Williams v. American Insurance Union

191 P. 291, 107 Kan. 214, 1920 Kan. LEXIS 48
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 10, 1920
DocketNo. 22,435
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 191 P. 291 (Williams v. American Insurance Union) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. American Insurance Union, 191 P. 291, 107 Kan. 214, 1920 Kan. LEXIS 48 (kan 1920).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Marshall, J.:

An opinion in this action was filed on January 10, 1920, but on the application of the American Insurance Union a rehearing was granted, and the opinion was not published.

The plaintiff recovered judgment against the American Insurance Union for $1,862.10 on a beneficiary certificate issued by the Home Builders Union, a fraternal mutual benefit society organized under the laws of this state. The American Insurance Union appeals.

In 1905 the Home Builders Union issued its certificate to N. R. Williams providing for the payment to the plaintiff, the beneficiary named therein, of certain graduated sums, beginning with $500 if the death of N. R. Williams occurred during the first year after the date of his certificate, and ending with $2,000 if his death occurred after the expiration of fifteen years. The certificate provided for the payment of $1,800 if his death occurred “after 13 years and before the expiration of 14 years.”

The application signed by N. R. Williams contained the following :

“I hereby consent and agree that this application, to which I have attached my signature, the examining physician’s report, and all of the provisions of the Constitution and Laws of the Order, now in force, or that may hereafter be adopted, shall constitute the basis for and form a part of any beneficiary certificate that may be issued to me by Supreme Lodge of The Home Builders Union, whether printed, or referred to therein, or not.”

The certificate contained the following provisions:

“This certificate is issued upon the express condition that said Nicholas R. Williams shall in every particular comply with all the laws of the Order. The terms and conditions of this certificate shall not be changed before the year A. d. 1925, except upon written consent of the member holding same, duly acknowledged before a notary public.”

The by-laws of the Home Builders Union provided for their amendment. An amendment made in 1906 provided:

[216]*216“That in no event shall any beneficiary or beneficiaries under any certificate issued in either class of this order, be entitled to receive a larger sum than will be produced and received from one full assessment on all members belonging to the order at the time of the death of the party holding such certificate under the established rates and rules of the order. Provided, also, the foregoing provision is hereby declared to have been the meaning and intention of the by-laws as originally adopted, and this meaning and construction shall apply to all certificates heretofore written, as well as those hereafter to be written.”

The by-laws also provided:

“Each beneficiary certificate shall name the rate paid by the member and shall contain an agreement that the rate named therein shall not be changed before the year A. D. 1925.”

A further provision of the by-laws was that each certificate should contain the following:

“The terms and conditions of this certificate shall not be changed before the year A. d. 1925, except upon the written consent of the member holding the same.”

In April, 1918, the Home Builders Union merged with the American Insurance Union. The contract of merger contained the following:

“Any member of The Home Builders hereby merged and consolidated who has attained the age of fifty-five (55) years at the time this contract goes into effect and who became a member of the said The Home Builders prior to January 1st, 1912, shall continue to pay the premiums and assessments required by the laws of The Home Builders and shall be entitled to receive the amount of insurance which said premiums or assessments so paid will purchase on the'basis of the American Experience Table of Mortality with interest at 4 per cent., so loaded as to provide for the use of the same amount for the expense fund as it set aside for expense on the Level and Twenty-year-payment Tables of the American Insurance Union and on the basis of the Level Rate at the age attained at the time this contract goes into effect. Should said members last above referred to desire to continue their present certificates in force for the full amount thereof by paying their premiums on the basis of the American Experience Table of Mortality with interest at 4 per cent., so loaded as to provide for the use of twenty-five (25) cents per month for expenses, and on the basis of the level rate at the age attained at the time this contract goes into effect, they may do so upon proper notice in writing to the Association and the consent and approval of the National Surgeon of the American Insurance Union.”

On May 10, 1918, the American Insurance Union issued a rider to be attached to the certificates held by members of the Home Builders Union. The rider stipulated that:

[217]*217“The holder of the certificate, hereto attached hereby becomes a member of the American Insurance Union, subject to all the conditions and limitations an.d entitled to all the benefits of said membership in accordance with and subject to the terms of the contract of merger and consolidation reprinted on the back hereof and subject to the Constitution and Laws of the American Insurance Union now in force or that may hereafter be in force.”

The rider sent to Williams was not attached to the certificate. He was insane from December, 1917, continuously until the time of his death, which occurred in September, 1918. He was fifty years old at the time he became a member of the Home Builders, and was sixty-three years old when he died. After the merger his assessments were paid to the American Insurance Union. It offered to confess judgment for $266.67, the amount of insurance the assessments paid by N. R. Williams would purchase -under the terms of the merger contract. That offer was refused by the plaintiff. At the time of his death there were 1,105 members in the Home Builders Union, and one full assessment thereon would have produced $912.75; in October, 1918, there were 1,092 members, and one full assessment thereon would have produced $852.49. The American Insurance Union argues that judgment should not have been rendered for more than $266.67.

1. The application, the certificate, and the by-laws, as they existed at the time the certificate was issued, must be construed together as the contract between the Home Builders Union and N. R. Williams; however, all must be subordinate to law. In the application Williams consented to all the laws of the organization that might thereafter be adopted. The by-laws provided for their own amendment, but they stipulated that no change should be made in the terms and conditions of the certificate before 1925 without the written consent of the member. The by-laws further stipulated that each certificate should contain-an agreement “that the rate named therein should not be- changed before 1925.” The certificate must be construed to have been issued, under the terms imposed by law. Section 5409 of the General- Statutes of 1915, governing certificates issued by fraternal beneficiary societies, in part reads:

“No such association shall issue benefit certificates except for the smallest amount provided for by its laws, until its membership shall be [218]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
191 P. 291, 107 Kan. 214, 1920 Kan. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-american-insurance-union-kan-1920.