Thе case calls for a consideration of the exemption of eleemosynary or charitable organizations from liability for torts. The reappraisal of the doctrine and of our broad statements of absolute exemption is confined to the unusual combination of facts of this case.
In an action for damages for personal injuries the cirсuit court rendered a summary judgment under the decisions of this court that no right of action may be maintained as a matter of law in such cases. The plaintiff appeals.
The appellees are the Rt. Rev. John A. Floersh, Roman Catholic Bishop of Louisville, and the Home for the Aged of the Little Sisters of the Poor, and The Sisters of the Good Shepherd of Eighth Street. The first рarty is a corporation sole, created by a special legislative act many years ago, and as such is engaged in many religious, educational and charitable activities. The other two parties are also Kentucky corporations maintaining and operating homes *575 for destitute men and women and for orphaned colored children, аs well as other benevolent enterprises. The three parties jointly owned and maintained property at Broadway and Preston Street in Louisville, which had been devised to them for their charitable purposes. The building was three stories in height. The first or street floor was rented to commercial enterprises and the upper floors were rented as living apartments. Five tenants occupied the third floor, one of whom, Clifford Roland, is the plaintiff in this action. His complaint charges that in violation of the statute, KRS 101.700, and certain sections of the Louisville ordinances, and otherwise, the defendants “with gross negligence and wanton and willful recklessness failed to provide proper, adequate and safe exit ways and fire escapes for this plaintiff from his apartment to the outside of the building in the event of fire.” The statute cited (in effect at the time of the fire) read:
“Every tenement house over two stories and a basement in height shall be equipped with such fire escapes for each floor as are deemed adequate by the building department. The owner shall keep all the firе escapes in good order and repair. No person shall place any incumbrance before or upon any fire escape. Every tenement house over three stories and a basement in height shall be of fireproof construction.”
A penalty of a fine was imposed for violation.
The city ordinances had like requirements.
The complaint alleges that on February 22, 1954, the described building caught fire; the stairway and place of exit were enveloped in flames and the plaintiff’s exit from the building was cut off, аnd he was compelled to climb out a window to escape the fire. He clung to a coping until the flames burned his fingers, and then he fell to the pavement below. The plaintiff suffered serious injuries of severe burns and multiple fractures. He is apparently completely and permanently disabled. He asked judgment for a large sum for special and general damages.
The defendants traversed the allegations of negligence and damages, pleaded contributory negligence and their immunity from liability by reason of their charitable status. The basis of the latter pleading was specifically set forth in an affidavit supporting the defendants’ motion for a summary judgment, which, as stated, was sustained. They particularly stated that the property involved was held in trust and the income therefrom devoted to the objects of public charities. It is obvious that with the legal question of immunity or non-liability eliminated, there were issues of material facts to be tried, and the summary judgment would not have been rendered. Civil Rule 56.03. We address ourselves to the determinative question.
This court has consistently affirmed (although not always with unanimity) that a charitable institution is not liable for torts of its agents and employees. St. Walburg Monastery, etc. v. Feltner’s Adm’r, Ky.,
The opinions which have placed this court among those declaring complete exemption from liability do not show that the conception of partial or limited liability has been hitherto considered, or, indeed, that there has ever been any need for such consideration in relation to circumstances like any of the conditions in the case now before us. Therefore, our decision in this case is in a material degree unfettered by the rule of stare decisis notwithstanding the apparent commitment to the complete immunity from any legal liability. We note the cases.
In Robinson v. Second Presbyterian Church,
In Williams v. Louisville Industrial School of Reform,
In Emery v. Jewish Hosp. Ass’n,
Differentiating circumstances in the case at bar are three-fold, namely:
(1) The allegations are of corporate or administrative negligence in violating a duty imposed by a penal statute аnd ordinances for the safety of all persons situated as was the plaintiff, and that duty was imposed upon all owners of such property without any exception or exemption from obedience.
(2) The property concerning which there was negligence was not being used in the services of the charities but was commercial property, held and rentеd as a landlord to produce income, albeit income which was used in conducting the charities.
(3) The person' injured was a stranger to the charities, being but a tenant in the property; hence, there was no sort of implied waiver or assumption of risk by having become a beneficiary.
In studying the many foreign cases dealing with the subject, one becomes lost in the thicket. It is said in Foster v. Roman Catholic Diocese,
A review of the cases summarized in the annotations,
(1) The cases dealing with corporate or administrative negligence, or breach of a non-delegable duty, may be found in Sec. 28, p. 112.
