Burd Orphan Asylum v. School District

90 Pa. 21 | Pa. | 1879

Mr. Justice Truhkey

delivered the opinion of the court,

' The clear and convincing opinion of the learned judge of the Common Pleas comprises all that need be said in support of the judgment. He puts the case on the true ground, namely, that the charity is not purely public, for the reason that it is practically limited to white female orphan children, who shall have been baptised in the Protestant Episcopal Church. His reasoning upon the essential point, accords with the doctrine of Donohugh’s Appeal, 5 Norris 806, where it was'held that private institntions for purposes of purely public charity, and not administered for private gain, may be exempted from taxation. It was there said, “ The essential feature of a public use is that it is not confined to privileged individuals, but is open to the indefinite public. It is this indefinite or unrestricted quality that gives it its public character. The smallest street in the smallest village is a public • highway of the Commonwealth, and none the less so because a vast majority of the citizens will certainly never derive any benefit from its use. It is enough that they may do so if they choose. So there is no charity conceivable which will not, in its practical operation, exclude a large part of mankind, and there are few which do not do so in express terms, or by the restrictive force of the description of the persons for whose benefit they are intended. Thus, Girard College excludes by a single word, half the public, by requiring that only male children shall be received; the great Pennsylvania Hospital closes its gates to all but recent injuries, yet no one questions that they are public charities in the widest and most exacting *29sense. * * * Next, and last, we have to consider the force to he given to the word ‘ purely’ in the constitutional phrase, ‘ purely public charity.’ In this connection, and in its ordinary sense, the word purely means completely, entirely, unqualifiedly, and this is the meaning we. must presume the people to have intended in adopting it in their constitution.” Per Mitchell, J., in C. P.

From the foregoing, it is at once seen that a public use, whether for all men or a class, is one not confined to privileged persons. The smallest street is public, for all have an equal right to travel on it; but a way used by thousands, which may be shut against a stranger, is private. Would Girard College be a public charity if the male children entitled to admission were limited to sons of deceased Masons or Odd Fellows ? If Pennsylvania Hospital closed its gates to all hut Methodists or Baptists, having recent injuries, the people would not believe it a purely public charity in the intendment of their constitution. A charity for the poor of a parish or township is public; but not, if confined to poor Presbyterians in the municipality.

Public charities may be restricted to a class of the people of the state or of a municipal division; at the same time, they must be general for all of the class, within the particular municipality. “ Thus, a blind asylum is only for the blind in the community.” If it be completely public, all the blind in that community are on, an equal' footing, and should its capacity be insufficient for all, there is no mistaking justice in the order of admission. To open its doors only to the blind of a particular religious denomination, or of a beneficial association, or of a. political party, shuts them against the public. A known and recognised class, though not generally poor, or diseased or decrepit, may be the subject of a public charity, as sailors; yet if the endowment were limited in its benefits to sailors who are members of a designated sect, there could hardly be two opinions of its character.

Private or individual gain in a pecuniary sense, is not the sole test. “ The true test is to be found in the objects of the institution.” Where these are to advance the interest of a party, of an association, of a private corporation, of a religious denomination, and the like, however beneficial to the public their growth and success may be, there is a private object to gain; the institution is not unqualifiedly public. In such cases the purpose is wholly private, or the private blends with the public. •

The constitution prohibits appropriations “to any denominational or sectarian institution, corporation or associationand of money raised for public schools, to be “ used for the support of any sectarian school.” It forbids exemption from taxation of all property, except such as may he devoted to public purposes and uses. Among the public purposes, “actual places of religious worship” are named, thereby excluding from the exception other property held by reli*30gious societies. How can it be said that an institution for the support and education of the orphan children of a distinct denomination of Christians, may be exempted from taxation within the spirit of the constitution ?

Judgment affirmed. .

Chief Justice Sharswood and Justices Mercur and Páxson, dissented.

On May 20th 1879, “The Church Home for ChildrenJ” united in an application for a re-argument of the case and through its counsel, George Tucker Bispham, Esq., assigned the following, reasons therefor: >

It is a charity incorporated by the laws of this Commonwealth, whose constitution authorizes it to maintain and educate orphans and desitute white children, to be received without regal’d to the religious belief of their parents, but to be trained in the faith of the Protestant Episcopal Church of the United States. By an Act of the Legislature, passed in 1860, its real estate, which is in the county of Philadelphia, has been exempted from- taxation. It had believed that, by reason of being “an institution of charity,” it came within the provisions of the Act of the 14th of May 1874, and was, therefore, still exempt from taxation.- And such has been the view heretofore adopted by the proper authorities.

