Craig v. Mercy Hospital-Street Memorial
Craig v. Mercy Hospital-Street Memorial
Opinion of the Court
Upon the advice of the Attorney General, based upon an interpretation of the meaning of Section 66 of the Mississippi Constitution of 1890, as applied to the question at issue, the appellant, Carl N. Craig, as State Auditor of Public Accounts, refused to honor and pay a requisition of the Mississippi Commission on Hospital Care, for a warrant on the State Treasury, in favor of the appellee, Mercy Hospital — Street Memorial, of Vicksburg, Mississippi, and representing a part of a large grant of money which had been approved by such Commission in favor of the said hospital in the total sum of $214,000 from state funds, to be supplemented to the extent of $527,000 from federal funds to be paid to the hospital through the Commission, as per contract between them in connection with the long range statewide hospital plan to assist in the construction, erection, and equipping of hospitals, nurses’ homes, health centers, clinics, and related facilities, that are publicly owned, operated, and controlled, or where the same are privately owned, op
...Thereupon, the .appellee, Mercy Hospital — Street Memorial, filed its petition for a writ of mandamus to compel the issuance of the warrant as aforesaid. To this petition the appellant, as such State Auditor, and represented by the Attorney General, filed an answer .to the suit for mandamus on two defense grounds, (1) That the hospital involved is not eligible to receive such grant from the state appropriation of $4,750,000, made by Chapter 164, Laws of 1948, and from the federal funds allocated to-the state, for the reason that the hospital corporation is not owned, operated, and controlled on a strictly nonprofit basis, within the meaning of Chapter 430, Laws of 1948, which is amendatory of Chapter 363, Laws of 1946, and the Act of Congress, 42 U. S. C. A. Section 291 et seq., which was enacted “to assist the several states.to construct public and non-profit hospitals ’ ’ and appropriated $300,000,000 of federal funds for such purpose.
.(2) .That the grant of the funds in question is a donation or gratuity for a sectarian purpose or use, and is therefore in violation of said Section 66 of the State Constitution, which reads as follows: “No law granting a donation or gratuity in favor of any person or object shall be enacted except by the concurrence of two thirds of the members elect of each branch of the legislature, nor by any vote for a sectarian purpose or use. ”
As to the first ground of defense above stated, a nonprofit,hospital is defined in both the said Act of Congress and Chapter 430, Laws of 1948, as “ [any hospital] owned and operated by a corporation or association no part of the net earnings of which inures, or may lawfully inure, to the benefit of any private shareholder, group, or individual. ”
The Mississippi Commission on Hospital Care found and adjudicated by resolution duly adopted that the appellee hospital comes within the definition of a nonprofit hospital, as above defined, and that said hospital
As a consideration for the so-called “grant” of the funds in question, the appellee hospital obligated itself to maintain at least 10% of its bed capacity if needed for charity patients as provided for in the said Acts of the Legislature. It also agreed and contracted with the Commission, as provided for in said Chapter 430, Laws of 1948, that if, at any time within twenty years after the date of such grant, the hospital shall cease to be a nonprofit institution, or shall otherwise fail to meet the requirements of the Act, a lien in favor of the State shall attach to the property of the hospital, and that the State shall be entitled to recover the amount of money advanced by it to such institution, less reasonable depreciation as determined by agreement of the parties or the chancery court of the county in which such hospital or facility is located. It further covenanted and agreed that the hospital will be maintained as a privately owned nonprofit hospital and operated with a purpose of providing maximum hospital facilities to the citizenship of the State at minimum cost to the patient, as required by the statute authorizing such a grant of aid; and that said hospital and all of its facilities “shall be available at all times as a part of the state-wide hospital program sponsored by the Commission and as a part of the state-wide teaching facilities for medical technicians, nurses, medical students, internes, and resident physicians and such other medical educational needs as the Commission may determine to be necessary or desirable; . . .”. (Italics ours.) And the following is expressly admitted by the answer of the defendant in this case and it therefore
It will therefore be seen that while the statutes in question refer to the allocation of the funds as being a “grant”, the express provision of the statues fully discloses that the allocation of funds is not to be made as a grant in the sense of being a gift. In fact a grant of personal property is defined in Black’s Law Dictionary, Second Edition, 547, as “a method of transferring personal property, distinguished from a gift by being always founded on some consideration or equivalent. 2 Bl. Com. 440, 441.” And as applied to real estate, a grant is a generic term applicable to all transfers of such property, whether with or without consideration.
The record is silent as to any finding by the Mississippi Commission on Hospital Care on the issue as to whether or not the appellee, Mercy Hospital — Street Memorial, had applied for the grant for a sectarian purpose or use, within the meaning of said Section 66 of the State Constitution. Assuming that there was no donation or gratuity involved, in view of the consideration to be received by the State in return for the so-called grant under the terms of the contract hereinbefore mentioned, there would have been no need for a finding* by the Oommission that the funds were not being sought for a sectarian purpose or use, the Constitutional provision in question only prohibiting a “donation or gratuity” for such a purpose or use. However, the circuit court which heard the cause on both oral and documentary evidence without the intervention of a jury, not only sustained the findings of the Commission on Hospital Care to the effect that the appellee is a nonprofit hospital, no part of the net earnings of which inures, or may lawfully inure, to
To support the finding of the Commission and the trial court, the proof discloses (and there is no conflict in any of the evidence in the record before us) that the appellee hospital was originally incorporated as the Vicksburg Sanitarium on April 13, 1903, for a period of 50 years. The founder thereof, Dr. D. P. Street, personally guaranteed to the stockholders an 8% dividend upon their investment and he continued to pay the same until about the year 1921 or 1922, when he notified the stockholders that he would be unable to continue paying a dividend and at the same time improve and maintain the facilities of the hospital. He thereupon refunded to the stockholders their investment and took up the stock. Eventually this stock came to be owned by his brothers, Drs. George M. and Augustus Street, but no dividends or other payments in the nature of profits of any kind have been paid to the stockholders since the year 1921 or 1922. On the contrary, all of the net earnings of the hospital have been invested since that time in the development and improvement of its facilities and physical properties.
