Mellville v. Wickham
Mellville v. Wickham
Opinion of the Court
This suit was brought by appellant, Mrs. Fredonia Mellville, joined by her' husband, against appellees, Della Wickham and the Sovereign Camp of the Woodmen of the World, to recover $2,000 the amount of a benefit certificate issued by said Sovereign Camp of Woodmen of the World. The petition alleges, in substance:
That on or about August 10, 1910, the Sovereign Camp of Woodmen of the World, through its subordinate camp, known as Sycamore Camp No. 26, and located at Palestine, in Anderson county, issued a certificate to John W. Pace for $2,000, payable to Mrs. Fredonia Mellville, who was represented in the application for the certificate to be the aunt of said Pace, but who was in fact the foster mother of said Pace, and was not otherwise related to him. That on or about June 17, 1913, John W. Pace legally adopted Mrs. Mellville as his heir, in accordance with the statute of this state providing for the adoption of an heir, and on June 30, 1913, through said local camp, forwarded said certificate to the Sovereign Camp, with the request that a new certificate be issued in lieu thereof, payable to Mrs., Mellville as the adopted heir of said John W. Pace; that said *1124 Sovereign Camp refused said request, on fide ground that the certificate must he payable to a blood relative, and stated that no certificate would be issued to Mrs. Mellville, and she could not collect the amount of the original certificate in event of the death of said Pace. That all premiums and assessments due upon said certificate have been paid, and that the Sovereign Camp received payment of assessments upon said certificate after it had notice of the fact that Mrs. Mellville was not related to John W. Pace otherwise than as foster mother.
“That said Sovereign Camp, in refusing to issue a new certificate payable to Mrs. Fredonia Mellville as adopted heir of John W. Pace, and advising her that she could not legally be the beneficiary in either the original certificate, in which she was designated as the aunt of said Pace, nor in a new certificate designating her as adopted heir, misconstrued the constitution of the Woodmen of the World and the statutes of Texas, both of which provide that an adopted heir may be named as' beneficiary in said certificate.
“Said John W. Pace and Mrs. Mellville, on or about August 1, 1913, acting on the advice of Sovereign Camp and the promise of Della M. T. Wickham that the money should be paid to Mrs. Mellville, acting through its agents, and being in error as to their rights under the original certificate, and the efforts that they had made to obtain a new certificate payable to Mrs. Mellville, as adopted heir of John W. Pace, caused an application for the issuance of a new certificate, to issue payable to defendant Della M. T. Wickham, which application was granted, and a new certificate issued by Sovereign Camp on or about August 6, 1913, payable to said Della M. T. Wickham.
“That before said application for the-certificate payable to said Della M. T. Wickham was prepared and forwarded to said Sovereign Camp, said Della M. T. Wickham requested that said certificate be made payable to her on the express promise and condition that the money should be paid over to said Mrs. Mellville when it was collected, which promise was known to the Head Camp and was concurred •in by John T. Wickham, who represented to Mrs. Mellville and John W. Pace that he wps the guardian of Della; but said Della M. T. Wickham now declines to comply with that promise.
“That said John W. Pace died at his residence in Anderson county, Texas, on or about August 5, 1913.
“The constitution and laws of said Sovereign Camp Woodmen of the World requires the clerk of the camp of which the deceased is a member to notify the Sovereign Clerk of the death of such member. The clerk of Sycamore Camp No 26, immediately after the death of said John W. Pace, notified the Sovereign Clerk of said death.
“That said Della M. T. Wickham declines to make out and furnish to said Sovereign Camp proper proof of the death of said John W. Pace.
“Wherefore, premises considered, plaintiffs pray that the defendants be cited to answer this petition, and that on final trial of this cause that they have their judgment against said Sovereign Camp Woodmen, of the World for said two thousand dollars, and that the certificate issued to Della M. T. Wickham be canceled. But, should plaintiffs be mistaken as to their right to recover from said Sovereign Camp, then they pray that said Sovereign Camp be held liable on the certificate payable to Della M. T. Wickham, and that said Della M. T. Wickham be adjudged a trustee for the benefit of Mrs. Mellville, and that the plaintiffs recover judgment against said Della M. T. Wickham for said two thousand dollars. Plaintiffs further pray for costs and general relief.”
