Adams, Ch. J.
The plaintiffs aver that they are the legal
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heirs of Vincent J. Bailey, deceased; that he died intestate; and that at the time of his death his life was insured in the defendant company by a contract by which it agreed to pay his heirs “ the net proceeds of one full assessment upon all members in good standing at his death, not to exceed $3,000.” The defendant pleaded a general denial, and also that the contract of insurance had lajised by non-payment of an assessment.
1. Practice on Appeal: abstract: evidence: presumption. I. Before proceeding to the determination of the other questions involved, it is proper that we should say that the plaintiff filed a motion to strike the evidence from the abstract, because it does not appear that the evidence was incorporated in any bill of exceptions properly signed by the judge. By an amendment to the abstract, the defendant sets out two certificates made by the trial judge, from which it appears that a bill of exceptions was signed. The abstract purports to be an abstract of all the evidence, and, in the absence of an additional abstract of the appellee, we must assume that the evidence was made of record, and that it is before us.
2. Life Insurance: delay in paying assessment: forfeiture waived. II. As to whether there was a default by the deceased in the payment of an assessment we need not determine. There was evidence tending to show that before the death of the deceased the company received the- amount of the assessment. The court below, we may presume, so found, and the evidence was sufficient to sustain the finding. It is, to be sure, insisted by the defendant that the money was demanded and received by mistake, the real intention being to regard the certificate as forfeited. But we do not think that such mistake, if made, could be regarded as material. The defendant received and held the money until after the death of the deceased, and he had a right to regard the contract as in forcé, regardless of any intention of the defendant to the contrary.
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3. -: assessment plan: remedy on certificate.
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III. The contract called for the not proceeds of an assess
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ment, not to exceed $3,000. The assessment contemplated, it appears, is an assessment made in advance of the death which gives rise to the liability. Article fourteen of the articles of incorporation is as follows: “ The amount due and payable under any certificat' of membership by reason of death of the member named therein shall be the net amount collected on the advance assessment previous to the death of a member, and.received at the principal office of the association, which amount shall, in no case, exceed $3,000.”. There is no pretense that there is any averment in the petition as to what the proceeds of an assessment were, as called for by the certificate, nor what the net amount of an assessment was, as provided in the articles of incorporation, nor that there was an assessment at all. The plaintiffs, indeed, claim that there was no assessment, and their theory is that they are entitled to recover outside of the terms of the contract, to-wit, the gross amount of what an assessment would have been if it had been made. But, in our opinion, their position cannot be sustained. This is a mutual association. It does not appear that it has any funds with which to pay claims except the proceeds of assessments. One assessment, and only one, can be made to pay one claim, and each assessment, when made and collected, becomes a special fund, and this fund is virtually appropriated in advance. In the absence of an assessment made for the payment of the claim in question} it would be impossible to pay it without using a special fund, virtually otherwise appropriated, for the payment of another claim. If it be true, as contended, that no assessment was made to pay the claim in question, the plaintiffs, probably, are not without their remedy. But their remedy is, manifestly, not an action at law to recover what would be the amount of an assessment if made. In an action at law upon the certificate the plaintiffs must bring themselves within the terms of the certificate. They have not done so, either by the averments of their petition, or by evidence introduced. They rely upon
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Neskern v. Northwestern Endowment Ass’n, 30 Minn., 406 ; but the contract appears to have been materially different.
The judgment of the court below must be
Kb VERSED.