Woods v. Cook

73 P.2d 1387, 101 Colo. 419, 1937 Colo. LEXIS 319
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 8, 1937
DocketNo. 14,215.
StatusPublished

This text of 73 P.2d 1387 (Woods v. Cook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woods v. Cook, 73 P.2d 1387, 101 Colo. 419, 1937 Colo. LEXIS 319 (Colo. 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Bakke

delivered tlie opinion of the court.

Suit between two claimants of a sum of $656.50, being the proceeds of a mutual benefit insurance contract held by decedent, George W. McGee, in the Pullman Porters Benefit Association of America, an Illinois corporation. The defendant in error, Henrietta B. Cook, was claiming as an adopted daughter of McG-ee, and plaintiff in error, Benjamin C. Woods, as a nephew. The trial court, a jury being waived, decided in favor of Mrs. Cook. A motion for a new trial was dispensed with, and Woods assigns error. The original complaint below was filed by the Pullman Porters Benefit Association, who inter-pleaded the parties here, and paid the money into court.

*421 McGee bad been employed as a Pullman porter from 1906 to 1931. He was married, but be and bis wife bad no children of their own. On May 24, 1921, a decree of adoption in the usual form was entered in the Denver juvenile court on the petition of McGee and bis wife, the decree reciting, inter alia, Henrietta Evylin Blackwell (defendant in error, Mrs. Cook) to be, “to all legal intents and purposes, the child and legal heir of the petitioners.” Mrs. Cook was born in 1893, and in due time married Blackwell, her first husband, the record does not disclose when. She first met McGee about 1905. In 1909, McGee married and be and bis wife lived at Mrs. Cook’s sister’s bouse from 1910 to 1921. Mrs. Cook’s first husband, Blackwell, died about 1917. About the time the adoption decree was entered, McGee and bis wife went to live with Mrs. Blackwell (Mrs. Cook). In 1922, Mrs. McGee left and was never beard from, but McGee continued to make bis home with Mrs. Blackwell, who in that same year married Mr. Cook.

McGee lived as a member of the household, contributing to its support. He bad an interest in an oil well and Mrs. Cook borrowed some money on her home to protect that investment. He was taken sick in 1929, and was not able to work very much after that and Mrs. Cook nursed him at all times whenever be was unable tO' care for himself. He died in 1936.

On April 25, 1921, McGee applied for membership in the Pullman Porters Benefit Association of America, naming a Mrs. Ella Blackwell as bis beneficiary, and describing her as bis daughter, giving her age as thirty-two.

On November 8, 1930, in a request for a change in the beneficiary, be asked that the principal beneficiary be changed from Bertha Powell to Mrs. Etter B. Cook, and naming as alternative beneficiary, Benjamin Woods, describing him as his (McGee’s) nephew.

On September 29, 1932, be again changed bis beneficiary, leaving Mrs. Henrietta B. Cook as principal *422 beneficiary, but changing the alternative beneficiary to his estate.

It is not disputed that Mrs. Ella Blackwell, Mrs. Etter B. Cook and Mrs. Henrietta B. Cook are one and the same person, and it is equally clear that she was the principal beneficiary during all of the time that this insurance was in force and was so at the time of McGee’s death. The association acquiesced in all of the changes of beneficiary.

On April 16, 1913, McGee executed what purports to be his last will and testament, in which he gives and bequeathes to “Henrietta Williams Blackwell, of Denver, Colorado, all the residue and remainder of my said estate after the payment of my just debts; and I hereby appoint the said Henrietta Williams Blackwell as my administratrix, to serve without bond;” the purported will also reciting that his property and estate consisted of life insurance policies and personal belongings.

The contentions of Woods are: (1) That Mrs. Cook’s claim fails, because she was over twenty-one years of age at the time that the decree of adoption was entered by the Denver juvenile court, and, because of that fact the said court had no jurisdiction to decree her adoption, its jurisdiction being limited to minors; (2) that because of the adoption being ineffectual, she fails as a member of a class designated as eligible beneficiaries under the by-laws of the Pullman Porters Benefit Association, and the laws of the state of Illinois controlling said by-laws; (3) that Mrs. Cook thereby becoming ineligible, Woods insists that he is entitled to the money by virtue of his being McGee’s only blood relative, thus falling within the designated class of beneficiaries in the association’s by-laws.

In response to these contentions, Mrs. Cook urges; (1) That, in spite of the lack of jurisdiction on the part of the juvenile court, she considered herself to be the adopted daughter of McGee-, and that from and after 1921 she treated him as her father and took care of him *423 as a loving and faithful daughter would; (2) their dependence one upon the other being established, as a matter of fact, she does come within the class of designated beneficiaries within the by-laws of the association and the Illinois statute; (3) that the claim of Woods was specifically denied in the trial court, and upon conflicting evidence the court ruled against any blood relationship on the part of Woods.

The controlling provisions of the by-laws of the association are as follows:

“Section 16: Every member of the Association in filing application for membership shall designate a person or persons who shall be the beneficiary or beneficiaries to whom payment of any death benefit is to be made in case of death of the member,, and an alternative beneficiary or beneficiaries to whom payment of the death benefit is to be made in case the first named beneficiary or beneficiaries do not survive the member.
“Such beneficiary or alternative beneficiary shall be confined to: The wife of the member, his children, his parents, his brothers or sisters, other blood relatives, or persons dependent upon him for support. The Association shall be entitled to rely upon representations by a member as to the qualifications of the beneficiaries designated, and payment to beneficiaries so designated shall operate as a full discharge of the Association’s obligations. * * *”
“Section 18. The certificate of membership issued to a member, the application for membership signed by the applicant, and the Constitution and By-laws of the Association, with all amendments to each thereof, shall constitute an agreement between the Association and the member, and any changes, additions or amendments to the Constitution or By-laws made subsequent to the issuance of the certificate of membership shall be binding upon the member, his beneficiary or beneficiaries, and shall govern and control the agreement in all respects in the same manner as if such changes, additions or *424 amendments had been in force at the time of the application for membership.”

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Bluebook (online)
73 P.2d 1387, 101 Colo. 419, 1937 Colo. LEXIS 319, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woods-v-cook-colo-1937.