Supreme Lodge, Order of Golden Chain v. Terrell

99 F. 330, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3453
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Georgia
DecidedJune 22, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 99 F. 330 (Supreme Lodge, Order of Golden Chain v. Terrell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the Northern District of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Supreme Lodge, Order of Golden Chain v. Terrell, 99 F. 330, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3453 (circtndga 1899).

Opinion

NEWMAN, District Judge.

Ledrew R. Hooper Lad a benefit certificate, which had been issued to him in 1896, in the Order of the Golden Chain. The certificate provided for payment at his death to his mother, Mrs. Sophia A. Hooper, of the sum of $3,000. On the 24th day of July Mrs. Hooper, the mother, died. The insured, Ledrew R. Hooper, was himself quite sick at the time of his mother’s death. Immediately after his mother’s death he sent for lawyers, and made his will. In the will he directed that the $3,000 in question should be paid by the executor named in the will (John Terrell) to his two sisters, Mrs. Louisa West and Mrs. Martha M. Standridge. On the back of the benefit certificate held by Hooper is a blank to be used for naming a new beneficiary. Hooper caused this blank to be filled up, and in it directed the supreme secretary of the order to issue to him a new certificate payable to John Terrell as his executor which he signed. He sent the benefit certificate, with this indorsement on it, together with the $1 fee required in such cases, to the local officers of his lodge in Atlanta. Within a very few days thereafter, Hooper died. The benefit certificate, with the indorsement on it changing the beneficiary, and the $1, were received by the officers of the lodge, who subsequently sent it to the officers of the supreme lodge in Baltimore. In addi[331]*331tion to the two sisters named in the will, to whom the executor was directed to pay this $3,000, Hooper had five other brothers and sisters. After Hooper’s death the order made no question as to its duty to pay the $3,000 called for by the certificate, but as the same was claimed both by the executor, as to the entire amount, and by the five other brothers and sisters as to their five-sevenths of the amount, the order filed its bill of interpleader, and, by an order of the court, paid the money into its registry.

The question in the case is as to whether or not, by the provision of the will, and the designation on the hack of the benefit certificate, Hooper made a proper and legal change in the beneficiary, so that the amount should go to the executor for the benefit of his two sisters, or whether it should go to all the brothers and sisters, share and share alike. Hooper’s father had died before his mother, and, as he was an unmarried man, his brothers and sisters were his nearest relatives.

The by-laws of this order (section 172) provide:

“A member shall enter upon his application the name or names of those dependent vpon him to whom he desires his benefits paid, subject to such future disposal among his dependents as Hie member may thereafter direct; and the name shall be entered in the benefit certificate according to said direction, which, however, must be explicit.’’

Section 173 provides:

“A member desiring to change his beneficiary may, at any time when in good standing, surrender his benefit certificate, and a new certificate shall be issued, payable to such beneficiary or beneficiaries dependent upon him as such member may direct, upon the payment of a fee of one dollar. Said surrender and direction must he made in writing, signed by the member, and forwarded, under the seal of the subordinate lodge, with the benefit certificate, to the supreme secretary.”

Section 176 provides:

“In the event of the death of all the beneficiaries selected by the member, before the dec-case of such member, if he shall make no other or further dispos’tion thereof, the benefit shall he paid to his widow; if none, then to his children, pro rata; * * if no widow, child, children, or grandchildren living, then to the mother of the deceased, if living; if none of the foregoing, then to his fattier, if living; in failure of all of the above named, to brothers and sisters, share and share alike,” etc.

The constitution of the order provides for what is called a “widows’ and orphans’ benefit fund,” payable to the member’s family, “or those dependent upon him, as he may direct.”

The contention here is, on behalf of all these brothers and sisters, that the designation by Hooper in his will was — First, not such a new designation of beneficiaries as is required by the by-laws of the order; and, second, that even if it he a sufficient designation, the two sisters named were not dependent upon him, and that therefore the designation was invalid, and by virtue of the terms of the by-laws all the brothers and sisters, being the next of kin, are entitled to the amount.

As to the first point, the will of Hooper and the designation on the hack of the benefit certificate must he considered together. He directed the order to issue a new certificate to John Terrell, [332]*332as-Ms executor. In Ms will lie directs that John Terrell, as his executor,* shall- collect the money, and hold the same as trustee for the .benefit of the two sisters named. By the terms of the by-laws the new certificate would be “payable to such beneficiary or beneficiaries dependent upon him” as he (Hooper) might direct. There is nothing whatever to show that Hooper was not in good standing in every way with* his. order, and consequently a new certificate would have issued, as a matter of course, if he had not died before there was time for the proper officers to issue it. Therefore that should be considered as'done, especially in a court of equity; and, as the case stands; it may be considered as if a new certificate had been issued, payable to John Terrell, as executor, and in legal effect to the two sisters named; and the special master to whom this case was refei’red so determined.

'■ As to the other question, that these two sisters were not dependent upon him, the record seems to be, in a measure, silent; but the special master finds that they were not dependent upon him in such sense as is contemplated in the constitution and by-laws of the Order of the Golden Chain. The provision of the by-laws is that .a person .becoming a member of this order, and applying for a benefit certificate, shall enter upon his application the “name or names of those dependent upon him to whom he desires his benefit paid”; and it also provides for such “future disposal among his dependénts as the member may thereafter direct.” The designation ;of the beneficiaries dependent upon him, to whom a member desires •the amount for which he is insured paid at his death, is therefore a matter for the member. It may be that, within reasonable limits, the supreme lodge of the order might raise some question as to the person named not being of the member’s family or dependent upon him; but is there any authority for third parties to make this question? . A -member insures Ms life, and pays the dues required by the order. Why should he not name such person or persons depend-ant upon him as he may desire, and why should he not be the judge, as between himself and his other relatives, as to which of them is dependent upon him, and as to who shall receive his insurance in the event of his death? It is his contract, and he pays the dues or premiums, and why may he not name the beneficiaries? By what right do third parties claim that a member’s designation of befieficiaries is invalid? I am wholly unable to*see how any other parties, even if they be of the same relationship to the member as the "beneficiary named, can contest this question, when the supreme (lodge of the order does not make it. The able special master, who has made a careful and well-considered report, takes the contrary yiew of this question, and so reports.

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Bluebook (online)
99 F. 330, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/supreme-lodge-order-of-golden-chain-v-terrell-circtndga-1899.