Whitmore v. Supreme Lodge Knights & Ladies of Honor

100 Mo. 36
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedOctober 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 100 Mo. 36 (Whitmore v. Supreme Lodge Knights & Ladies of Honor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whitmore v. Supreme Lodge Knights & Ladies of Honor, 100 Mo. 36 (Mo. 1889).

Opinion

Sherwood, J.

The pleadings in this cause are, in substance, as follows :—

[41]*41Plaintiffs, Benjamín T. and Marie E. Whitmore, are husband and wife and defendant is a corporation. On the twenty-second of November, 1883, Mary A. Mudd was a member of Nonpareil Lodge, number '592, of defendant in St. Louis, and entitled to participate in the relief fund of said order to the amount of one thousand dollars, said sum to be paid to plaintiff, Marie E. Whitmore, as trustee of Mary L. Whitmore. Defendant issued its benefit certificate under seal to said Mary A. Mudd, for one thousand dollars, payable on death of said Mudd to said Marie E. Whitmore, as trustee as aforesaid. Mary A. Mudd complied with all the conditions of said certificate, paid all assessments, etc., and died on the twenty-first of July, 1884, a member of said order, in good standing. The certificate is filed as Exhibit A. Plaintiff asks judgment for one thousand dollars. The petition has a second count upon another certificate for two thousand dollars, filed as Exhibit B.

The answer, after a general denial, alleges that the deceased, Mary A. Mudd, procured the insurance in question by false and fraudulent representations as to her health; and by false answers to the questions put to her by defendant as to the relationship of the beneficiary to her, as to the canse of death and age of her relatives. These answers are set forth in full, and alleged to have been as to material matters. The answer further sets up that Mary A. Mudd was of weak mind, and was induced by fraudulent representations and influence of plaintiffs, Benjamin T. and Marie E. Whitmore to become a member of defendant; that Benjamin T. Whitmore, being a physician, caused himself to be made a medical examiner of defendant, and, as such, witnessed and subscribed the application of said Mary A. Mudd, and fraudulently recommended her to defendant as a good subject for insurance; and made false statements to defendant as to her health; and that he and his wife, by fraudulent acts and representations, [42]*42induced the lodge of defendants to receive said Mary A. Mudd to membership, and procured farther insurance on her life to the amount of nineteen thousand dollars, within eight months from the date of the certificaté in suit. That Mary L. Whitmore, the cestui que trust, is the infant daughter of plaintiffs, and that the insurance in question and the other insurance was obtained by a fraudulent conspiracy of plaintiffs. That Mary A. Mudd lived with plaintiffs, and that her death was caused by their ill-treatment and neglect of her, and that her initiation fee and assessments were advanced for her' by plaintiffs. The answer also denies that Mary A. Mudd was of kin to either of plaintiffs or to their daughter, the beneficiary in question under the certificates in suit.

The replication specifically denies the new matter set forth in the answer.

It is admitted by the pleadings that the defendant was an incorporated, co-operative, benevolent insurance society.

The evidence is not preserved at length in the bill- of exceptions, but only in short form, and, omitting the cross-examination of Williamson (afterwards ruled out and instructed against by the court), is the following:—

Plaintiffs introduced evidence tending to prove all the material allegations of the amended petition, and also introduced the constitution and by-laws of, defendant.

Defendant introduced testimony tending to show that the statements made by Mary A. Mudd in her written application to defendant for insurance, as to her health, the relationship of the cestui que trust of plaintiffs to her, and the age and cause of death of her relatives,, were, in some respects, untrue; also that said Mary A. Mudd was of weak mind, and under the influence of plaintiff, Benjamin T. Whitmore; that said [43]*43Whitmore was a member of the lodge of defendant to which said Mary A.' Mudd belonged, and was a medical examiner of the same, and, as such, at the time of such insurance, and in order to effect the same, signed a physician’s certificate as to the health of said Mary A. Mudd, which was, in some material respects, false.

Defendant introduced evidence tending to show that the life of Mary A. Mudd ’ was also insured in four other benefit societies for the benefit of the children of said plaintiffs, Benjamin T. and Mary L. Whitmore, to the amount of nineteen thousand dollars, all of which testimony as to other and further insurance was then and there objected to by plaintiffs as incompetent and irrelevant, and the objection overruled; to which rulings the plaintiffs then and there excepted.