The petitioner does not believe that its claim for exemption from taxation rests entirely on the same basis as that of the Burd Orphan Asylum, and it is advised that the decision of the court recently made will not necessarily affect it. Certainly it will not be conclusive as to its rights. It unites, however, in the petition for a re-argument, as it believes that, upon careful reconsideration, the Burd Orphan Asylum will be considered as exempt from taxation, and a fortiori, that the property held by the petitioner will be exempt.

Its view of the questions involved is, in brief, as follows:

1. It involves the constitutionality of the Act of 14th of May 1874, under which the corporation in question was expressly exempted as “ an institution of benevolence or charity,” and the act, though not referred to in the opinion, is in effect decided to be unconstitutional.

In five states similar constitutions have been identically interpreted by their various legislatures, and the constitutionality expressly sustained by the court. It is submitted that this question is too important to be determined without the fullest presentation and investigation.

2. It is conceived that no logical distinction can exist between classification by creed and classification by race, age, color, sex, birth, or physical or mental disabilities.

3. The constitutional provisions that the legislature shall not *31appropriate money to any sectarian institution, was not intended to apply to laws exempting such institutions from taxation; for,

Ludovie O. Gleemann and William Henry Rawle, for plaintiff in error.

The Burd Orphan Asylum is a charity, and none the less so because it benefits a particular religious denomination: Domestic Society’s Appeal, 6 Casey 425; Price v. Maxwell, 4 Id. 23; Wit*32man v. Lex, 17 S. & R. 88; Mayer v. Society, 2 Brewster 386; Evangelical Association’s Appeal, 11 Casey 316; Beatty v. Kurtz, 2 Peters 566; Trustees v. Beatty, 28 N. J. Eq. 570; Goodell v. Union Association, 29 Id. 33; De Camp v. Dobbins, 31 Id. 670; Convention v. Portland, 65 Maine 92; Vidal v. Girard, 2 Howard 199; McGirr v. Aaron, 1 P. & W. 49; Magill v. Brown, Brightly’s Rep. 346; Perry on Trusts 701, 702, 733, 734.

*31(a) Otherwise the constitution would be inconsistent with itself, as it expressly authorizes exemption laws as to “ actual places of religious worship,” which are necessarily and invariably sectarian, and burial-grounds, which are usually so.

(l>) Classification by creed has always existed in tax-exemption laws, not only as to churches, but as to charities, such as hospitals, schools, &e.

(a) And for this obvious reason: The religious sympathies of men towards charity can be reached in cases where more abstract philanthropy would fail to touch them, and it is both the duty and the policy of the state to take advantage of that fact in aid of the public duty, and in case of state appropriation.

4. In other states there have been decisions which, under similar constitutions and statutes, expressly- recognise the validity of such classification by creed as exists in the case at bar.

The Supreme Court ordered a re-argument, which was made before the court on the 25th of March 188.0; there being on the bench Sharswood, C. J., and Mercur, Gordon, Trunkey, Sterrett and Green, JJ. (The latter was appointed, by the governor to succeed Hon. Warren J. Woodward, who died in September 1879.)

In the statement of facts by the plaintiff in error at the re-argument, after a review of the three qualifications for admission to the asylum, it was said :

“ Religious belief being, therefore, a mere question of education, and not of admission; in other words, the question being not one of exclusion, but of preference, the trustees have always received such children of the required age and sex as have applied; and have never acted upon the directions of the will in,regard to preferred classes, being advised that those directions only applied when there were more applicants than could be received.”
“ The assumption of the learned court.below, and upon which the cause was ruled; that ‘ ihe exclusion of the general public • is so great as to amount to almost absolute rejection,’ was not warranted by anything appearing of record, and, as matter of fact, the contrary is true. In case of a vacancy at the asylum, any destitute, white female child of the prescribed age could ask the aid of the court to admit her, unless there were other preferred applicants then demanding admission.”

*32The asylum is a public charity, not being established for private ends, and being open to the indefinite public of the specified class.

An error sometimes arises (and to the layman it is often insurmountable) from the use of the words “ the public.” The law says the charity must be “indefinite,” and yet every one knows that there can be no.charity wide enough to include all classes within it, and hence the law, while wholly excluding, as not within the class of charity, mere beneficial associations, suffers almost all kinds of discrimination and exclusion within the class of charity.

