Wooten v. Grand United Order of Odd Fellows

96 S.E. 654, 176 N.C. 52, 1918 N.C. LEXIS 182
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 11, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 96 S.E. 654 (Wooten v. Grand United Order of Odd Fellows) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wooten v. Grand United Order of Odd Fellows, 96 S.E. 654, 176 N.C. 52, 1918 N.C. LEXIS 182 (N.C. 1918).

Opinion

WalKER, J.,

after stating the case: It is now considered that an insur•ance company may make reasonable rules and regulations by which the insured may change the beneficiary named in the policy of insurance, or his certificate in the case of benefit societies, and that such rules and regulations become a part of the contract. Where the policy or rule of the company, or society, provides that such a, change may be made in a particular way, the method prescribed should be followed, but if the insured has done substantially what is required of him, or what he is *56 able to do, to effect a change of beneficiary, and all that remains to be done are ministerial acts of the association, the change will take effect, though the formal details are not completed before the death of the insured. It must be understood, however, that some affirmative act on the part of the insured to change the beneficiary is required, as his mere unexecuted intention will not suffice to work such a change. When the right to substitute another beneficiary exists by express reservation, or otherwise, the insured, or member of a benefit society, may, without the consent of the original beneficiary, and subject only to the rules of the association, change his beneficiary at will. Pollock v. Household of Ruth, 150 N. C., 211. This is true, because the beneficiary whose right, under the policy, or certificate, may thus be taken away, has only a contingent interest therein, which will not vest until the death of the insured. The- revocation of his appointment as beneficiary does not require his consent, as the power to displace him is vested solely in the insured, provided he proceeds in substantial compliance with the rules of the association, which may be waived by the company, or society, where they are made for its benefit or protection.

The general rule is that the right to a policy of insurance, at least to onq of the ordinary character, and to the money which may become due under it, vests immediately, upon its being issued, in the person who is named in it as beneficiary, and that this interest, being vested, cannot be transferred by the insured to any other person (Central National Bank v. Hume, 128 U. S., 195) without his consent. This does not hold true, however, when the contract of insurance provides for a change of the beneficiary by the insured, or such a right arises in some other way, for in such a case the right of the beneficiary vests conditionally only, and is subject to be defeated by the terms of the very contract, or instrument, which created it, and is destroyed by the execution of the reserved power. These principles, we take it, are well settled by the highest authority and groat weight of judicial opinion. 4 Cooley's Briefs on the Law of Insurance, par. 3762-3772; Nally v. Nally, 74 Ga., 669; McGowan v. Supreme Court of Ind. Order of Foresters, 104 Wis., 173; Schoenan v. Grand Lodge, 85 Minn., 349; Sanburn v. Black, 67 N. H., 537; St. L. Pol. Assn. v. Strode, 103 Mo. App., 694; Luhrs v. Luhrs, 123 N. Y., 367; Donnelly v. Burnham, 86 App. Div. (N. Y.), by Hun., p. 226 (Aff. in same case, 177 N. Y., 546) ; Hancock Mut. L. Ins. Co. v. White, 20 R. I., 457. From these cases, which very strongly and, we may say, conclusively support the defendant’s contention, it seems to be now well settled that one who is insured, with the right to change the beneficiary, and who wishes to exercise this right, must make the change in the manner required by his policy and the rules of the association, and that any material deviation from this course will render the attempted change *57 ineffective. It is equally well settled that there are cases where literal and exact conformity with the requirements of the policy may be excused. The subject was fully considered in McGowan v. Supreme Court of Ind. Order of Foresters, supra, where it was said that Supreme Conclave v. Cappella, 41 Fed Eep., 1, exhaustively reviewed this question in its entire phase, and the Court there reached the conclusion that there were three exceptions to the rule of exact compliance with the terms of the policy, or certificate: first, .where the society has waived strict compliance by issuing a new certificate without insisting on the performance of all the intermediate steps; second, where, by loss of the first certificate without fault, its surrender becomes impossible, a court of equity will not require an impossibility, but will treat the change as made if the insured has taken all the other necessary steps and done all in his power to make the change; third, where the insured has pursued the course required by the policy and the rules of the association, and done all in his power to make the change, but before the new certificate is actually issued he dies, a court of equity will decree that to be done which ought to be done, and will act as though a new certificate had been issued, citing National Assn. v. Kirgin, 28 Mo. App., 80; Isgrigg v. Schooley, 125 Ind., 94; Grand Lodge v. Noll (Mich.), 15 L. R. A., 350, note; Marsh v. Supreme Council, 149 Mass., 512; Luhrs v. Luhrs, 123 N. Y., 367; Bacon Ben. Soc. (new ed.), pp. 310, 310a.

In Donnelly v. Burnham, supra (which, as we have seen, was approved and affirmed by”the Court of appeals of New York), the acts done by the policyholder were essentially the same as those done in this case, and the new policy, or certificate, was mailed to his address after his death, and the Court said: “It will be seen, therefore, that the deceased had in this case done all that was in his power, before he died, to make this change in the beneficiary under his certificate. The association had no reason for refusing the new certificate, and no interest in so refusing. No discretion in the matter. Its action in receiving the application and issuing the new certificate was merely formal and related back to the time when the application was delivered to the. secretary of the branch of the association. The by-laws of the association provided for nothing to be done by the deceased after the delivery to the branch secretary. Everything to be done thereafter was to be done by the association and its officers and agents in the formal steps necessary to carry out and complete the change made by the deceased,” citing Luhrs v. Luhrs, supra, as approved in Thomas v. Thomas, 131 N. Y., 205; Fink v. Fink, 171 N. Y., 624; Lahey v. Lahey, 174 N. Y., 146. In the Luhrs case the facts were also similar to those we have here, and the Court said, in making the same ruling: “The certificate, when issued, may be thus regarded as relating back, on the ground that it is merely and purely a formal act on the part *58 of the Supreme Lodge, registering and giving written evidence of a transaction, all the material facts of which had occurred during the lifetime of the deceased.

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Bluebook (online)
96 S.E. 654, 176 N.C. 52, 1918 N.C. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wooten-v-grand-united-order-of-odd-fellows-nc-1918.