Defendants introduced evidence tending to show that the health of said Mary A. Mudd was weak; that she was no relation to plaintiffs—or to either of them, or to their children; that plaintiffs allowed said Mary A. Mudd to sleep and live in a cellar room in their house after she was, insured, and that she lived with them in a menial capacity, and that she had no money except what plaintiffs gave her; and that plaintiff Benjamin furnished her with the money with which the insurance in question was effected, and the monthly assessments with which it was kept up; and the defendant also offered evidence tending to prove the several facts stated in the instructions afterwards 'given by the court in this cause.

Plaintiffs introduced evidence tending to show that Mary A. Mudd, deceased, was of good health and fair intellectual abilities and of good education; that she was not under any undue influence of plaintiffs, or either of them; that she was a first cousin of plaintiff, Benjamin T. Whitmore; that the children of plaintiffs, who are beneficiaries of the policy, were two girls of tender age; that deceased was devotedly attached to them; that she [44]*44was treated always by plaintiffs as an honored member of their family, and not as' a menial; that she loved them and they her; that the most friendly relations existed between deceased and plaintiffs; that her room in their house was cheerful, wholesome and comfortable, and not a cellar room; that the deceased had money of her own, and that the money with which she kept up and paid the insurance in question was her own; and that no statements were made at any time to the defendant, by. the deceased, or by plaintiff, Benjamin T. Whitmore, which they, or either of them, believed to be false, or that were false, in regard to said application for insurance; that the said Mary A. Mudd, at or about the time of the insurance in question, was examined for other insurance by two other physicians, and was passed by them and recommended by them for membership into two of the other orders to which she belonged.

The court refused all instructions asked by either party, but gave, of its own motion, the following:—

“1. The court instructs the jury that the relationship existing in this case, between the beneficiary, Mary L. Whitmore, and the insured, Mary A. Mudd, was such that, while Mary A. Mudd, under the charter of defendant, might lawfully effect such insurance on her own life for the benefit of said beneficiary, as the certificates read in evidence express, it would not have been lawful for the beneficiary, Mary L. Whitmore, or for either of plaintiffs, for their said child, to effect such an insurance oh the life of Mary A. Mudd. Hence, if you find from the evidence that Benjamin T. Whitmore procured, or caused, Mary A.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Wilhelm v. Security Benefit Ass'n
121 S.W.2d 295 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1938)
Evans v. Independent Nat. Life Ins. Co.
143 So. 724 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1932)
Williams v. Peoples Life & Accident Insurance
35 S.W.2d 922 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1931)
Industrial Loan & Investment Co. v. Missouri State Life Insurance
3 S.W.2d 1046 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1928)
Mattero v. Central Life Insurance
215 S.W. 750 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1919)
Lee v. Equitable Life Assurance Society
189 S.W. 1195 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1916)
McCloskey v. United Railways Co.
142 S.W. 737 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1912)
Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis Railway Co. v. Dixon
96 N.E. 815 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1911)
Claver v. Woodmen of the World
133 S.W. 153 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1911)
Ryan v. Metropolitan Life Insurance
93 S.W. 347 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1906)
Metropolitan Life-insurance v. Elison
83 P. 410 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1905)
Simons v. Wittmann
88 S.W. 791 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1905)
Pauley v. Modern Woodmen of America
87 S.W. 990 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1905)
Hayden v. Franklin Life Ins.
136 F. 285 (Eighth Circuit, 1905)
Gillam v. Dale
76 P. 861 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1904)
Strode v. Meyer Bros. Drug Co.
74 S.W. 379 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1903)
Black v. Missouri Pacific Railway Co.
72 S.W. 559 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1903)
Mutual Life Ins. v. Richards
72 S.W. 487 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1903)
McDermott v. Modern Woodmen of America
71 S.W. 833 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1903)
Elliott v. Des Moines Life Ass'n
63 S.W. 400 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 Mo. 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitmore-v-supreme-lodge-knights-ladies-of-honor-mo-1889.