Tice v. Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias

100 S.W. 519, 123 Mo. App. 85, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 219
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 5, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 100 S.W. 519 (Tice v. Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tice v. Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias, 100 S.W. 519, 123 Mo. App. 85, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 219 (Mo. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

(after stating,the facts). — The legislation of this State takes notice of and regulates several classes of companies or associations furnishing life insurance, among which are regular or old line companies conducted for profit and issuing policies calling for a stipulated premium to all persons who can pass the required health examination, assessment companies which raise money to pay death losses in whole or in part by assessing their membership, and fraternal-beneficiary societies, which commonly depend, to some extent, on assessments too, for the payment of losses, but are distinguished by their social and fraternal features, lodge system, rituals and ceremonies, and by insuring only initiated members. Instead .of leaving the question of whether any company writing life insurance in the State, belongs to one or the other of the different classes of companies, to be determined by the intention of the members as expressed in its charter, or by the understanding between it and those insured as to the nature [100]*100of the contract, the State’s policy has been to classify such companies according to statutory definitions and the presence or absence in their corporate organization and mode of business of certain features deemed decisive of their essential character. In deference to statutory criterions prevailing at different times, our courts have held some societies that were organized elsewhere as fraternal, and empowered by the incorporating sovereignty to write benefit certificates, to be old line insurance companies. As the immunities' and duties of the different kinds of companies are various, the character which the statutes affix to one often becomes important in litigation over its contracts and proves decisive of the rights of the parties. An apt illustration of this is found in the career of the present defendant. The Supreme Lodge of Knights of Pythias of the World was incorporated by an act of Congress for fraternal purposes, and empowered to organize the Endowment Rank to write benefit insurance for members of the order; and doubtless no member who ever took a certificate believed he was getting an old line policy. Nevertheless, because of statutes then in force in Missouri, this court in Toomey v. Supreme Lodge (74 Mo. App. 507), and the Supreme Court of the State in the same case (147 Mo. 129, 48 S. W. 936), held the defendant was conducting a regular, instead of a fraternal-beneficial insurance business, was not entitled to the exemption from the general insurance laws granted by the statutes (sec. 1408, R. S. 1899) to fraternal associations, but was subject to all of them, including the provision that the suicide of an insured person shall be no defense to an action on the policy, unless it was procured in contemplation of suicide. [R. S. 1899, sec. 7896.] The same question is presented as the controlling one in the cause before us; which must be disposed of as the Toomey case was, and on its authority, unless subsequent legislation has so altered the law as to require a decision that the defendant was writing [101]*101fraternal-beneficial, and not old line, insurance, when it contracted with the deceased, and that the certificate sued on created a contract between him and the defendant for fraternal insurance. The constitution and rules of the defendant remain as they were when the.Toomey certificate was issued and a different result from the one reached in that cause, can only be justified if changes have been made in the statutes which annul the reasons for which the Supreme Court held the defendant’s certificates constituted old line contracts. Construing the sections of the Revised Statutes of 1889 relating to fraternal associations and assessment companies, the Supreme Court said: “Thus under defendant’s amended charter of 1892, it had power to-, insure the lives of members of the Endowment Ranh of the order for a certain sum, upon the payment of fixed monthly premiums, and it exercised that power when it issued the policy sued on. The amount to be paid does not depend ‘upon the collection of an assessment upon persons holding similar contracts,’ and hence, it is not an. assessment company within the meaning of section 5860; nor is the amount to be paid derived ‘from the proceeds of assessments upon the members of the association,’ and therefore it is not a fraternal-beneficial association, within the definition of such societies by section 2823, R. S. 1889. The premium ■ to be paid by the insured is fUr.ed, and the sum to be paid by the defendant to the beneficiary is certain — two1 thousand dollars flat. Thus whether we reason by induction or exclusion the result is the' same; it is a regular old line policy of insurance and section 5855, R. S. 1899, applies and renders the defense of suicide unavailing in this case.”

We understand that the controlling reason for the decision was that the statutes of 1889 classed as fraternal-beneficiary associations only those raising money to pay benefits by assessing their members; a mode of deriving revenue not exclusively, nor chiefly pursued by [102]*102the defendant, but only resorted to when other modes temporarily prove inadequate. Fraternal insurance, if not of recent origin, has but recently attained a magnitude that caused States to regulate it. The growth of associations furnishing such insurance and their experience, have altered opinions as to the best mode of conducting the business, and corresponding changes in the law have followed from time to time. The original conception of such insurance was that the consideration for it should be assessments levied on and paid by members to meet death or indemnity losses as they accrued, and that the amount of benefit paid in each instance should depend on the sum then collected, not to exceed a maximum limit. The law in this State reflected that conception at first. Many fraternal associations now exact fixed dues as a consideration for their certificates and agree to pay a certain sum when the insured member dies. Presumably, this system has come into vogue in response to a popular demand, and legislation has been enacted in this State as in others, to authorize it.

Besides the decisive fact that the defendant did not rely on assessments to pay benefits, the Toomey opinion called attention, as arguing for the bid line nature of ' defendant’s business, to the fund which the Endowment Rank had accumulated beyond the sums needed to defray current losses, and to the circumstance that in the year 1895 the benefits paid in Missouri exceeded the receipts therein.

By comparing the relevant sections of the statutes of 1889 and 1899, it will be observed that the alterations introduced by the Act of 1897 were radical and exten- ‘ give, and that they go directly to the reasons which induced. the ruling in the Toomey case, that the defendant’s indemnity contracts were old line, instead of fraternal-beneficial. We will examine those reasons in the light of the law as it now is to see if they still hold good.

The fund to pay death benefits due on certificates [103]*103is yet obtained by the defendant otherwise than by levying assessments on members. But the present statutes, instead of restricting the association to that means of raising the fund, expressly authorize it to be raised by dues collected from members as well as by assessments (sec. 1408), and impliedly authorize its obtainment from still other sources; for among the questions fraternal-beneficiary associations are required to answer in their annual reports to the State Superintendent of Insurance is this one: “Does association guarantee in its certificates,

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111 S.W. 911 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1908)
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102 S.W. 1013 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1907)

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Bluebook (online)
100 S.W. 519, 123 Mo. App. 85, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tice-v-supreme-lodge-knights-of-pythias-moctapp-1904.