The corporation, known as the Vicksburg Sanitarium, amended its charter during the year 1935 so that it would contain, among other provisions, the following: “Provided, however, that all of the income and revenue derived from the hospital or sanitarium, and nurses’ school and home, shall be used and devoted exclusively to and for the purposes of said hospital or sanitarium and nurses’ home, and no part of the same for profit; and no dividends shall be declared or paid to the stockholders; and that said corporation, as now and heretofore may
On July 7,1943, all the corporate stock of the Vicksburg Sanitarium, aggregating 500 shares of the par value of $100 each, was acquired for the sum of $50,000, the face value thereof, by the Sisters of Mercy of Vicksburg, a corporation which was organized and chartered on November 7, 1861, under the laws of this State. The corporate members of the latter corporation are individually members of the Order, Sisters of Mercy, all of whom are of the Catholic faith.
After the acquisition of the corporate stock of the Vicksburg Sanitarium, the charter thereof was amended on August 5, 1943, so as to change the name to Mercy Hospital — Street Memorial, for the reason that the Vicksburg Sanitarium was originally founded by Dr. D. P. Street, as aforesaid, and 499 shares of the corporate stock thereof were owned in 1943 by Drs. George M. and Augustus Street when the hospital was sold in 1943 by the transfer of such stock for a small per cent of its then value, after the Drs. Street had rendered distinguished services therein to suffering humanity for nearly 40 years; and for the further reason that the Drs. Street were continuing to devote their best efforts to the success of the hospital under its new management, in which .they were to play and are still playing a most important part. The Drs. Street are members of the Protestant faith.
The sale to the Sisters of Mercy of Vicksburg in 1943, including the land, buildings, and equipment of the hospital, was accompanied merely by the assignment of the corporate stock, and the present holders thereof are the 7 members of the corporation, Sisters of Mercy of Vicksburg, and their successors, who each have an equal vote and interest with the other in regard thereto.
The hospital has been granted tax exemption as a nonprofit hospital for a number of years.
The resolution adopted by the Commission on Hospital Care, which approved the grant to the appellee hospital,
In the instant case, if we consider a gain or increase in the capital assets as a profit, the corporate charter of Mercy Hospital — Street Memorial would prohibit such profit or gain from ever being distributed to any shareholder, group, or individual.
While dividends and profits are not synonymous, the former being paid out of the latter, the fact remains that no part of the net earnings of this hospital have inured to anyone, but the earnings have been used for the enlargement and • improvement of the physical properties and other facilities, and with the necessary result of course that the corporate stock has greatly enhanced in value and to the extent that the land, buildings, and other equipment and other assets are now worth at least from one-fourtli to one-half million dollars. However, it is contemplated that under the contract between the hospital and the Mississippi Commission on Hospital Care, all of the assets of the hospital are to go into the new hospital building to be constructed from state and federal funds; that is to say, all of the assets of the hospital corporation, or the proceeds of any sale thereof, are to go into the cost of the new hospital, and no benefit therefrom is to accrue to the stockholders.
But it is argued that the appellee hospital is not a nonprofit institution because it has outstanding stock in the hands of shareholders who would ordinarily be entitled to those assets upon the expiration of its charter in 1953, or upon its dissolution at any future time. But it may be observed that the same result would follow if the hospital was a nonstock corporation. Woodville Lodge v. Poole, 190 Miss. 798, 1 So. 2d 780. At any rate, in the statute
Our Constitution does not say “no appropriation”, or “no public funds”, or “no money of the state” may be used “for a sectarian purpose or use”, but the provision is that no “donation or gratuity” shall be made for such purpose. Nor does our Constitution prohibit a grant being made to any “sectarian institution”, as do the constitutions of many other states. Even so, the grant here involved is not to the Sisters of Mercy of Vicksburg, as aforesaid, but to the appellee hospital corporation, engaged in operating a general hospital on a nonsectarian basis. However, money may be handled by a “ sectarian institution” and still not be devoted to a “ sectarian purpose or use”. Administering to the sick is not sectarian; it is done by governmental and secular agencies.
Moreover, the term “donation or gratuity” implies absence of consideration, the transfer of money or other things of value from the owner to another without any consideration. In Bouvier’s Law Dictionary, a donation is defined to be the act by which the owner of money or other things voluntarily transfers the title and possession thereof without any consideration in return. Georgia Penitentiary Co. v. Nelms, 65 Ga. 499, 504, 38 Am. Rep. 793; Indiana N. & S. Railway Co. v. City of Attica, 56 Ind. 476, 486; Roche v. Roanoke Classical Seminary, 56 Ind. 198, 202; State ex rel. Western Construction Co. v. Board of Com’rs. of Clinton County, 166
Webster defines a gratuity as being: “Given freely, without recompense, or regardless of merit. Not called for by the circumstances; unwarranted. Not involving a return, compensation, or consideration, as in gratuitous contract, one solely for the benefit of one of the parties.”
It may be conceded that words are variously defined in both legal and standard dictionaries and elsewhere, but the fact remains that the foregoing definitions are in accord with the common acceptation of the meaning of the term “donation or gratuity”. When Section 66 of our Constitution was adopted in 1890, all of the people —Protestants, Catholics, Jews, and those of no religious affiliation at all — met on a common level, through their chosen delegates in the convention, and agreed on the precise limitation which should be placed upon the legislative power in regard to granting funds for a sectarian purpose or use, and they declared that “no law granting a donation or gratnffy . . . shall be enacted . . . ” for such a purpose or use. It is to be assumed that the words of this brief constitutional provision on such an all-important question were chosen advisedly, and expressed the full measure of the convention’s determination and concern in that behalf. It would have been an easy matter to have provided therein that no money of the state should ever be used, or authorized by the Legislature to be expended, for such a purpose or use, but the convention chose to prohibit only a “donation or gratuity” therefor.
