Unless a defendant to a suit on a contract of insurance is shown to he within one of the exceptions stated in section 4562 of the Code, evidence offered by it of an agreement as to the contract which is shown only by an application or other instrument separate and apart from the policy is not admissible, as the admission of such evidence plainly would contravene the provision of section 4579 of the Code that “no life, nor any other insurance company, nor any agent thereof, shall make any contract of insurance, or agreement as to the policy contract, other than is plainly expressed in the policy issued thereon.” Under this statute nothing can be a part of the contract which the policy itself does not disclose. — Hunt v. Preferred Accident Ins. Co. of New York, 172 Ala. 442, 55 South. 201; Manhattan Life Ins. Co. v. Verneuille, 156 Ala. 592, 47 South. 72.
One of the effects of section 4562 of ,the Code is to prevent the application of the above-quoted provision of section 4579 to “any secret benevolent society, such as Masons, Odd Fellows, Knights of Pythias, Ancient Order of United Workmen, National Union, or other orders of like kind.” There was no evidence tending to prove that the defendant belongs to the class of organizations designated by this provision or by either of the other provisions of the section in which it is found. There was nothing before the court to indicate the purposes or objects of the defendant corporation or the activities in which it engages except what was disclosed *431by the terms of the contract sued on. That contract is one of insurance on the assessment plan. There is nothing in it to indicate that the defendant was undertaking to confer upon any one a benefit for which it did not receive an equivalent. That contract did not furnish any basis for an inference that the defendant is such an order, as for instance, the Masons, the sole purposes and objects of which in acquiring money or property beyond the current expenses of the society are for the bestowal of reliefs and charities to the needy. — Burdine v. Grand Lodge of Alabama, 37 Ala. 478. For anything appearing to the contrary, the defendant may not exist for any purpose other than to provide insurance for such of its members as pay for it. It may be entirely devoid of any charitable or eleemosynary feature. It may be outside of the objects of its existence to undertake to confer any benefit without requiring any equivalent from the one benefited. An order or organization cannot be classed as a benevolent one when it does not undertake to do anything except for those from whom it receives in money what the service it renders is supposed to be worth. The defendant was not shown to be either a secret or a benevolent order. Without such showing it was not entitled to be treated as a benevolent society such as those mentioned in the statute or as an order “of like kind.” — National Union v. Marlow, 74 Fed. 775, 21 C. C. A. 89; 3 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2d Ed.) 1043. The evidence before the court not showing that the defendant was within the exception or exemption provided for by section 4562 of the Code, the above-quoted provision of section 4579 was applicable, and the objections to the evidence which was offered of representations or statements made by the insured were properly sustained.
*432There is nothing in the terms of the contract sued on by which the liability incurred by the defendant in the event of the death of the insured would be affected by the fact that 'he died of organic heart lesion, a disease of the heart. This being true, the court was not in error in declining to permit the defendant, to'prove that fact. The fact was not a material or relevant one.
It may be added that the contract sued on was made in 1910, and is not within the influence of subsequently enacted statutes that might have a bearing on similar contracts entered into at later dates.
Affirmed.