This asylum is a public charity administered by a private corporation : Allen v. McKeen, 1 Sumner 296; Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 4 Wheat. 670; Philadelphia v. Fox, 14 P. F. Smith 170; Attorney-General v. Pearce, 2 Atk. 87; Humphries v. Little Sisters, 29 Ohio 206; McDonald v. Massachusetts Hospital, 120 Mass. 432; City v. Indianapolis Home, 50 Ind. 215; Clement v. Hyde, 50 Vt. 716; Warde v. Manchester, 56 N. H. 508; Wright v. Linn, 9 Barr 438. As it is neither founded nor conducted for either individual or corporate profit, it is a purely public charity : Donohugh v. Library Co., 5 Norris 306; Gerke v. Purcell, 25 Ohio 229; City v. Indianapolis Home, supra; McDonald v. Hospital, supra.

It is submitted that the constitutional provision was intended to exclude — 1. Charities not public, as a gift to the donor’s “poor relationsAttorney-General v. Bucknall, 2 Atk. 328. 2. Charities founded with a view to profit. 3. Charities which, though free from private profit, were for organizations not in themselves legal charities, as Masonic orders, dramatic associations, beneficial societies, &c.: Swift v. Easton Society, 23 P. F. Smith 362. 4. Institutions connected with public charities, but not used for the purposes of charity, as parsonages, real estate producing rental, &c.: Mullen v. Commissioners, 4 Norris 289; Christian Association v. Donohugh, 7 W. N. C. 208; New Orleans v. St. Patrick Association, 28 La. Ann. 512. But it was not intended to exclude public educational charities, neither founded nor conducted for profit, and in actual use for the purposes of their organization. It was not intended to apply to an exemption which treats all sects alike.

We contend, therefore,

1. The primary object of the testatrix was to found an asylum for orphans, and the direction in favor of Episcopalian children is secondary, being merely one of preference and not of exclusion, and in nowise alters the legal status of the institution. 2. The *33fact that the orphans are, as .part of their general education, to be instructed in the Christian religion as taught by the Episcopal Church, in nowise detracts from the public charitable nature of the institution. And, apart from the foregoing : 3. The appellant is a “purely public charity” within the constitutional provision, being an institution certain and definite in its objects, and uncertain and indefinite as to those constituting the class to be benefited thereby, being open to the indefinite public of the specified class, and being neither founded, endowed, nor maintained for private or corporate profit. 4. The appellant is directly within the legislative interpretation of the constitutional provision, being “ an institution of learning founded, endowed or maintained by public or private charity;” and this express legislation is, and has been declared to be constitutional.

Henry O. Howard and A. Leivis Smith, for defendant in error.—

To restrict the power of the legislature to exempt property was plainly the intent of the convention which gave us the present constitution. The abuse of the privilege of exemption had become so flagrant as to demand a remedy. Institutions of charity to be entitled to exemption must be “purely public.” This language was intended to have a strict construction. The charities authorized to be exempted are only those which are completely and entirely public. Does this asylum' come within this definition of the term ?

It is open to a certain class of children, to wit: “White female orphan children of legitimate birth, of the age of not less than four years, and of not more than eight years.” Had the classification stopped here, the institution would undoubtedly be purely public. Then if two children of the prescribed color, sex, birth and age were applicants, they could, so far as classification is concerned, stand on a common footing, and if both could not be admitted for want of room, there would be nothing in the charter of the charity to prefer one over the other; and if the trustees unjustly or wrongfully preferred one over the other, a court of equity could remedy the evil. But it is not so. The donor saw fit to impose a further and a sectarian classification, which it is submitted cannot be recognised by the laws of this state.

We hold then that a charity founded on a religious belief, and from the benefits of which the general public are not only excluded, but from which all the orphans of the state are practically excluded, except those born or baptised in a particular faith, is not purely public.

The argument of the'plaintiffs in error (that all charities are restricted from necessity) has no application, nor is it of any force to argue that blind asylums are for the blind alone, &c. These are restrictions made for the proper development of the benevo*34lence, and for its good government.. They are as inherent in the proper working of charities as the division of labor is in the progress of society at large, found after long experience to he the best means of dispensing to the entire community the beneficent results of charitable action. There is no taint of partiality or exclusiveness about them. They are not classified by reason of incidental qualities or preferences foreign to the infirmities themselves, but because of these very infirmities.

