Lead Opinion
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
In April, 1914, defendant gave a musical entertainment in its new auditorium to which the public was invited on payment of an admission fee of 50 cents each. While the entertainment was in progress, the balcoriy fell on plaintiff’s intestate, and he sustained injuries from which he subsequently died.
Plaintiff alleged and introduced evidence tending to prove that the balcony fell because of negligence in its construction. Defendant denied negligence, but claimed exemption from liability, notwithstanding negligence should be proved, on the ground that it is a public charity; and, on that ground, a nonsuit was ordered.
Plaintiff seeks to distinguish this case from the Eindler case upon these grounds: (1) In that case, plaintiff was a beneficiary of the charity; in this, he was a stranger, sustaining no relation to the charity, except that of an invited guest upon its premises, who had paid for his right to be there; (2) in that case, the negligence was that of a servant of the hospital, who had been selected with due care; in this, the negligence was that of the corporation itself or its superior officers and agents, in failing to provide a safe place for an invited guest.
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It would serve no good purpose, except to show painstaking diligence in the consideration of the question at issue, to review the decisions of other Courts. This has been done in several cases cited in the arguments of counsel. The conclusions reached are variant and irreconcilable. Some Courts hold the rule of respondeat superior applicable to the fullest extent; others deny its applicability in toto; while others take intermediate ground for various reasons. The rule of total exemption is, perhaps, without exception, based upon grounds of public policy. That is the principle upon which liability was denied by the Court en banc in the handler case, and, as has been shown, its logical application requires exemption of public charities for the torts of their superior officers and agents as well as for those of their servants or employees, whether these be selected with or without due care.
Judgment reversed.
Footnote. — As to liability of charitable institutions, see
Lindler
v.
Hospital,
98 S. C. 25,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring. I concur, under the authority of the handler case. By that case I am as much bound as if I had signed the majority opinion.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting in part. I think fhe Circuit Court was right to grant the nonsuit, on the authority *203 of the Rindler case. I think the proof that the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Synod is a religious association engaged in the propagation of the gospel, and that the college is under the control of the synod, makes the college a charity.
If the synod controls the college, and if the synod is a religious association engaged in the propagation of the gospel, then the necessary inference is the synod is propagating the gospel by its operation of the college, for if it did other than that, it would be departing from its functions. No doubt the synod does make a profit in the operation of the college, but not for gain, and that fact cannot change the character of its college work. “The laborer is worthy of his hire.” It is true if the synod does operate the college as a private enterprise for gain and such is its object, then that would be another question. But that inference is hostile to the charter of the synod as a religious association engaged in the propagation of the gospel. We take judicial notice of the fact that well-nigh all the religious denominations of the State control and operate colleges for women and men, too, as a part of the work of the church. Beyond cavil the plaintiffs right of action against the college is gone.
I concur with the leading opinion that this case is not differentiated from the Lindler case; that ends this case. But I think the defendant has proved its charitable character by so much evidence that a verdict to the contrary could not be reasonably sustained. I think it was not necessary for the defendant to prove its character beyond dispute.
I, therefore, think the order of nonsuit ■ should not be reversed, but should be sustained.
