Court Opinion

ID: 8267057
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-16 16:03:03.810549+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:43:23.797066
License: Public Domain

BECKER, J.
— This is an. appeal in a ease in which the appellants, Katherine A. Houlehin, Adelaide A. Houlehin, Mary C. Houlehin and Eloysius L. Houlehin, widow and children and heirs at law of Patrick J. Houle-hin, contest the right of Margaret Houlehin, mother of the said Patrick J. Houlehin and the named beneficiary in a certificate of life insurance issued by the St. Louis Police Relief Association, to a fund of $2000 which accrued thereunder upon his death. Because of these rival claims the St. Louis Police Relief Association filed a -bill of interpleader, which was sustained, by consent of the parties, and the fund of $2000 . was paid to the clerk of the court.. Upon a hearing the court awarded the fund, to the said Margaret Houlehin, mother of the deceased, from which the widow and • children in due course bring this appeal;
During the pendency of the appeal the said Margaret Houlehin passed away and the cause was revived in the name of Mercantile Trust Company, her executor.
There is no controversy hut that the St. Louis Police Relief Association, a corporation, is organized uhder article 12, chapter 33, of the Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1909, providing for police and firemen relief associations, and that section 1, article 2, of the charter, constitution and by-laws of the St. Louis Police Relief Association provides that “the objects for which this association is formed are to create a fund for (1) the purpose of affording relief to such members of the association as may become (a) sick, (b) disabled, or (e) incapacitated by long years of service, or (d) as may have served five (5) years on the police force of the city of St. Louis and severed their connections with the force after such service; (2) aiding the families of police officers who may die while members in good standing of this association.” (italics ours) Section 4, article 7, provides “whenever any member of the police force, who is a member of this association, shall die, the sum of $2000.00 shall be paid within 30. days after his *564demise, to such person or persons as lie may have designated on the hooks of the association. If he shall have failed to designate, it will.he paid to his heirs at law in accordance with the laws of descent and distribution. If he shall have failed to designate and have no heirs at law it shall then revert to the association.”
It appears that in 1885 Patrick J. Houlehin joined the police force of the city of St. Louis and' continued to be a member in good standing up to the time of his demise on the 29th day of December, 1914. A year or two after Houlehin had become a member of the police force he married, and in September, 1900, he named his wife Katherine A. Houlehin, defendant herein,' as his beneficiary. Patrick’s mother lived with them without paying any board from about 1889 to. 1907, when for some'reason not clearly shown by the record, the mother went to the Mullanply Hospital for a- few weeks and' then went to St. Ann’s Widow’s Home to live, and she was living there at the time of the trial. In February, 1910, Patrick left the 'home where he had been living with his wife and children and went to live apart for himself. He continued to live thus, estranged from his wife and children, until .his decease in 1914, however he paid $25 monthly to his wife during the years of their separation. In August, 1910, after he had separated from his wife and was no longer living under the same roof with her, he changed his beneficiary to his mother, Margaret Houlehin, who was then living at St. Ann’s. The mother remained the named beneficiary thereafter continuously until Houlehin’s demise in- December, 1914. At his death he left surviving him, besides his mother, the plaintiffs, Katherine A. Houle-hin, his widow, and Adelaide A. Houlehin, Mary C. Houlehin and Eloysius L. Houlehin, his children, born of the marriage, each of said children having attained their majority.
The sole question in issue is as to whether or not under the testimony adduced in this case the mother, the said defendant, Margaret Houlehin, fell within that class of beneficiaries which is designated under our statutes and under the provisions of the constitution of the said *565St. Louis Police Relief Association. Having in mind that the fund, under the objects provided for in the constitution of the association, can be paid only to members of families of police officers who may die while members in good standing in. the association, it therefore becomes necessary to determine whether or not Margaret Houlehin, the mother of the deceased, can in legal contemplation be held to have been a member of Patrick J. Houlehin’s family.
