165 Ky. 56 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1915
Opinion op the Court- by
Affirming.
This is an appeal of. the city of Dayton, Kentucky, from a judgment rendered by the , Campbell . Circuit Court, in an-action by the city, against J. 0. Jenkins,, John L. Phythian-, and W. E. Senour, trustees of the Speers Hospital,- in -which the city sought to. procure a-
The agreed statement of facts further shows that for several years, before the year 1910, the cities of Dayton and Bellevue contributed annually to the hospital the sum of $1,000.00, and the city of Newport contributed annually to the support of the hospital $3,000.00, and the county of Campbell contributed annually the sum of $1,000.00. These contributions were made to the hospital upon condition that the indigent sick of the three cities named and of the county were to be received at the hospital and treated there without charge to them. This plan continued for several years, when it was changed, so that the cities of .Dayton, Bellevue, and Newport paid $1.05 per day for each indigent person sent to the institution by them, but in the year 1913 the city of Newport paid $3,500.00 for that year, while the county of Campbell continued to donate $1,000.00 per year, as theretofore. The hospital trus
It was, also, agreed that the earnings ■ of the hospital for the year ending August 31st, 1909, for board, operating, nursing-,1 rents, donations, miscellaneous receipts of all kinds, and discounts earned, amounted to $18,720.69, while its expenses for the same time for wages, provisions, fuel, water,-and-light,-surgical supplies, drugs, house supplies, repairs, interest, insurance, and general expenses amounted to $17,032.89,. which, after'deducting $861.45 for persons treated free of-charge, left a balánce in favor o'f .the institution of $826.35; for the year ending August 31st, 1910, the receipts of the hospital amounted to $18,067.03, and deducting the expenses for the same period from it; left a net deficit for the same year of $147.87; deducting the expenses from the earnings for the year ending August 31st, 1911, showed a net gain for the year- of $184.14. A statement of the earnings and expenses for the year ending August 31st, 1912, showed a net balance in favor of the institution of $126.43. .
This court, in Trustees of the Kentucky, Female Orphans School v. City of Louisville, 100 Ky., 470, and in Widows and Orphans Home of Odd Fellows v. Commonwealth, 126 Ky., 386, quoted,with approval from the case of Episcopal Academy v. Philadelphia, 150 Pa. St., 565, wherein it laid down, among others, the two following rules by which to determine whether an institution was one of purely public charity:
“First:' Whatever is done or given gratuitously in relief of the public burdens or for the advancement of public good, is a public charity. Where the public is the beneficiary, the charity is public, and where no private or pecuniary return is reserved to the giver or to any particular person, but all the benefits resulting from the gift or act go to the public, is a purely public charity, the word ‘purely’ being equivalent to ‘wholly.’
In the case of Gerke v. Purcell, 25 Ohio St., 229, the Ohio' Supreme Court said: . -
“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. ”
Another test of purely public charity is the object for which it was founded. If it was for the general public good, and not- for private gain, and- was so conducted that the public1 received all the benefits of it, it is á purely public charity. Donohugh v. Library Co., 86 Pa. St., 306.
By the' will of Elizabeth Speer, the funds for the establishment and maintenance of this hospital in the City of Dayton were set apart by her, and the hospital ‘to be erected and maintained, was to be conducted in such a manner and upon such a plan, as, in the judgment of the trustees, would do the greatest good. No provision is in the will providing that the funds so set apart should ever revert to any private person, or should in any event, ever, be used for any purpose, except the one designated in the will. The title • to the property is vested in trustees, who have no personal interest in the property, whatever, and in the case of vacancies in the office of trustees, the vacancies must be filled by the circuit court of the county. The purpose of the donor was to create a pure charity, and the fund was placed in the service of the public without any view to provide gain for any one. The nursing and medical treatment of the indigent sick, and of those whose pecuniary circumstances are such, as will not justify an expenditure of more than a small sum for medical and surgical treatment, and nursing and caring while sick, is, without question, a public charity, if the doors of the institution are open to all persons, alike. It is always the duty of the State to provide for its indigent sick.
It does not appear that it was ever intended, that any private gain should result to any person in the operation of the trust created by the - donor, in setting apart the fund for the erection and maintenance of the
The fact that the institution receives a revenue from the recipients of its bounty, sufficient to keep it in operation, does not take from it its character as a purely public charity, where it was founded and endowed as such, and when all of the receipts go to providing for the purposes for which it was erected and maintained. The municipalities and the county itself in which the institution is located, and whose duty it is to care for the indigent sick of each of them, respectively, have, by its use, been saved the burden of erecting an institution of the kind of their own, or otherwise caring for such sick.
In 6 Cyc., 900, a public charity is defined “to be a gift, to be applied consistently with the existing laws, for the benefit of an indefinite number of persons, either by bringing their minds or hearts under the influence of education or religion, by relieving their bodies from dis
The Speers Hospital has been so conducted and was so endowed and maintained, that no private gain has come to any one, and all of its benefits go to the public.
The cases of Wathen v. City of Louisville, 27 R., 635, and Gray Street Infirmary v. City of Louisville, 23 R., 1274, relied upon to show that Speers Hospital is not a purely public charity, are not in point, since each of those institutions was founded and conducted with a view to private gain and resulted in private gain to the managers.
It is, therefore, adjudged that the judgment appealed from be affirmed.