Court Opinion

ID: 8262331
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-16 15:55:49.504957+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:43:13.322560
License: Public Domain

BLAND, J.
The Supreme Council of Legion of Honor is a Fraternal Benevolent Association, working under a lodge system, and was incorporated under the laws of Missouri. Prior to February 28, 1894, Guy G. Renick was a member of the order and had received a benefit certificate No. 4007,. payable to his wife on his death. On February 28, 1894, his wife having died he surrendered certificate No. 4007 and took out a new one, No. 7987, in which Anna R. Neidelet was designed as the beneficiary. On March 12, 1898, Renick died, in good standing with the -order. Proofs of his death were duly made and furnished the order. He left surviving him as his only heir at law Guy R. Reni-ck, his only child, a minor. Mrs. Neidelet and this heir -appeared as rival claimants for the benefit fund evidenced by the certificate. Mrs. Neidelet claimed -as the designated beneficiary and as a blood relative of the deceased, and as a dependent member of his family. Guy R. Renick claimed as heir at law, and denied that Mrs. Neidelet was a dependent member of his father’s family and that she was not such a person as could receive the benefit under the laws of the order. On account of these rival claims, the order filed its petition in court, setting out the facts in detail; that the benefit was due to one or the other of the rival claimants, asking that it be permitted to pay the *601fund into court, and that the two claimants be required to interplea for the same. By an order of the court the fund, $2,000, less $60 allowed for attorney’s fees, was paid into court, and the rival claimants appeared, Anna Neidelet in person, and Guy R. Renick by guardian, and filed their respective pleas for the fund. The issues were submitted to the court. On the hearing Anna Neidelet to sustain the issues on her part, read in evidence the following laws of the order; and the certificate No. 7987:
Sec. 2. “Each member shall enter upon his application the name or names of the members of his family or those dependent upon him, to whom he desires his benefit paid, subject to such further disposal of the benefit among his dependents as the member may direct, and the same shall be entered in the benefit certificate.”
Sec. 3. “A member may at any time, when in good standing, surrender his benefit certificate, and a new certificate shall thereafter be issued, payable to such beneficiary or beneficiaries dependent upon him as such member may direct, upon the payment of a certificate fee of fifty cents.”
Sec. 5. “In the event of the death of all the beneficiaries selected by the member before the decease of such member if he shall make no other or further disposition thereof, the benefit shall be paid to the heirs of the deceased member, dependent upon him, and if no such person or persons shall be entitled to receive such benefits by the laws of the order it shall revert to the relief fund.”
Appellant produced oral testimony tending to prove that Guy G. Renick, about five years prior to his death, moved to her house in the city of St. Louis, bringing with him his household goods and his minor child, and continued to reside with her until his death; that during the period of his residence with her he paid her from time to time $600 or $700, which went toward the support of her family; that he was not a boarder, but was given a home at the house of Anna Neidelet *602as a member of the family; that at times Anna was dependent upon him for means to buy necessaries for family use, especially was this so when her husband was out of employment, which occurred frequently. The proof further showed that Anna Neidelet was a blood sister of Guy G. Benick. On the part of Guy B. Benick the evidence tended to- show that Guy G. Benick was mostly out of employment while residing with his sister; that while residing there $400 at one time and $150 at another was about all the money that came into his hands; that the husband of Anna Neidelet resided with his wife and was the head of the family, and that he supported the family before Benick went there to live and after his death, and that his earnings while Benick lived there went to the support of the family. The court found for Guy B. Benick and awarded him the fund, from this judgment Anna Neidelet duly appealed.
Under the laws of the' order as they existed when the certificate was issued, the beneficiaries were confined to members of the family, or those dependent on the member, to whom the certificate was issued. The learned circuit judge found that Anna Neidelet was neither a member of Guy G. Benick’s family, nor dependent upon him. The Act of 1897 concerning Fraternal and Benevolent Associations (Session Acts 1897, p. 132), it seems was not noticed or called to the attention of the circuit court on the trial. It is conceded here that if the benefit certificate is to be governed by. that Act, Mrs. Neidelet being a blood sister of Guy G. Benick, is entitled to the benefit. It is also conceded that the order has not reincorporated under the Act of 1897, nor so amended its laws in regard to who may be beneficiaries of its bounty, as to conform to the Act. Section 1 of the Act of 1897, provides that “payments of death benefits shall be to the families, heirs, blood relatives, affianced husband or wife, or to persons dependent upon the member.” While Guy G. Benick lived the benefit certificate was but an expectancy, as no vested *603rights did or could accrue under it. The Masonic Ben. Ass’n v. Busch, 109 Mo. loc. cit. 579; Wells v. Covenant Mut. Ben. Ass’n, 126 Mo. 630. But immediately on his death the benefit secured by the certificate became vested in the person who was authorized under the law as it then existed to take the benefit-, and first to the person designated in the certificate, if within either class of the persons pointed out by the law, as competent to receive payment. The Act of 1897 was in force at the date of tire death of Guy G. Renick and is controlling in this case, unless it was necessary that the order should re-incorporate or amend its laws to conform them to the provisions of the Act before the Act could become the law of the order. The law of 1897 embraces the whole subject relating to the government and powers -of these associations and repeals all laws inconsistent with its provisions, and expressly repeals section 2823, Revised Statutes 1889, which points out theclasses of persons who maybe made beneficiaries of members of the order, so that unless the Act applies to orders which were in being when it went into effect, they were thereafter without lawful right to issue benefit certificates at all, until they in some manner accepted the provisions of the law of 1897. The Act nowhere requires that any such action must be taken. Section 2823 authorizes existing corporations to re-incorporate in ffche manner prescribed by section 2822, Revised Statutes 1889, but it does not follow that it should re-incorporate and adopt the provisions of the Act before it could receive its benefits. The order was bound to make the annual reports to the commissioner of insurance provided for by the Act,' and to do other things thereby prescribed. As the Act imposed burdens on the order, how can it be said that it withheld from it its benefits; or how can it be said that a part of the Act took effect on existing associations, and another part did not,’ when it is not so provided by the Act. The continuance of the corporation and its authority to do business is, by section 2 of the act, made dependent upon its *604compliance with section 4 (the making of annual reports to the superintendent of insurance) not upon the condition that it shall re-incorporate, or by some amendment of its laws or by resolution adopt the provisions of the Act. Because the law of 1897 was not followed by the trial court the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to the circuit court to enter judgment for interpleader Anna Neidelet awarding her the fund.
All concur.