In Cooley’s Const. Lim. 54 it is said: “The object of construction, as applied to a written constitution is to give effect to the intent of the people when adopting it.”
The words “grant and convey” are familiar expressions in deeds executed for a valuable consideration. The substitution of the word “donate” in a conveyance would be generally understood to mean that the conveyance was intended to be without consideration. We are therefore of the opinion that a donation and a grant are not synonymous, as used in our Constitution and the statute in question.
However, we are relieved of the difficulty in the instant case as to whether the use of the word “grant” in the statute in question was used in the sense of a donation, for the reason that the statute by its plain provisions has clearly disclosed that the so-called “grant” of funds therein mentioned were for valuable considerations in return, and therefore in no sense a donation. But there is an early case from Texas, Fisk v. Flores, decided in
A decision of affirmance herein might well rest alone upon the two grounds: (1) that we are not justified in reversing the trial court and the finding of the Commission on Hospital Care on the issue of fact, based on undisputed evidence, that the appellee, Mercy Hospital— Street Memorial, is a nonprofit hospital within the definition of the said Act of Congress and the said statute in question, and (2) that the payment of the funds in question by the Commission on Hospital Care to the said hospital for the considerations contracted for, is not eith
Por the purpose of stating our views, it may be conceded that the corporation, Sisters of Mercy of Vicksburg, and the appellee, Mercy Hospital — Street Memorial, are both sectarian institutions, and such is the opinion of the three judges who are concurring in this decision, the same as it is of those dissenting hereto, for the reason that the corporate stock of the latter is owned by the former corporation, which is admittedly sectarian. The concurring judges do not concede, however, that the grant is for a sectarian purpose or use, and particularly within the meaning of Section 66 of our Constitution. The operation of a hospital may be for a charitable, benevolent, and philanthropic purpose without being operated for a sectarian purpose.
The appellee, Mercy Hospital — Street Memorial, the incorporators of which were mostly, if not altogether, Protestants, obtained the right under the charter of the Vicksburg Sanitarium to establish only a sanitarium for the treatment of the sick and injured and a school and home for nurses, with no authority expressed therein for teaching any particular religious beliefs, and which hospital was admittedly operated on a nonsectarian basis from 1903 until 1943, and since its incorporation no change has been made in its charter up to the present time so as to enlarge these charter powers — the only changes made since 1903 in the charter being those made in 1935 to prohibit any of the earnings of the hospital
Even though in 1943 the corporate stock of this hospital, which was chartered 42 years after the charter was granted to the corporation, Sisters of Mercy of Vicksburg, is now owned by the latter corporation, it has been definitely agreed as a part of the contract with the Commission on Hospital Care that the appellee hospital is now operated as a nonsectarian hospital, its bylaws adopted to that effect having been submitted as a part of the application for the fund in question, and as a part thereof, and presumably the contract executed by the appellee Mercy Hospital- — Street Memorial with the Commission is to be carried out in good faith.
All matters of policy and the management of the appellee hospital are vested in a Hospital Adminstrative Board, selected without regard to religious affiliation. The bylaws of the Mercy Hospital — Street Memorial contain, among other provisions, the following: “Article I, Section 2: This Company shall in all respects be conducted as a non-profit, non-sectarian community service institution. No part of the net earnings of this hospital shall inure to the benefit of any private member, stockholder, group or individual.”
Article IX, Section 2, of the bylaws of the hospital, provides: “The Board of Directors shall name a Hospital Administrative Board of ten members who shall elect a chairman from their number.
“The Hospital Administrative Board shall be selected so as to insure that said hospital shall be a community hospital and the members thereof shall be determined without regard to denomination or creed.” (Italics ours.)
Article III, Section 9, of the bylaws of the appellee hospital expressly requires that the Board of Directors shall delegate to the Hospital Administrative Board the
The Board of Directors, which is composed of not less than five of the corporate members of “The Sisters of Mercy of .Vicksburg” name three members of the Hospital Administrative Board, who may be Sisters, but who are not required to be. The medical staff of the appellee hospital, composed of twenty-one doctors who at this time happen to all be members of the Protestant faith, name three members of the Hospital Administrative Board, who may be, but are not required to be, physicians. The six members of said Board so named get together and name three lay people of any religious denomination to make out the nine members of the Board, who name another person as chairman thereof. It so happens that at the present time the Hospital Administrative Board is composed of five Catholics and five Protestants. Vicksburg is a Catholic center in this state. The appellee Mercy Hospital; — Street Memorial, is open to the public of all races, creeds and faiths as well as to those who profess no religious belief. Religion is not taught in the hospital nor are there any Bibles, or other religious books or literature distributed therein. Crucifixes are in the hospital rooms, but since a crucifix is a cross bearing an effigy of Christ crucified — a Christian emblem — its use is not confined to one church alone. Its presence could neither cause a Protestant or Jew to embrace the Catholic faith, nor could its absence cause a Catholic to relinquish his beliefs in favor of the Protestant or Jewish religion. No patient would likely stay so long.
Each minister of the Gospel in Vicksburg, whether Protestant, Catholic, or Jew, is notified daily by the hospital authorities of the arrival of any patient of his
The business manager of the hospital belongs to the Christian Church. Graduate and student nurses are accepted without regard to religious affiliation. Out of the number of approximately 75 students and graduate nurses (most of whom are Protestants and required to attend their own church at least once a month) only two or three of the nurses are Sisters, wearing uniforms of the Sisterhood. There are only eight Sister nurses in all at the hospital, one of whom is an administrator of the hospital, another of whom has charge of the dietary and food services, and the third of whom is in charge of the hospital’s bookkeeping department. These eight Sisters receive for their services only the total sum of $1,500 per month for the eight of them, a sum barely sufficient to meet their actual necessities, although the three executives specifically mentioned above are filling positions which would ordinarily command a salary of from $5;000 to $8,000 per annum.