The appellee Della Wickham, by her legally appointed guardian, J. D. Wickham, appeared and filed in the court below on November 25, 1913, a plea of personal privilege to be sued in Bell county, the county of her residence. This plea, omitting formal portions, is as follows:
“That his said ward is not now, and was not at the time of the institution of this suit, nor at the time of the service of process herein, nor at the time of the filing of this plea, a resident of the county of Anderson, state of Texas, the county in which this suit was instituted, and is now pending, but that he and his said ward are now, and were at the time of the institution of this suit, and at the time of the service of process herein, and at the time of the execution and the filing of this plea, both residents of the county of Bell and state of Texas, and that he is duly acting as guardian of his said ward under the orders and authority and jurisdiction of the county court of Bell county, Texas, where he and his said ward then and now resides and that none of the exceptions to the exclusive venue ini the county of one’s residence, mentioned in article 1830, or article 2308, of the Revised Statutes of the state of Texas, exist in- this cause, and that this suit does not come within any of the exceptions provided by law in such cases, authorizing this suit to be brought or maintained in the county of Anderson and state of Texas, or elsewhere outside of said county of Bell, in state of Texas.”
No answer appears to have been filed by the defendant Sovereign Camp, and no pleading was filed by appellants in answer to the plea of privilege.
On January 28, 1914, appellee Wickham, by leave of the court, filed a supplemental plea of privilege. This pleading, which is lengthy, consists of a recital of facts in regard to the issuance of the certificate which are, in substance, the same as alleged in plaintiff’s petition. It then avers that upon the facts stated plaintiff has no cause of action against the Sovereign Camp of Woodmen of the World, because under the constitution and by-laws of said association and under the statutes of this state Mrs. Mellville could not become a beneficiary in a certificate issued by said association. It further avers:
“That the Sovereign Camp Woodmen of the World is ready and willing to pay to the proper beneficiary the sum named in the policy of insurance as provided in said policy when the proper proofs of the death of said John W. Pace are made and forwarded to the Sovereign Camp Woodmen of the World as provided and required by the constitution and laws of said fraternal benefit association, and as required and provided in said policy of insurance, and that it, the Sovereign Camp Woodmen of the World, is in no way contesting the payment of said sum named in said policy to the proper beneficiary.
“That the reason for joining the Sovereign Camp Woodmen of the World as a defendant with Della M. Turner, known and sued herein as Della M. T. Wickham, was for the purpose of trying to evade the laws of this state relative to venue of suits and for the purpose of requiring the defendant Della M. Turner to try this cause in Anderson county district court, instead of the district court of Bell county, where the venue of this cause is properly laid and be *1125 longs. That plaintiffs have no cause of action which can be brought or maintained against the Sovereign Camp Woodmen of the World, and no cause of action which can be brought or maintained in Anderson county and in the district court of Anderson county against the defendant Della M. Turner.
“Wherefore, premises considered, the defendant Della M. Turner prays that this cause, so far as the same affects her, be dismissed, and, if not dismissed, that it be transferred to the district court of Bell county, Texas, and for such further orders as may be necessary herein.”
The plea of privilege was' sustained by the trial court, and the case was ordered transferred to the district court of Bell county.
“There is no authority of law for the filing of a supplemental plea of privilege. The purpose and object of a supplemental pleading is in reply to affirmative matter alleged in the pleading filed by the adversary party in response to the original pleading filed by the party offering to file the supplemental pleading, and when there is no answer filed, as in this case, to an original plea of privilege, a supplemental plea cannot be filed.”
This is a sound proposition, and if the plea be regarded as only a supplemental plea, it should not have been allowed. Fink v. San Augustine Grocery Co., 167 S. W. 35; Townes on Pleading (1st Ed.) p. 300; Id. (2d Ed.) p. 447.
The case of Peek v. Peek, 101 Ky. 423, 41 S. W. 434, is one in which an agreement almost identical with the one in this ease was sought to be enforced. In upholding the right of the plaintiff in that ease to enforce the agreement against the .executor of the person who had agreed to collect the certificate and'turn the proceeds over to the plaintiff, the Court of Appeals of Kentucky says:
“All the rights of Mary Peek arise by virtue of the contract with David C. Peek, because by means of that contract she procured herself to be named as beneficiary in the certificate. If she had failed to carry out her contract, or her executor fails to carry out the agreement, a court of equity would cancel the certificate before it would allow the trustee to benefit herself or her estate in violation of her solemn contract.”
This language is as applicable to the instant case as to the case in which it was written. It follows from the views above ex *1126 pressed that the judgment of the court below should be reversed, and the cause remanded; and it is so ordered.
Reversed and remanded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- MELLVILLE Et Al. v. WICKHAM Et Al.
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published