— Plaintiffs are the minor children of Peter Eranta, deceásed, who in his lifetime had been a member of the defendant corporation, which is a fraternal-beneficiary society, incorporated under the laws of this State, and the suit is to recover on a benefit certificate or quasi life insurance policy for $1,000 issued by the society to plaintiffs’ father.
The answer of the defendant pleads that it is an association of persons who are members of the Roman Catholic church, that by its constitution no person can be a member who is not' a Roman Catholic and who does not perform his duties as required by the church, and that one of those duties is to go to confession and receive the sacrament of the holy communion every year during Easter time, and the constitution and bylaws require every member to perform that duty and to produce to the society a certificate of the priest that he had done so, or failing therein the society has the authority to suspend him indefinitely or for such time as it may deem just, first giving him an opportunity to clear himself of the charge. That every applicant for membership in the association is required *309to sign an agreement that he will be governed by its constitution and laws, and the plaintiffs’ father signed such agreement and war admitted to membership thereupon. That plaintiffs’ father did not receive the sacrament of the holy communion during Easter in 1896, and was charged in the society with that omission, and in a regular meeting he admitted the truth of the charge, and thereupon, in due course, the society suspended him from membership indefinitely and he died whilé so suspended. That by the laws of the order a suspended member lost all benefits during his suspension.
The plaintiff demurred to that plea, and the court sustained the demurrer on the ground that the provision of the law of the defendant society was in violation of section 5, article 2, of the Constitution and defendant not pleading further, judgment for the plaintiffs was rendered for $1,069.16, from which the defendant appeals.
The only question in the case is, whether persons of any religious denomination may form a corporation under our statutes in reference to fratemal-benefieiary societies and by its laws limit its membership to persons of the same religious belief and suspend or expel a member for failure to observe a duty prescribed by the church and required by the law of the corporation.
The clause of our Constitution which the circuit court adjudged to have been violated by the law of the defendant corporation is section 5 of the Bill of Rights, and is in these words: “That all men have a natural and indefeasible right to worship Almighty God according to the dictates of their own conscience; that no person can, on account of his religious opinions, be rendered ineligible to any office of trust or profit under this State, nor be disqualified from testifying, or from serving as a juror; that no human authority can control or interfere with the rights of conscience; that no person ought, by any *310law, to be molested in his person or estate, on account of his religious persuasion or profession; but the liberty of conscience hereby secured shall not be so construed as to excuse acts of licentiousness, nor to justify practices inconsistent with the good order, peace or safety of this State, or with the rights of others.”
When we consider the purely voluntary character of the society in question, that no one can be brought into its membership but by his own free will, nor restrained to keep his membership when he wishes to withdraw, that he can be admitted only on terms and conditions upon which he and the society mutually agree, that he can be expelled or suspended only in conformity to laws of the society which he has agreed he would obey and submit to, and when we also' consider that by expulsion or suspension he is- deprived of no right or privilege which he holds independent of the society, which was not created by the sociéty itself, and which in so far as it may have assumed the character of a right is purely contractual and depends for its continuance on the observance of the terms of the contract; it would be a strange construction of the clause-of the Constitution guaranteeing freedom of conscience if we should interpret it to mean that one under those circumstances was entitled to receive the fruits of his contract while declining, from scruples of conscience, to perform the conditions which entitle him to the same.
The defendant corporation is organized under article 10, chapter 42, R. S. 1889. Eratemal-benefieiary corporations necessarily have, the character of fraternal or social community; that is, their foundation, the pecuniary benefit or quasi insurance, that the law allows to be contracted for, is merely incidental to the social or fraternal character. The language of the statute specifying the purposes for which corporations under that article may be formed is: “Eor benevolent, religious, sci-*311entitle, fraternal, beneficial or educational purposes.” Insurance is not one of the fundamental purposes for which a corporation under that article may be formed. When the purpose is to form a life insurance company on the assessment plan, the organization must be effected under another statute enacted for that purpose. Having prescribed the purposes for which such corporations may be formed and the procedure for their organization, the statute goes on to confer upon fraternal-beneficiary associations the power to mate provision by assessments to pay benefits to the families or dependants of deceased members, and to their sick or disabled members, living, but it avoids the word “insurance” in that connection, and expressly exempts such societies from the operation of the insurance laws of the State. Benefit certificates issued by such societies have some of the characteristics of life insurance policies and are enforced in the courts according to the contract, but there is something more in the contract evidenced by such a certificate than there is in that evidenced by an ordinary life insurance policy.