Mr. Justice Green

delivered the opinion of the court, June 7th 1880.

The Burd Orphan Asylum is an institution of learning, benevolence and charity, founded, endowed and maintained by private charity. It is directly within the letter of the Act of 14th May 1874, and is therefore prima facie exempt from taxation. In Donohugh’s Appeal, 5 Norris 306, that act was held to be constitutional. This court has frequently ruled that the whole power of taxation is one of the exclusive functions of the legislative department of the government. The legislature has said that this class of property shall not be taxed, and that declaration must prevail, unless it is an unlawful exercise of legislative power. It can only have that character by being a clear violation of some definite provision of the constitution. We have decided that this act is not subject to that objection, and that decision is., not questioned. But it is claimed that to extend the protection of the act to this particular property W'ould be doing violence to article ix. of the constitution, which authorizes the legislature to exempt from taxation certain public property, places of religious worship “ and institutions of purely public charity.” In cases of doubt the legal presumption is in favor of the constitutionality of legislative enactments, and if this were a doubtful case, this principle would require us to give the act the benefit of the doubt when applied to property expressly exempted by its terms.

It is conceded that the devise in question has created a charity which is public in the strict sense of that expression. But it is urged, that it is not purely public, and hence that to apply the language of the act to this particular case, would be a violation of the constitutional provision. Now it must be conceded and it has been ■decided, here and elsewhere, that the word “purely” is not to have its largest and broadest significance when used in this connection. In the opposing line of thought it is admitted that the word is to have a limited meaning. It is not contended that a charity to be purely public must be open to the whole public, nor to any considerable portion of the public. Without doubt an asylum for the support of fifty blind men or an equal number of paupers would not be obnoxious to the objection that it was not “purely public.” A charity for the maintenance of disabled seamen, or of aged and infirm stone masons, resident in the city of Philadelphia, would *35undoubtedly be a purely public charity. And so also would a charity for the education and maintenance of the children of such persons. And if such a charity should be limited to the white female orphan children of such persons between the ages of four and eight years, such limitations, though they would very greatly restrict the class and the number of the beneficiaries, would constitute no valid objection to the purely public character of the charity. But seamen and stone masons are only designated classes of persons distinguished by their occupations. A charity for the support of poor widows, or indigent old men, or the insane poor, of a city, county, borough or township would be equally a purely public char ity, no matter how small would be the number of the beneficiaries or how limited the class.

Why, then, would not a charity for the support of poor Episcopalians, Catholics, Jews or Presbyterians of a state or city, be purely public; or a charity for the education and maintenance of the orphan children of such persons ? No private gain or profit is subserved; the objects of such a charity are certain and definite, and the persons benefited are indefinite within the specified class. The circumstance that the beneficiaries are to be of a particular religious faith is only of importance as designating the class. It indicates a certain portion of the whole community who are to be recipients of the charity. It has the same effect in this respect as the words seamen, stone masons, blind persons, poor widows, &c., in the cases already mentioned. For the purpose of defining the class of persons, who, as distinguished from all other persons in the community, are to enjoy the benefit of the donor’s bounty, the legal effect is the same, whether the words used be seamen, Episcopalians, blind persons, Catholics, poor widows,-Jews, stone masons or Presbyterians. The argument that to sustain, as purely public, a charity in favor of persons of a particular religious faith, would be to maintain sectarianism, is of no weight. It is not discrimination in favor of a sect, for it is treating all sects alike. It is not even extending a preference to sectarians; it is merely recognising them as a class of persons. We see no reason why that community which ranges persons into classes, so far as this subject is concerned, may not be a community of religious faith, as well as of occupation, condition in life, sex, color, age, disability, physical or mental, or nationality. As to the meaning of the word “purely,” when used in this connection, we concur in the construction which was given by the Supreme Court of Ohio in the case of Gerke v. Purcell, 25 Ohio St. Rep. 229, that, “ when the charity is public, the exclusion of all idea of private gain or profit is equivalent in effect to the force of ‘purely,’ as applied to public charity in the constitution.”

But there is another and a broader ground upon which this particular charity must be sustained as purely public. It is this: the *36third class of persons enumerated in the will of the testatrix as the objects of her bounty are, “all other white female orphan children of legitimate birth, not less than four years of age, and of not more than eight years, without respect to any other description or qualification whatever, except that at all times and in every case the orphan children of clergymen of the Protestant Episcopal Church shall have the preference.” It will of course not be disputed that if this were the only class of beneficiaries mentioned in the will, the charity would be purely public in the strictest sense.