What definition of the word “family” shall be our guide in determining? The word “family” has been variously defined. In its widest scope it would include all the descendants of a common progenitor, as when we speak of one’s family tree, but when used in its primary sense it is often used to designate that collective body of persons who live in one house under one head or management. Of the various definitions of the word ‘ ‘ family, ’ ’ when used, in the latter sense, we find that in construing the word “family” when used in the constitution of a benefit society, declaring its purpose, amongst others as that of aiding the families of members, the. court held it to mean ‘ ‘ such persons as habitually reside under one roof and form one household or such as are dependent on each other for support or among whom there is a legal or equitable obligation to furnish support.” [Hofmann v. Grand Lodge, 73 Mo. App. 47; Lister v. Lister, 73 Mo. App. 99; Ferbrache v. Grand Lodge. 81 Mo. App. 268.] We are of the opinion that this definition of the word family is comprehensive in its scope and we shall apply it here.
Under this definition it must be conceded that had the mother been living with and supported by the son, she would unquestionably have been a member of his family. Does then the fact that the mother was living at St. Ann’s Widow’s Home and thus not- living with her said son, at the time she was named as beneficiary and at the time of the decease of her son Patrick, of itself exclude her from being in contemplation of law considered as a member of her son’s “family,” within the meaning of the word “family” as used in the *566constitution of the association? We think not; provided that during all of said period the mother was dependent upon and was supported by her said son.
While upon this question of dependency and support the evidence was conflicting, yet one cannot read the record in this ca'se without concluding that the testimony which was adduced on the part of the defendant, mother, greatly preponderated, and that when she went to St. Ann’s the arrangements for her going there had been made at the suggestion of her son Patrick and upon his agreeing to pay St. Ann’s the sum of $10. per month for her maintenance and support, and that he did, in point of fact, pay the agreed, stipulated sum up to the time of his decease. Severál of the witnesses testified that the son had given them money to he paid to St. Ann’s; the records of the institution show that monthly payments had in point of fact been made, and in the light of the detailed history of the mother’s financial affairs, which' failed to show her possessed of hny funds during the years immediately preceding her going to St. Ann’s — years during which she had admittedly been living as a member of said son’s, Patrick, home, together with his wife and children, and not paying any hoard — is sufficient to warrant the finding of the learned trial judge that the mother was, in contemplation of law, a member of her son’s family at the time of his decease. The fact that several witnesses testified that the mother, who at the time of the trial was 87 years old, had, on various occasions, stated that she had means of her own and was not dependent upon any one, must he taken in light of human experience, which has taught us that the average person is not prone, when by reason of misfortune or advancement in years, they may have become an object of charity, to proclaim it from the housetop, hut rather, if curcumstanceé arise which require any statement as to the matter, to speak so as to leave or create the impression that they are self supporting. And beyond *567such statements testified to by several witnesses as having been made by the mother, no testimony was adduced of any probative value which proved, or from which one could infer, that the mother, during the last years of her life, had any means of her own whatsoever.
Even were the testimony in this case more evenly balanced in its conflict as to whether or not the mother was dependent upon her son while she lived at St. Ann’s, which however, as above stated we do not find to be the case herein, we would not be disposed to interfere with the conclusions reached by the learned trial judge who had each of the witnesses before him and thus had a better opportunity to judge the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be given to their testimony.
While the claim of the wife, as presented in this case, appeals strongly to one’s sense of equity, yet we are without authority to determine this case excepting upon the rule of law applicable , to this class of eases.
Holding as we do that the mother was dependent upon her son for support at the time she was named as beneficiary continuously up to the time of his decease, it follows that the mother came within that class of beneficiaries intended to be covered by the constitution of the St. Louis Police Relief Association, where as one of its objects it provides for “aiding the families of police officers who die while members' in good standing.” The judgment is accordingly affirmed.
Reynolds, P. J., and Allen, J., concur.