff of his malice aforethought did then and there intentionally kill and murder the said Elizabeth Menkhausen, and for which said killing and murder, he, the said Gustav Menkhausen. was afterward and at the April term, 1894, of the Circuit Court of said county, duly convicted, and was by the court duly sentenced to be hanged on the 12th day of October, 1894, all of which more fully and at large appears from the record of said court recorded in criminal record 10,’ pages 536, 537 and 538; that said sentence was, by the governor of the State of Illinois, commuted to imprisonment in the penitentiary at Chester for and during the natural life of the said Gustav Menkhausen; that the said plaintiff is now in said penitentiary under said sentence for and on account of having so killed and murdered the said Elizabeth Menkhausen; that- such further proceedings were had in such cause that at the April term, 1896, of said court, the said cause came on for trial before the court and a jury, and after hearing the evidence and arguments of counsel and instructions of the court, the jury retired to consider of their verdict, and returned into court the following verdict : ‘ We, the jury, find the issues for the defendant.’ A judgment was thereupon rendered upon said verdict and was never appealed from and is now in full force and effect.”

That appellant successfully defended said suit solely on the ground that the then plaintiff, Gustav Menkhausen, the beneficiary named in the certificate, had murdered the beneficiary member, and for that reason the fund should not be paid to him.

The purpose of appellant order, as averred in the declaration, was to provide and establish a relief fund, from which, upon death of a member, payment should be made to such of the member’s family, kindred or dependents, as the member should designate, and that its by-laws provided that such benefit might be made payable to a member’s wife, husband, children, grandchildren, parents, brothers sisters, grandparents, nieces, nephews, cousins in the first degree, aunts, uncles or next of kin • who would be distributees of the personal estate of such member upon his death intestate, in the order named.

The statute in force in the State of Illinois at the time deceased became a member, act of 1887, provides:

“ Corporations, associations, or societies, for the purpose of furnishing life iñdemnity or pecuniary benefit upon the death of a member, to the widow, heirs, relatives, lee'al representatives, or designated,beneficiaries of such deceased member, * * * may be organized.”

This statute was modified after deceased became a member and before her death, by the act of 1893, which limits the scope of permissible beneficiaries somewhat; it providing that “ payments of death benefits shall only be made to the families, heirs, blood relations, affianced husband or affianced wife, or to a person dependent upon the members.”

It will be observed that so far as any fact in the case at bar is involved, the purpose of the order, its by-laws, and both the statutes, are in perfect harmony. They all include children of the member, and in all of them the children stand first in the order, after the widow or husband.

The rule is now well established, under such state of purpose, by law and statute as we have here, that where the member fails to designate any particular beneficiary, or where the beneficiary designated by the' member is not in existence at the time of the member’s death, or where the person designated as beneficiary is not within any eligible class, or is at the time of the death of the member, for any reason, ineligible to take, and there are persons who are eligible, the fund does not lapse to the association or society, but'is held by it in trust for those of the eligible who then stand first in order.

The following cases support this rule, and when all of them are considered they fully establish the rule, and cover, both in principle and in facts, every material feature of the case at bar. Schmidt v. The Northern Life Ass’n, 112 Iowa, 41; Baldwin v. Begley, 185 Ill. 180; Palmer v. Welch, 132 Ill. 141; Parke v. Welch, 33 Ill. App. 188; Bishop v. Grand Lodge E. O. M. A., 112 N. Y. 627; Shea v. The Massachusetts Benefit Ass’n, 35 N. E. Rep. 855; Haskins v. Kendall, 158 Mass. 224; Rindge v. New England Mutual Aid Society, 146 Mass. 286; American Legion of Honor v. Perry, 140 Mass. 580; Jewell v. The Grand Lodge A. O. U. W., 41 Minn. 405; Mich. Mutual Benefit Ass’n v. Rolfe, 76 Mich. 146.

A benefit membership and certificate in a society of this character, differ from an ordinary policy of life insurance, in that they speak with reference to the conditions that may exist a't the time of the member’s death.

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Bluebook (online)
106 Ill. App. 665, 1902 Ill. App. LEXIS 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/supreme-lodge-knights-ladies-of-honor-v-menkhausen-illappct-1903.