The Hospital Authorities Law (Code Ch. 99-15; Ga. L. 1941, p. 241) under which the defendant hospital authority was incorporated was upheld as against attacks on its constitutionality in
DeJarnette
v.
Hospital Authority of Albany,
195
Ga.
189, 200 (
It thus appears that the State has a right to delegate to a public corporation the governmental right and duty which it has to protect and preserve the health of its citizens, in this case the indigent sick and poor of Floyd County, and that when it properly does so the corporation maintaining and operating a hospital under such delegated authority, not for profit, is in the exercise of a governmental function and not subj ect to suit in a tort action. In considering the purposes for which the hospital is set up and maintained it is necessary to examine its charter, and the charter provisions on the question of the character of the institution are controlling.
Morton
v.
Savannah Hospital,
148
Ga.
438 (2) (
Applying the statutory provisions above set out to the rules of law herein discussed relating to governmental functions, it follows that the defendant hospital authority is performing a governmental function in the course of which it is not liable for the torts *322 of its servants, agents and employees. This being the case, the remaining grounds of demurrer need not be here considered.
The trial court did not err in dismissing the petitions of the plaintiffs on general demurrer.
Judgment affirmed.