(2) Distinctions are drawn between charitable and noncharitable activities, or activities which incidentally yield revenue. As stated in note, Sec. 33, p. 131, 25 A.L.R. 2d, “most courts which have considered the question as a distinct issue hold, even in the absence of a statutory provision, that there is liability for negligence in the course of activities incidental to the corporate powers but primarily commercial in charactеr though carried on to obtain revenue to be used for the charitable purposes of the corporation.” See also Sec. 33 and 34, pp. 130 et seq. And, again, some courts draw a line between liability for breach of statutory, as distinguished from common law, duties. Sec. 36, p. 138.
(3) The cases which have considered the question of liability to strangers and
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non-liability to benеficiaries are collected in Sec. 21, p. 89, et seq. These cases also recognize a distinction where there was corporate negligence and where the negligence was of subordinate employees. Of course, the particular relationship, even of so-called strangers, may be important, e.g., visitors or servants or outsiders. Sec. 26, р. 108. The rule that exemption does not extend to torts committed against complete strangers, such as by the operation of an automobile on the highway, seems to be quite generally recognized (Sec. 23, p. 91) and is sustained upon sound reasons by the weight of authority. 10 Am.Jur., Charities, Sec. 153; 14 C.J.S., Charties, § 75; Foster v. Roman Catholic Diocese,
The increasing modern hazards to life and limb and the growing sense of social responsibility may not be ignored. Nor mаy we regard with complete detachment the availability of indemnifying and liability insurance. Individuals and commercial enterprises quite generally, and some charitable institutions also, carry such insurance to compensate persons who may be injured and to protect themselves against loss or liability from negligence. The State has recognized the injustice thаt may result from governmental immunity by providing for compensating persons for damages sustained to either person or property as a proximate result of negligence on the part of the Commonwealth or any department or of its agents or employees, KRS 44.070, et seq., and by authorizing counties and boards of education to carry insurance for the benefit of persons who may suffer injury through negligence of their agents and servants. KRS 67.180, 67.185, 67.186 (covering county hospitals), 160.310. Attention may be called to Williams’ Adm’x v. Church Home, etc.,
In evaluating the apparent conflict between the principle of aiding charities of a public nature by exempting them from liability for tortious acts and the principle of a citizen’s right to recover compensation for injury suffered through the tortious act of another, we cannot help but see the justice of limiting or restricting the rule of absolute immunity, nor avoid the force of logical grounds of modern decisiоns *579 and the weight of judicial opinion that there should be a limitation of immunity in certain cases.
When the question of liability for torts first came before the courts, private charities were largely small institutions with limited means. Nowadays, on the one hand are the complexities and hazards of modem life and on the other, the growth and development of philanthropic fоundations with large funds, engaging in many and varied enterprises, both commercial and charitable. It might come as a shock if such foundations should claim immunity and the courts hold them to be absolutely free from liability for all tortious wrongs. But the same rule must apply to both the great and the small.
It is neither moral nor just that a stranger- to a charity who has been injured, as is alleged in the present case, as the result of the management having violated safety laws in relation to an activity which was no part of the operation of the charity itself, should bear all the burden and the wrong-doer be entirely relieved. Doubtless, the extended hospital services which the plaintiff has received because of his injuries were in part at the expense of funds of other charitable trusts. This exemplifies the fact that often the immunity of one charity imposes a burden upon another.
The law should keep pace with moving events of everyday life, and the courts within bounds should shape the law to conform. The eminent Justice Cardozo in a series of lectures, first published in 1921 under the title, “The Nature of Judicial Process,” said, “Law is, indeed, an historical growth, for it is an expression of customary morality which develops silently and unconsciously from one age to another.” (p. 104) He affirmed the view that if a rule continues to work an injustice, it should be retested and must eventually be reformed, p. 23.
We have not overlooked appellees’ argument of exemption from tort liability that the very property involved in this case was regarded (with other real estate owned by several religious and charitable institutions) as exempt from taxation since it was producing income for the charities. City of Louisville v. Presbyterian Orphans Home,
The conclusion of the court is that with the combination of the three major factors alleged in the present case, namely (1) corporate negligence in failing to perform a statutory duty, (2) merely income-producing property, and (3) injuries to a stranger to the charities, the plea of immunity is not available to the appellees. This is as far as we are required to go. It will be time enough when a case is presented with any of these factors absent to determine what the decision may be.
The judgment is, therefore, reversed, that the issues of fact may be tried by a jury.