The conduct of the hospital does not differ in any respect from that of any other general hospital of comparable size and similarly located for carrying on the work of administering to the sick.
No part of the physical properties or other assets of the hospital corporation has been accumulated by the contribution of any funds from the Catholic Church or any other church, or from the Sisters of Mercy of Vicksburg; nor do any of the earnings of the hospital go into the treasury of the Catholic Church or any other church, or into the treasury of the Sisters of Mercy of Vicksburg, Incorporated. It should be kept in mind that the corporation, Sisters of Mercy of Vicksburg, is not a party to this suit, and has -neither applied for nor been granted any funds by the Commission on Hospital Care.
Section 86 of the Mississippi Constitution of 1890 contemplates, among other things, that “the legislature
If there be apprehension that when the charter of the Mercy Hospital — Street Memorial shall expire on April 13, 1953, the owners of the corporate stock therein may fail to have the charter renewed and allow it to lapse so that upon dissolution the stockholders may claim the capital assets, including the new building and equipment, as their own, or for the Catholic Church, notwithstanding that the assets belong to the Corporation, Sisters of Mercy, to which the stock was sold by the Drs. Street, and also claim the right to operate the hospital, or dispose of the same, in disregard of the contractual agreement of the Mercy Hospital — Street Memorial with the Commission, and that they will assert their right to do so as individual shareholders, or that the Sisters of Mercy, Incorporated, will undertake to do so, freed of any obligation to carry out the solemn contract with the state to render the services hereinbefore mentioned, such apprehension may be dispelled by the fact that under the contract with the Commission, and Chapter 430, Laws of 1948, a lien would immediately attach in favor of the state for the funds advanced under this grant, for failure to continue to operate the hospital as a nonprofit institution for 20 years and render the services to the state as contemplated.
Moreover, such a scheme to obtain the grant with the purpose of breaching the contract and getting a new
As to what may happen beyond the 20 years’ period of service contracted for, it is contemplated that a long-range hospital program for such a period will enable the state to get value received in the performance of a service by the hos'pital to the indigent sick and from the other benefits contracted for, in fulfillment of the state’s constitutional authority and governmental function; and that this will furnish a valuable consideration in return for the grant and prevent it from being a donation or gratuity.
In 59 C. J. Section 342, p. 203, the general law is stated: “A constitutional limitation, express or implied, on gifts of public money does not generally apply to a disbursement, appropriation, or other fiscal statute for a public purpose to carry out a function of the government or to discharge the obligation of the state, although only a moral or equitable obligation.”
In Craig, State Auditor v. North Mississippi Community Hospital, 206 Miss. 11, 39 So. (2d) 523, 528,
In its petition for mandamus the North Mississippi Community Hospital described itself as a “non-profit, nonsectarian corporation”, which was admitted by the demurrer.
The Court, following the petitioner’s own description of itself in that ease, held that “the legislature has the authority to appropriate public funds out of the state treasury for the care of the indigent sick in the nonprofit, nonsectarian hospitals in this state in accordance with the above quoted Section 86 of the Constitution, particularly where the expenditure of such funds for such purposes is under the supervision and control of a state agency.” In other words, the decision was limited to the case then before the Court wherein it was admitted that the hospital involved in that case was nonprofit, and nonsectarian. There was no attempt to infer what the future might hold for any other hospital. No sectarian problem was there involved, since the institution was admitted to be nonsectarian, and the question of whether or not the grant in that case was a “donation or gratuity” for a “sectarian purpose or use” under Section 66 of the Constitution did not arise for the consideration and decision of the court in that case, it being admitted by the demurrer that the grant of funds was not for a sectarian purpose or use, as hereinbefore stated.
It is of interest, however, that in the recent case of Bedford County Hospital v. Browning, 225 S. W. (2d)
Also, on May 20, 1949, the Supreme Court of Kentucky, in the case of Kentucky Building Commission v. Effron, 310 Ky. 355, 220 S. W. (2d) 836, 838, when construing Section 5 of their Constitution which provides that, “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”, and where one of the hospitals was controlled and governed by Episcopalians and the other by Catholics,, held as follows: “It is well settled that a private agency may be utilized as the pipeline through which a public expenditure is made, the test being not who receives the money, but the character or the use for which it is expended. 51 Am. Jur., Section 390, p. 381; Hager v. Kentucky Children’s Home Society, 119 Ky. 235, 83 S. W. 605, 67 L. R. A. 815; Orphan Society of Lexington v. Fayette County, 6 Bush 413, 69 Ky. 413; Robinson v. Mercer Fiscal Court, 218 Ky. 452, 291 S. W. 721.” (Italics ours.)
In this Kentucky case there was involved a grant to certain hospitals, and one of them, ‘ ‘ Our Lady of Peace ’ ’,
Now, referring to the cases relied upon by the Attorney General in the case at bar, the purport of which may seem to be in conflict with what has been above stated, it will be found that the section of the state constitution involved in the case of State ex rel. Nevada Orphan Asylum v. Hallock, 16 Nev. 373, reads as follows: “No public funds of any kind or character whatever, state, county, or municipal, shall be used for sectarian purposes”, article 11, Section 10, whereas Section 66 of our Constitution provides that: “No law granting a donation or gratuity . . . shall be enacted . . . for a sectarian purpose or use.” The two provisions are vastly different. Nevada says “No public funds of any kind or character . . ., shall be used for sectarian purposes”, whereas Mississippi says no “donation or gratuity” shall be made for such a purpose. Our Constitution leaves the Legislature free to make a grant for a valuable consideration in return, whereas Nevada pre
The provision of the Constitution of South Dakota, article 6, Section 3, involved in the case of Synod of Dakota v. State, 2 S. D. 366, 50 N. W. 632, 633, 14 L. R. A. 418, reads: “No money or property of the state shall be given or appropriated for the benefit of any sectarian or religious society or institution,” whereas Mississippi only forbids a donation or a gratuity for such purpose. In the South Dakota case the institution to which the appropriation was made was chartered and organized “to maintain and promulgate the doctrines and belief of the Christian religion, and of the sect known as ‘Presbyterians.’ ” The grant was held to be in violation of the constitution on the ground that the State is not only prohibited' from giving or donating said funds, but from appropriating them at all. The decision hung on the words “or appropriated”. No donation was claimed, a consideration in return was involved, but the Court said that under the above constitutional provision “the state is not only prohibited from giving or donating state funds, but from appropriating them.”
