Vadakin v. Cass

242 F. 235, 155 C.C.A. 75, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1873
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 22, 1917
DocketNo. 2218
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 242 F. 235 (Vadakin v. Cass) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vadakin v. Cass, 242 F. 235, 155 C.C.A. 75, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1873 (3d Cir. 1917).

Opinion

McPHHRSON, Circuit Judge.

This is a petition to revise, and brings up the refusal of the District Court to vacate an adjudication and to dismiss the petition in bankruptcy. The facts are as follows:

The Order of Sparta is an unincorporated fraternal beneficial association, organized more than 35 years ago in Philadelphia, and having its principal place of business in that city. We are informed, also, that most of its membership is in the state of Pennsylvania. On November 22, 1916, it made and filed of record an assignment for the benefit of creditors, and on the next day a petition in bankruptcy was filed by the beneficiaries named in three unpaid certificates, each certificate having been issued to a deceased member. On December 4, it answered the petition, admitting insolvency and the making of the assignment, and stating its willingness to be adjudged bankrupt. The Order is governed by a supreme legislative and executive body, called the Great Senate, and the answer stated that this body had declared by formal resolution that the assets could not pay the pending death claims, that the assessments necessary to keep up the beneficiary fund were insufficient to continue the business of the Order successfully, and that no further assessments would be levied, but that business would be abandoned and an assignment made for the benefit of creditors. On the same day the adjudication was entered, and on December 6 Louis Vadakin, another holder of an unpaid certificate, obtained a rule to show cause why the adjudication should not be vacated and the proceedings dismissed, setting forth as the ground that the Bankruptcy Act did not cover the case of such an association. On January 11 the court entered the refusal now complained of.

The question for decision is whether the phrase “any unincorporated company,” in clause b of section 4, embraces such an association as the Order of S'parta. Undoubtedly, the Order is unincorporated; is it also such a “company” as the act intends to include? From the record and from several decisions of the Pennsylvania courts concerning this very Order — Algeo v. Fries, 27 Pa. Super. Ct. 157; Schoales v. Sparta, 206 Pa. 11, 55 Atl. 766; and Taylor v. Sparta, 254 Pa. 556, 99 Atl. 157—to which we may properly turn for information and guidance, we collect and condense the following facts concerning the association and the character of its activities:

The Order of Sparta is a fraternal beneficial association whose objects are (1) to unite fraternally men between 21 and 45 years of age, of good moral character, and of sound health in body and mind; and (2) to establish a fund from which, after the death of a member in good standing, certain sums shall be paid to his designated beneficiary. The Order has no capital stock, and the members are not individually liable to pay either the benefit certificates or its other debts, these being payable only out of the treasury. By virtue of the Pennsylvania act of 1893 (P. L. 7), it was not to be affected by any subsequent act of the Legislature, unless fraternal beneficial societies should be expressly named therein. By section 1 of the same act, such associations are ■described as societies not for profit, but for the sole benefit of the members and their beneficiaries. They are authorized to have subordi[237]*237nate bodies, a ritualistic form of work, a representative form of government, and to provide a fund to pay death and other benefits; the. fund and the societies’ expenses to be derived from assessments or dues collected from the members, and the benefits to be payable to families, heirs, or relatives, of the members, or to other dependent-persons. The purpose of such societies is well known to be twofold— fraternal or social, and beneficial'. The Order of Sparta consists of a Great Senate and subordinate senates. The Great Senate is the supreme legislative and governing body; it is authorized to enact and expound all rules regulating the affairs of the Order, to institute subordinate senates, and to have sole control of the beneficiary and other funds. The Order is not an insurance company, and does not do an insurance business; the essential difference between its beneficiary (or so-called insurance) contracts and the policies of regular insurance companies being that its pecuniary benefits are met by assessments paid by the members, these assessments being the chief and practically the only asset of the Order. Except that beneficial societies must file reports, it is not subject to the supervision of the state insurance department. Section 4 of the act of 1893 (P. L. 9). Its certificates arc not contracts of indemnity against loss, but are payable only from the contributions of members. It does not and cannot issue a paid-up policy; and it is not obliged to maintain an insurance reserve. Its assessment rates are not swollen by an item for expenses, these being paid out of a general fund, which is made up of initiation fees, interest upon deposits, fines, certain dues of $1 per year, and money paid by subordinate senates for supplies. Only a small proportion, about 2 per cent., of the monthly beneficiary assessments, may be, and no doubt is, used for the same purpose. The annual dues of each menú ber are $5, from which $1 is paid to the Great Senate; the remainder, with some initiation fees, being used to pay the expenses of the subordinate senates. Members enter the Order through the subordinate senates; the applicant submitting to a medical examination and signing a preliminary writing wherein he agrees that, if a beneficiary certificate be issued, he will pay promptly all assessments lawfully made upon him by the Great Senate, and in default of payment that the certificate shall be null and void, and no claim thereon shall be made by any person. If he pass the medical examination, and be elected and initiated, the applicant- receives a beneficiary certificate which follows the terms of the preliminary writing, and binds the Order to pay a specified sum upon receiving proof of death — the money to be paid to the person designated in the certificate, and to be payable as soon as the money is in the treasury of the fund. The applicant accepts in writing the terms and conditions of the certificate and agrees-to perform his own covenants and to pay all assessments, agreeing further that if he fail so to do no claim or demand shall be made on the certificate.

[1] If each word of the phrase in question — “any unincorporated company” — be taken singly, and be given what may be called its ordinary and popular meaning, there would be little hope of successful attack on the adjudication. But no doubt the argument may fairly be [238]*238made that the phrase should be considered as a whole, and also in the light of the subject-matter of the act, and that, when thus considered, the word “company” may have been intended to carry a more restricted meaning. Accordingly we have taken the argument into account, but we still see no sufficient reason for believing that the Order of Sparta is outside even the narrower meaning of the word. As amended in 1910, section 4 provides' that the following three classes or gloups may be adjudged bankrupt in adverse proceedings: (1) Any natural person, with certain exceptions; (2) any unincorporated company; (3) any moneyed, business, or commercial corporation, with certain exceptions — partnerships being separately dealt with in section 5 (Comp. St. 1916, § 9589).

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Bluebook (online)
242 F. 235, 155 C.C.A. 75, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1873, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vadakin-v-cass-ca3-1917.