These societies are sometimes referred to as organized for charitable purposes, but death losses on such benefit certificates are not to be classed under that head, for they are enforced according to the terms of the contract, and even sick benefits do not fill the legal meaning of the word “charity,” because they are limited to the members of the society. An act to be charitable in a legal sense must be designed for “some public benefit- open to an indefinite and vague number; that is, the persons to be benefited must be vague, uncertain and indefinite, until they are selected or appointed to be the particular beneficiaries of the trust for the time being.” “Money contributed by the members of a club to a common fund, to be applied to the relief and assistance of the particular members of the club when in sickness, want of employment, or other disability is not
*312a charitable fund to be controlled by a court of equity.” [Perry on Trusts, sec. 710.] It is not charity to give to your friend because of friendship, nor to your associate in a society because of your duty imposed by the laws of that society. Oharity in the legal sense has been illustrated by reference to the custom of the ancient Jews, to leave at random a sheaf of corn here and there in the field for the poor gleaners who followed the harvesters, it being unknown who would get it. Therefore, there is nothing in the idea of a charitable trust to influence the decision in this case. If the plaintiffs are entitled to recover it must be upon the theory that their father held a contractual relation with the defendant corporation at the time of his death which entitled him to membership therein and the benefits incident to such membership.
Eraternal-beneficiary societies appear to have received the approbation and encouragement of the legislatures in many of the States and have greatly increased in number and in the volume of their peculiar insurance within the last twenty years. Such has certainly been their history in Missouri. This encouragement has arisen from the fact that in their dealings with the families of their deceased members they have not been influenced alone by the strict letter of their contractual obligation, but also to a great extent by that spirit of fraternity which is the life of their organization. It not infrequently happens that the dues or assessments of an unfortunate sick member are paid by the members of his subordinate lodge ■ or out of its treasury, to keep him in good standing, in the face of impending death, for the very purpose of securing the payment of the benefit fund to his family. Such is not the conduct of mere strangers with each other or of those who are bound only by the ties of a contract of insurance. And the law recognizes in that spirit of fraternity not only a guaranty of life insurance when the member dies, but also the development of better character *313among the members while living, and thus the State derives a moral benefit.
But the idea of fraternity on which these societies are founded is not that of the mere abstract principle, which includes all mankind; it is rather fraternity in the concrete, embracing only those who have some feature common to themselves but not universal, which renders them for that reason a separate and peculiar band of friends or associates, distinct from the rest of the world. Such a peculiar quality common to them but distinguishing them from mankind in general, is absolutely essential, to a fraternal society, and it alone distinguishes these societies in their conduct from life insurance companies on the assessment plan.
In the invitation that our statute gives to the people to form such societies, it does not specify what sentiments or bonds of union may be used for that purpose. Whatever sentiment a number of men may have in common and peculiar to themselves, which draws them together for a purpose that is not immoral or inimical to the State, may be made by them essential to admission to membership in their society, and it follows as a corollary, it may be made essential to retention of such membership. If men of a particular religious faith prefer to be associated with those of that faith and desire to form a corporation composed alone of members who are in harmony with them on that subject, there is nothing in our law to forbid them. But a fraternal-beneficiary society founded on and limited to such membership is in no sense a religious corporation. It is not formed to teach or propagate the religious faith, but to cultivate the spirit of fraternity among its members who are of that faith, and incidentally to" provide a pecuniary benefit for them and their'families as the statute contemplates. And if the corporation may lawfully prescribe, as a condition precedent to admission to membership, that the applicant be one who *314is a member in good standing of a certain church and who conforms to its teachings, it may also prescribe as a condition subsequent to retaining his membership in the corporation that he continue in good standing in the church and in observance of its requirements. The corporation does not thereby become a propaganda of religious dogma, but only secures to its members that exclusive congenial association which it promised.