The provision of the Georgia Constitution 1877, art. 1, Section 1, par. 14, involved in Bennett v. LaGrange, 153 Ga. 428, 112 S. E. 482, 22 A. L. R. 1312, reads: “No money shall ever be taken from the public Treasury directly or indirectly, in aid of any church, sect, or . . . religionists, or of any sectarian institution”. In other words, Georgia says “No money shall ever be taken from the public Treasury ... in aid of . . . any church, . . . or of any sectarian institution”, whereas Mississippi says no “donation or gratuity” shall be made for a sectarian purpose or use. Therefore, in the Georgia case a contract with the Salvation Army, a sectarian institution, to care for the poor of the City of LaGrange, violated the constitution; that is to say, the fact that the city received a consideration, or whether
The LaGrange case was followed in Richter v. City of Savannah, 160 Ga. 178, 127 S. E. 739, and the same distinctions were applicable, with the addition that the hospital was operated under a rule and regulation providing: “This institution is incorporated and owned by the Sisters of Mercy, and it is intended to be operated from the standpoint of a religious order.” The very opposite facts exist in the present case, where the bylaws of the Mercy Hospital — Street Memorial expressly declare: “Article I. Sec. 2: This company shall in all respects be conducted as a non-profit, non-sectarian community service institution.”
The provision of the Illinois Constitution before the Court in Cook County v. Chicago Industrial School, 125 Ill. 540, 18 N. E. 183, 197, 1 L. R. A. 437, 8 Am. St. Rep. 386, reads: “Neither the general assembly ... or other public corporation, shall ever make any appropriation or pay from any public fund whatever, anything in aid of any church or sectarian purpose . . .; nor shall any grant or donation of land, money, or other personal property ever be made by the state or any such public corporation, to any church, or for any sectarian purpose.” Smith-Hurd Stats. Const. art. 8, Section 3.
The difference between this provision and Section 66 of our Constitution will be readily seen. In that case there was public money paid to a sectarian institution for a consideration, the tuition and maintenance of indigent girls, and the Court could not have found that the appropriation was in violation of the latter part of
But the strongest case relied upon by the Attorney General is that of Collins v. Kephart, State Treasurer, et al., 271 Pa. 428, 117 A. 440, 442, which involved a provision in the Constitution of Pennsylvania, which reads : "No appropriations, except for pensions or gratuities for military services, shall be made for charitable, educational or benevolent purposes, to any person or community, nor to any denominational or sectarian institution, corporation or association”. P. S. Const, art. 3, Section 18. (Italics ours.) While the principles announced by the Court in that case, and the strong argument for the complete separation of church and state, are very persuasive as to the intent of such constitutional provisions, as forbidding the state from giving any recognition, even in the fields of public charity and education, we are of the opinion that since the Pennsylvania Court in writing its opinion had before it five suits in equity to restrain the payment of moneys appropriated directly to denominational sectarian institutions, in each instance, without requiring any consideration in return (which would be material and controlling in the present case under all the facts), the decision turned on the point set forth by the Court in its opinion when it said: "It will be noted the Constitution does not say
Pennsylvania would not look to the purpose or use to which state aid was put, but only to the nature of the institution. The state was prohibited from using a sectarian institution as a medium for the performance of governmental duty. In Mississippi, such is not the case. Moreover, it is not shown that the Mercy PIospital- — Street Memorial, although a sectarian institution in that its corporate stock is owned by a sectarian corporation intends to use the funds in question for a sectarian purpose or use. The new hospital is to be devoted to the work of administering to the sick — a nonsectarian purpose or use, — the same as it was before its sale to the Sisters of Mercy in 1943 so far as its operation without regard to religious affiliation is concerned; that is to say it is to operate under the same charter powers and for the same purposes authorized by the charter of the Vicksburg Sanitarium granted in 1903 to its Protestant incorporators, as vouchsafed by the bylaws made a part of the application for the funds in question.
We do not contend that the foregoing decisions relied on by the appellant, State Auditor, are not controlling here merely because the constitutional provision involved in each of them was not couched in the same language as Section 66 of our Constitution, but because in our opinion the constitutional provisions under consideration in those cases are different in substance from our Constitutional provision here under consideration.
The ease of Bradfield v. Roberts, 175 U. S. 291, 20 S. Ct. 121, 44 L. Ed. 168, is decisive of the question of
It is contended by the appellant that this Court “has already adjudicated the petitioner to be a religious society and pointed out its sectarian nature in the case of Maas v. Sisters of Mercy of Vicksburg et al., 135 Miss. 505, 99 So. 468, but we do not find that the petitioner, for the writ of mandamus in the instant case to whom the grant of state and federal funds is sought to be made, to wit, Mercy Hospital — Street Memorial, with such provisions of its bylaws as are made a part of its contract with the Commission on Hospital Care now before us, was in any manner involved in that suit. Ordinarily the character of the appellee hospital in the instant case would be determined by its own rights and powers under its charter as a separate and distinct corporation from that of Sisters of Mercy of Vicksburg, which was incorporated 42 years prior to the granting of the charter of the appellee hospital, embodying no sectarian purpose among its charter powers granted to Protestant incorporators.