Does the circumstance that two other classes .are first named take away that character, and if so, how? The learned judge of the court below stated and answered this question by saying that “ the exclusion of the general public is so great as to amount to almost absolute rejection.” This position makes the legal character of the charity to depend upon a question of fact. The argument assumes, for the purpose of testing the quality of the charity as being “ purely public,” that the orphan children of the general public cannot be admitted (because they are in point of fact excluded by the numbers of the persons to be admitted) in the first and second classes. Now in legal contemplation the persons of the third class are beneficiaries upon the same title, and with the same abstract rights as those of the first and second. In any case of application for admission by one of the third class, it would be no answer to say that there were other orphan children? in the city or state who were of the Episcopal baptism, and had the other qualifications, and therefore the applicant could not be admitted. If there were actual vacancies in the asylum for more pupils, and no applications from persons of the first or second class, undoubtedly the applicant would be entitled to admission. And further, when once admitted such pupils would not be liable to be ejected in order to make room for subsequent applicants of the first or second class.

In other words, in such a case the only adequate reply that could be made to an applicant of the third class would be, that at the time of the application the asylum was already full. But that reply would be good in any case of a purely public charity. Hence, the only barrier to admission would be one that is common to all the classes and peculiar to none. How then can it be said that it is not a purely public charity because it is not open to the general public ? In law it is open to them, and hence, by a court defining its legal meaning, it must be held to be purely public. .

But it is said that the children of the general public will be in point of fact excluded, because the preferred classes will always exhaust the physical capacity of the charity. How do we know this, or what right have we to assume it? We certainly cannot assume it as a matter of law, for it is a pure matter of fact; and we cannot adopt it as a fact, because there is no evidence in support of it on this record. This cause comes before us on a case stated, and *37we are confined to the facts there set forth. Nothing of this kind is there alleged, and we have no right to infer it. The only assertion in the ease stated that relates to this subject implies the very reverse of this allegation, because it states that “ children have been received without regard as to their residence as to either state or county.”

If it were proper to dispose of the question by considering the probabilities as to the facts, we think they favor the theory that the children of the third class would have free admission to the asylum. The limitations are so sweeping and numerous that they reduce the preferred beneficiaries to an extremely small class. They must be of Episcopal baptism, which, at once, makes an immense reduction in the possible applicants. Further, they are to be white females and orphans, and between the ages oí four and eight years. Each one of these qualifications diminishes enormously the number of those who are preferred. There are probably many Episcopal congregations in which there is not a single child coming within all these limitations. Moreover, there are other extensive limitations, not fixed by the will, but which would be practically operative. All female orphan children who have means or friends to provide for them, would as a general rule abstain- from entering a charity school, especially one from which they are to be placed out at some employment. Outside of Philadelphia and a few neighboring counties this charity would be but little known, and this want of knowledge would increase with increasing distance. It must be considered, therefore, that orphan children whose nearest relatives are ignorant of the charity, and those who are unwilling to receive its benefits should be excluded from the computation. We can hence readily see how extremely small in number must be the preferred classes of beneficiaries likely to seek admission to this charity. We are not informed as to how many children can be accommodated, but it is not less than sixty, as that number are now provided for. The case stated, says: “A large amount of property” was given by the testatrix to establish the asylum, and that a tract of forty-five acres was purchased upon which the buildings were erected. If there is money enough there is certainly ground enough upon which to maintain a much larger number than sixty. In any event it is apparent that we are not at liberty to conclude, either as matter of fact or law, that the capacity of this charity is or will be exhausted by the reception of such applicants of the first and second classes as may desire to avail themselves of its benefits. As to .the exception in favor of the children of Protestant Episcopal clergymen, all who would be at all likely to seek admission, are already included in the first and second classes. As to those living out of the state, we are not informed whether any such have ever sought admission, but the probable number would be so very small as not to affect the result. We are of *38opinion that the appellant is a purely public charity within the constitutional provision, and is within the letter of the Act of 14th May 1874, and therefore exempt from taxation.

Judgment reversed, and judgment is entered here in favor of the defendant on the case stated with costs.

Justices Gordon, Trunkey and Sterrett, dissented.
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