The Masonic fraternity is generally reputed to be a society having for one of its objects at least the practice of charity in its broadest sense, yet a corporation known as the United Masonic Benefit Association, which was only a life insurance company on the assessment plan and in no sense a charitable society, had prescribed as a qualification for membership that the applicant be a Mason in good standing, and it was held that a by-law of the corporation declaring that upon a member thereof ceasing to be a member in good standing of the Masonic fraternity, he, ipso fado, forfeited his membership in the corporation, was valid. [Ellerbe v. Faust, 119 Mo. 656.] In that case the purpose of the corporation was life insurance, and it had nothing to do with teaching or propagating the tenets of Masonry, yet it was held that as it was a mutual society and those who had organized and composed it had seen fit to limit their association to Masons in good standing, no one not belonging to that class could come into it, or being in,’ no one ceasing to be of the class could remain in. The clause of the Constitution invoked in the case at bar as much protects a man in refusing to be or to remain a Mason against his conscience, as it, does in refusing to be or to remain a member of a particular church.
The law is not greatly concerned in guarding a man in that freedom of conscience which would permit him to enter into a contract and keep it to the extent that it suits him, and repudiate it otherwise. If the father of the respondents in this case acquired any rights which he or they could enforce against *315this corporation, it was by virtue of an express contract which • prescribed the terms upon which' he was admitted to membership, and as expressly prescribed the conditions necessary to be observed on his part to continue that membership, and the terms of continuing were exactly the same as the terms of admission. He expressly represented as a condition to his admission that he was a member of the Roman Catholic church, and that he observed its laws and would continue to do so while he remained a member of the corporation, and that if he should cease to conform to the laws óf the church in the particular mentioned in the answer, he expressly agreed that the corporation might suspend or expel him and thereby exclude him from its benefits. Under the Constitution and laws of this State a man can not be coerced into observing the sacraments of any church, and even if he should enter into a solemn contract to do so, he is free to break the contract, and for breaking it he can not be deprived of any right that he has independent of it. But if by the contract a special benefit is created for him, he can not break the contract and have the benefit too. The Court of Appeals of Kentucky, passing on exactly the question we are now. discussing, said: “But apart from this, we can not see that appellee’s rules are in any way inconsistent with the Constitution of Kentucky. The plaintiff never acquired the right to be thus watched and cared for m sickness, and to have his family provided for after his death, except upon the condition that he perform certain religious duties required of members of the Roman Catholic church. Those duties were to be performed every year during his membership in order to keep- alive the corresponding obligation of his fellow members. This right was at most but a conditional one, and has never been ‘diminished’ by any act of the society.....To compel them (other members of the society) to watch and care for plaintiff in times of sickness and contribute to support of his family after death, when *316they have agreed to do this for those who remain, true to their church, would be to disregard and trample upon that mutuality which lies at the foundation of all contracts.....The religious liberty of every denomination in this land demands that no such principle as this be declared as the law of Kentucky.” [Hitter v. St. Aloysius Society, 4 Ky. L. R. 871.] And to like effect also is Matt v. Roman Catholic, etc., Society, 70 Iowa, 455. If any court of last resort has ever held to the contrary, our attention has not been drawn to the case.
The facts stated in the defendant’s plea constituted a complete defense to the plaintiffs’ cause of action, and the court erred in sustaining the demurrer. The judgment' is reversed and the cause remanded to the circuit court to be proceeded with according to the law as herein expressed.
All concur.