We think that the finding of the Commission on Hospital Care and of the Circuit Court that the hospital is a nonprofit institution, and that the grant in question is not a donation or gratuity at all, is amply supported by the oral and documentary evidence in the case, and that therefore the judgment appealed from should be affirmed.
Since preparing the original draft of this opinion, we have carefully examined the cases relied upon in the dissenting opinion, and have reexamined the cases relied upon in the briefs of counsel hereinbefore discussed, and we do not feel justified in giving them any different construction and application than that hereinbefore set forth.
The writer would not attempt to justify an opinion of such great length as this one, bnt will say in mitigation that he has been prompted to write at such length because of the great importance of the issues involved, and the status of many other applicants for grants from these funds may be affected hereby.
Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
Risking an accusation of intolerance and bigotry, I am impelled to dissent from the controlling opinion in this case. There are six hospitals in this state owned and operated by religious denominations, three Protestant and three Catholic. No doubt they are all interested in obtaining grants for the expansion and improvement of their facilities, and no doubt it is purely accidental that the first of these institutions making an application and bringing a test suit happens to be the appellee in this case. I would much prefer that the applicant be the Baptist Hospital, to which faith I adhere, so that my views of the questions before us would not be misinterpreted. I approach the matter with a full realization of the great humanitarian work being done by these denominational hospitals to all patients regardless of faith or creed, and nothing herein is intended to disparage the usefulness of these institutions nor the sincerity and unselfishness of those who have dedicated their lives to such altruistic purposes. If the appellee here were the Mississippi Baptist Hospitals, my views would be the same.
This country was discovered and populated by persons of many creeds and faiths, including primarily
But the more serious question presents itself: What will be the status of the property of appellee upon the termination of its charter in 1953? In the case of Woodville Lodge v. Poole, 190 Miss. 798, 1 So. (2d) 780, this court held that upon termination of a nonstock corporation its assets are vested in the surviving members. It is well established that upon termination of a stock corporation, its assets are vested in the stockholders. So in either ease here the result is the same because the members of the appellee corporation are one and the same as the members of the Sisters of Mercy Corporation, in whose name appellee’s outstanding capital stock is held. The title to all of appellee’s property will therefore become vested in the Sisters of Mercy whose status as a religious society will be discussed later herein.
I am unable to bring myself into agreement with the assertion in the controlling opinion that appellee is a private hospital as distinguished from a sectarian hospital. The record here shows that its hospital is decorated with religious property and that there is a crucifix on display in every room, including those rooms to which charity patients are and will be admitted; the crucifix is generally recognized in this state as an emblem of the Roman Catholic Church and as a symbol of its faith.. I have never heard of its use by any other church in this state or section. Every member of appellee’s board of directors is and at all times must be a member of the Sisters of Mercy. Much emphasis is laid upon the fact that on October 8, 1949, these directors adopted bylaws whereby the general policy of the hospital was placed
The record in this case shows that there has been no material change in the status of the Sisters of Mercy since the decision of this court in the case of Maas v.
“The Sisters of Mercy of the Catholic Church is an organization through which the Catholic Church carries on a large part of its religious, charitable, and educational work. It is a monastic sisterhood, established in Ireland by Catherine McAuley in 1827. Notwithstanding its origin is comparatively recent, the society has extended its charitable, religious, and educational work over a large part of the earth. The members of this sisterhood, as shown by the evidence in this case, are governed by the constitution, laws, and usages as laid down in the following authorities, which were properly identified at the trial and introduced in evidence: Volume 10, Catholic Encyclopedia, pages 199 to 200; Bules and Constitutions of the Religious Sisters of Mercy, published by the Baltimore Publishing Company, containing 78 pages; Religious Profession, a commentary on a chapter of the new code of canon law by Hector Papi, S. J., Professor of Canon Law, Woodstock College, published by P. J. Kennedy & Sons, New York, containing 81 pages; Catechism of the New Religious Provision, translated from the French, and revised in conformity with the new code.
“It will be observed from the constitution and bylaws of the society that, after a given course of service and training preparatory thereto, the Sisters of Mercy take vows of poverty and obedience.
“By the vow of poverty the Sisters of Mercy in substance bind themselves to be entirely disengaged from the love of the things of this world; that they will be ‘content with the food and raiment allowed them, and willing at all times to give up whatever has been allotted to them; that they will not give or receive any present without permission from the Mother Superior, and when, with her permission, they receive any present from their relatives or other persons, it must be considered as for*464 the use of the community and not for the particular use of the receiver. By the vow of obedience they forever renounce their own will and bind themselves to become resigned to and follow the direction of their superiors. The vow concludes with the language that ‘they shall obey the call of the bell as the voice of God.’
“The ‘Catechism of the Religious Profession’ defines what the oath of poverty means. In substance it is that it effectually deprives the members of the society of all right'to own property in their individual capacity, and places them in a state of material subjection and dependence to their superiors; that any property owned by a sister at the time of profession, as well as any property she may thereafter acquire by legacy, inheritance, conveyance, or otherwise, shall inure to the benefit of the society; that the Sisters of Mercy receiving property shall be deprived of the ‘use and usufruct of such property as well as of the free and independent disposal thereof; that even the bare legal title cannot be disposed of by the holder thereof without the permission of the governing authorities; that all property owned or acquired by the members of the society shall be community property, that is, the use thereof shall go alone for the benefit of the society; that a Sister shall depend alone on the food, raiment, and support furnished her by the society, which shall be the same as furnished to every member thereof. No member of the society shall have any right to or claim under any circumstances more than her support for the time she is a member. See pages 55, 56, 58, 59, 60, 64, 70, 71, 76, 78, 79, 110. Withdrawal or dismissal from the society is permitted with the approval of the Pope. When withdrawal or dismissal takes place all the property acquired by the Sister during her membership belongs to the society;, she takes none of it with her.
