Hagerling v. Pension Mut. Life Insurance
Hagerling v. Pension Mut. Life Insurance
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The learned judge of the trial court refused judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense for the reason that the American Life and Annuity Society lacked authority to issue a benefit certificate containing a return value contract. It was not alleged that the laws of the society authorized such payment, nor did the certificate on its face make reference to such a contract. It was claimed that the liability arose by reason of a printed endorsement on the back of the policy of a mem
But if it be conceded that the association had authority to issue certificates containing withdrawal value contracts, another view of the case supports the judgment of the court below: The plaintiff was a member of the organization issuing the certificate and therefore is charged with knowledge of its objects and its mode of business. It was not a corporation for profit but for
The contract relied upon by the plaintiff was made with the defendant as trustee, and the funds received by it were to be administered in accordance with the obligations of the American Life and Annuity Society. As no fund was created for the payment to a member of the withdrawal value of a policy, nothing came into the hands of the trustee to meet such an obligation and the case is unlike Sheets v. Protected Home Circle, 256 Pa. 172, in this respect. In that case there was a fund for the payment of money to members who reached the age of permanent physical disability, and the organization bound itself to distribute this fund in accordance with the laws of the order and the rights of the claimant under the contract.
We conclude, therefore, that the court was not in error in refusing judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense.
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
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- Hagerling v. Pension Mut. Life Insurance Co.
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- Beneficial societies — Insurance—Withdrawal contract — Illegal contract — Acts of April 6, 1898, P. L. 10, and July %, 1895, P. L. ASO. Where the laws of a beneficial society chartered under the Act of April 6, 1893, P. L. 10, do not provide for withdrawals, but the society issues 318 policies or certificates of membership on the backs of each of which are endorsed a return value contract, for which contract there was no consideration, and for the payment of which no fund was provided and also issues 2,000 certificates on which no such contract is endorsed, and it appears that the funds of the society in the hands of the trustee are not sufficient to pay all of the certificates issued, the holder of a certificate with a return value contract endorsed on it cannot recover from the trustee the withdrawal value specified on the back of the certificate. In such a case whatever right the plaintiff may have under his contract, he is bound as a member of the association, to aid in the performance of its contracts with other persons, and equity does not permit him to recover at the expense of the society’s creditors.