220 S.W.2d 836 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1949
Reversing.
This is a declaratory judgment action brought by Julius Effron, as a taxpayer, against the Kentucky Building Commission and its several members, the State Treasurer, the Commissioner of Health and Division of Medical Hospitals and Related Services in the Department of Health, to test the constitutionality of KRS
The 79th National Congress enacted Public Law No. 725,
To enable Kentucky to take advantage of the benefits of the Federal Act and to protect the general public *357
health, our General Assembly at its 1948 session enacted KRS
In the same 1948 session, our General Assembly enacted KRS Chapter 47, Part Three, which appropriated ten million dollars to be expended among other purposes in "matching funds for hospital construction under any law now existing or that may be passed by the National Congress." The Kentucky Building Commission upon the recommendation of the Division of Medical Hospitals and Related Services allotted State funds for new construction by cities and counties of certain public hospitals. Such allotments were held to be constitutional in Miller v. State Bldg. Commission,
The petition questions the right of the State under secs. 3, 5, and 171 of our Constitution to make allotments from funds raised by taxes to these nonprofit hospitals. Although such allotments were not attacked as being violative of sec. 181 (forbidding the General Assembly from levying a tax for any political subdivision), the *358
chancellor held they were. He was in error in this, since it was expressly said in the Miller opinion,
It is clear that sec. 3 of the Kentucky Constitution (no exclusive grant of public emoluments or privileges shall be made except in consideration of public services) has no application to the question before us, since the construction of nonprofit hospital facilities is a public purpose. District Board of Tuberculosis Sanitarium Trustees v. City of Lexington,
This leaves us to dispose of the more difficult question raised by sec. 5 of our Constitution. That section guarantees religious freedom and among other things says: "No preference shall ever be given by law to any religious sect, society or denomination." The character of hospitals now under consideration, such as the Norton Infirmary and Our Lady of Peace, are controlled and governed by boards of certain religious faiths; the Norton's Board of Trustees are Episcopalians and the latter's Board are Catholics. But the hospitals are open to the public of all creeds and faiths — and even to those who profess no certain religious belief. Religion is not taught in these hospitals nor is any one sect given preference over another. The fact that members of the governing boards of these hospitals, which perform a recognized public service to all people regardless of faith *359 or creed, are all of one religious faith does not signify that the money allotted the hospitals is to aid their particular denomination. On the contrary, the governing boards of such hospitals are but the channels through which the funds flow. Courts will look at the use to which these funds are put rather than the conduits through which they run. If that use is a public one and is calculated to aid all people in the State, it will not be held in contravention of sec. 5 merely because the hospitals carry the name or are governed by the members of a particular faith. 51 Am. Jur. sec. 349, p. 393.
The first amendment to the Federal Constitution provides: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof." The framers of the Kentucky Constitution in writing sec. 5 into our Bill of Rights, "No preference shall ever be given by law to any religious sect, society or denomination; nor to any particular creed, mode of worship or system of ecclesiastical polity," followed closely the Federal Constitution. It was their evident purpose, in the language of Thomas Jefferson, to build "a wall of separation between Church and State" which had been so firmly erected in the Federal Constitution. Manifestly, the drafters of our Constitution did not intend to go so far as to prevent a public benefit, like a hospital in which the followers of all faiths and creeds are admitted, from receiving State aid merely because it was originally founded by a certain denomination whose members now serve on its board of trustees.
In their inception, hospitals were charitable organizations sponsored by religious sects which owned and operated them. In recent years the National and State Governments have enacted much social legislation in an endeavor to relieve charitable institutions in caring for the sick and afflicted and to let the governments assume the burden of operating hospitals as a public service from the State to its citizens. Recognizing that these institutions were in existence and were being operated efficiently through their own boards, the Federal and State Governments have thought it more practical to aid them rather than to build new ones. Certainly, it was never the intention of the framers of sec. 5 of our Constitution to prevent the State from aiding with money *360 raised by taxes an institution rendering a public service merely because the governing body of the institution is composed of one denomination.
Sherrard v. Jefferson County Board of Education,
We will not take the time and space necessary to discuss other cases cited and relied upon by appellee, such as Barker v. Crum,
The judgment is reversed with directions that one be entered which is in conformity with this opinion.