“Clearly the constitution, bylaws, and usages of the Sisters of Mercy constitute, so far as they deal with their*465 civil rights, a binding contract between them, provided, of course, the Constitution and laws of the state are not violated. So far as the ownership of property is concerned, the members of the society are simply trustees for the benefit of the society. ’ ’
In the opinion on suggestion of error in the Maas case, the court elaborated further upon what was shown in the record and said: “In the article referred to in the Catholic Encyclopedia it is stated that, after the organization of the society of Sisters of Mercy, a question arose as to whether it should be a religious society, and that a vote was taken and the society unanimously decided to become a religious society. ... In said book, Rules and Constitutions of the Religious Sisters of Mercy, second part, chapter 1, we find the following: ‘This religious congregation shall be always subject to the authority and jurisdiction of the Diocesan Bishop, and the Sisters shall respect and obey him as their principal superior after the Holy See.’ ”
Based on these undisputed findings this court held that a devise to members of the Sisters of Mercy, in their individual capacity, was, in effect, a devise to the society and void under our Mortmain Statutes as they existed at the time of the Maas decision because there was a resulting trust in favor of the society “by means of which, if enforced, the Mortmain Statutes would be completely circumvented.” The conclusion of the court was that the devise was void for this reason.
I have reviewed at length this history of the Sisters of Mercy for the reason that the controlling opinion .states that the nature and character of the appellee hospital in this case is to be determined by its own rights and powers under its charter as a separate and distinct corporation from that of the Sisters of Mercy. The controlling opinion says “No part of the physical properties or other assets of the hospital corporation has been accumulated by the contribution of any funds from the Catholic
Again, with due deference, I have searched the record in vain to find anything in the contract to support the statement in the controlling opinion ‘ ‘. . . it has been definitely agreed as a part of the contract with the Commission on Hospital Care that the appellee hospital is now operated as a nonsectarian hospital.” If it is in the contract I am unable to find it. Two days before approval of the grant by the commission the appellee did adopt some bylaws and did file them with the commission, but, as elsewhere pointed out herein, these bylaws specifically provide in the very last article thereof “These by-laws may be amended, repealed or alerted in whole or in part by a majority vote of the entire outstanding stock of the company at any regular meeting of the stockholders or at any special meeting where such action has been announced in the call and notice of such meeting.” Thus the commission and all who may examine its files were put on notice that the Sisters of Mercy (for they compose all the stockholders) reserve the right to change the bylaws at any time.
Reviewing the record as to the rights and powers of appellee, briefly summarized, it is this: All its stock is owned by Sisters of Mercy; all its corporate members are and shall always be members of that society; all its board of directors are and shall always be selected from the members of the Sisters of Mercy; these members are always subject to the authority and jurisdiction of the Diocesan Bishop; they can own
In the case of Bennett v. City of LaGrange, 153 Ga. 428, 112 S. E. 482, 486, 22 A. L. R. 1312, there was under review a contract between the city and the Salvation Army whereby the latter had contracted to handle chari
It is also worthy of note at this point that in the annotation following the report of the above case, in 22 A. L. R. at page 1319, it is said: “The weight of authority is to the effect that a contract between a state, county, city or other political subdivision and a sectarian institution, whereby the former agress to pay the latter for services rendered or expenditures incurred thereunder, is within the meaning of a constitutional provision inhibiting the use of public funds in aid of sectarian institutions, and void. ’ ’
A similar question was again before the Georgia Supreme Court in the case of Richter v. Mayor & Aldermen of the City of Savannah, 160 Ga. 178, 127 S. E. 739, when the City of Savannah was prohibited from making an appropriation for the support of St. Joseph’s Hospital, owned and operated by the Savannah Institute Sisters of Mercy, a corporation. In that case the court said that the Sisters of Mercy and the hospital are sectarian insti
In the case of Collins v. Kephart, 271 Pa. 428, 117 A. 440, there was involved the question whether grants of public funds to four different hospitals were in violation of a provision of the Pennsylvania Constitution which provides “No appropriation . . . shall be made for charitable, educational or benevolent purposes to . . . any denominational or sectarian institution, corporation or association.” P. S. Const, art. 3, Section 18. One of these was Passavant Hospital of Pittsburgh, owned by a corporation whose charter provided that the persons composing the society are members of the Evangelical Lutheran Church and that the directors, though two might be laymen, must be members of said church in good and regular standing. Another of the hospitals under consideration was St. Timothy’s Memorial Hospital and House of Mercy, a corporation composed of members of the Protestant Episcopal Church. The third was Dubois Hospital Association, a corporation, owned and operated by another corporation called Sisters of Mercy of Crawford and Erie Counties, composed of members of the Roman Catholic Church. The fourth was Jewish Hospital Association, a corporation, under control of persons of the Jewish faith, but neither the chief physician nor the chief nurse was a Jew. These hospitals, without exception, admitted all persons without distinction as to race, color or religion. There was also involved in this same decision an appropriation to Duquesne University of the Holy Ghost, an incorporated educational institution; it was pointed out that the words “Holy Ghost” were used “in recognition of the relation existing between said corporation and another distinct Catholic organization known as ‘The Society of the Holy Ghost,’ ” just as the word “Mercy” in the corporate title of appellee in the case at bar unquestionably was selected in recognition of the relation existing between appellee and
Section 86 of the Mississippi Constitution says “It shall be the duty of the legislature to provide by law for the treatment and care of the insane; and the legislature may provide for the care of the indigent sick in the hospitals in the state.” It will be noted that there is a positive obligation to provide for the treatment and care of the insane, but only a permissive authority to provide for the care of the indigent sick. Now, the controlling opinion emphasizes the fact that this section mentions the hospitals in this state and not merely the hospitals of this state, but it is a well known rule of constitutional construction that all portions of the constitution must be considered together, each as limiting the other, and if
Adverting to the question of the legislative duty, regardless of whether it be obligatory, to provide for the care of the indigent sick in the hospitals in this state, and whether “in this state” means all hospitals, sectarian and otherwise, it is significant to note what was said by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in answer to this very question in the case of Collins v. Martin, 290 Pa. 388, 139 A. 122, 125, 55 A. L. R 311: “Whether the charitable work is compulsory or discretionary, the performance is controlled by the Constitution. No function of government can be discharged in disregard of or in opposition to, the fundamental law. If the performance of the proposed function can be done only in one way and
The controlling opinion in the case at bar proceeds upon the theory that the grant here in question is neither a gratuity nor a donation for the reason that it is supported by a valuable consideration, to wit, an agreement on the part of appellee to operate a hospital and maintain 10% of its beds for charity patients. The courts have frequently had occasion to deal with such contracts between a state agency and a sectarian institution. For instance, in Collins v. Martin, supra, the very same argument was advanced and the court said in response thereto: “Even if it be conceded that the arrangement entered into between the department and the hospital represents the purchase of a commodity, the all-important fact still remains that, by virtue of that very arrangement, and payment under the act of 1925, the sectarian institution is enabled to furnish the commodity — care of the indigent sick — and it is thereby enabled to do it as a sectarian institution. It still exists as such, and, even though no profit be made, or though the compensation covers only the cost, or less, the institution is thereby, to that extent, enabled to function as a sectarian institution, and on the people’s money.”
The case of Synod of Dakota v. State, 2 S. D. 366, 50 N. W. 632, 635, 14 L. R. A. 418, is directly contrary to the contentions of appellee. In that case the Presbyterian Synod operated an educational'institution under the name of Pierre University, to which students of all faiths were admitted. The board of education was authorized by the legislature to discharge the state’s obligation to train teachers by designating educational institutions where students should be taught the methods and practice of teaching in the common schools and to pay out of the public funds the tuition of the students availing themselves of this educational opportunity. Under the direction of the board of education the university set up and operated a special department known as the ‘ ‘Normal Department” which adopted the course of study prescribed by the board of education and conformed in every respect to its regulations. The university applied for payment of tuition accrued under its contract and upon refusal brought suit against the state to recover it. The constitution of So.uth Dakota, article 6, Section 3, provides that “No money or property of the state shall be given or appropriated for the benefit of any sectarian or religious society or institution” and in denying recovery by the university the Supreme Court of South Dakota
It is interesting to note that the controlling opinion herein merely brushes aside the last cited case with the statement that the aforesaid provision of the Illinois Constitution is not couched in the same language 'as Section 66 of the Mississippi Constitution, and it is startling that the controlling opinion then says that the Illinois Supreme Court “could not have found that the appropriation was in violation of the latter part of such constitutional provision, for the reason that it was not a ‘gratuity or donation.’” The quoted statement is an almost verbatim replica from the brief for appellee herein and most assuredly could not have been made from a close study of the Cook County case, supra, for therein the Illinois Supreme Court very plainly held to the contrary when it said:
“It is strenuously contended by counsel that Section 3 was only intended to prohibit gifts or donations, and that it refers to ‘state support, gifts by way of aid,’ and ‘ appropriations to be used by managers of religious institutions, without restraint or liability to account.’ The theory seems to be that, even if the two institutions are controlled by a church, and are to be the recipients of all the money paid to appellee, yet neither they nor their purposes are aided by such payment, provided only there is a consideration for the money paid. It is said that these institutions furnish tuition and clothing in return for the money received by them; and that, as they earn what they get, and are not the recipients of any gift or donation, nothing is paid in their ‘aid,’ ‘or to help sup'port or sustain’ them. The refjised propositions assert the contrary of the view thus contended for.
“The doctrine here contended for is an exceedingly dangerous one. In County of McLean v. Humphreys, 104 Ill. 378, it is intimated by this court that the state is under obligations to protect and educate such classes of female infants as were declared to be dependent girls by section 3 of the act of May 28, 1879, as that section stood before it was amended on June 26, 1885. Under this view, the industrial schools which teach and care for such girls are performing, as substitutes for the state, a duty which the state itself is bound to perform. If they are entitled to be paid out of the public funds', even though they are under the control of sectarian denominations, simply because they relieve the state of a burden which it would otherwise be itself required to bear, then there is nothing to prevent all public education from becoming subjected, by hasty and unwise legislation, to sectarian influences. By section 1 of article 8 of the constitution it is made the duty of the state to provide a thorough and efficient system of free schools.
“If statutes are passed under which the management of these schools shall get into the hands of sectarian institutions, then, under the theory contended for, the prohibition of the constitution will be powerless to prevent the money of the taxpayers from being used to
Summarizing the holding of the Illinois court it was that a contribution of public funds cannot be justified merely because it was in furtherance or aid of an obligation which the state owes to its citizens, and this is true regardless of whether there is or is not a consideration furnished for the funds so used, and it is still a contribution even though there may be value received therefor.
The salient principles of law quoted from the numerous authorities hereinbefore mentioned are all brushed aside in the controlling opinion, as they were in the brief for appellee, with the simple statement that the constitutional provisions of these various states are not couched in the same language as Section 66 of our own Constitution. The case of Bradfield v. Roberts, 175 U. S. 291, 20 S.Ct. 121, 123, 44 L.Ed. 168, which the controlling-opinion says is decisive of the question before us might also be brushed aside by the same process of reasoning because the only constitutional provision there involved was that portion of the first amendment to the. Constitution of the United States which provides “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion.” But the facts in that case were that Providence Hospital, there in question, a corporation domiciled in the District of Columbia and created by an Act of Congress wherein Congress specifically reserved the
The controlling opinion cites the case of Chance v. Mississippi State Textbook Rating & Purchasing Board, 190 Miss. 453, 200 So. 706, 713, and says that therein this court took high ground on the question as to what is meant by the separation of church and state. Let us analyze that “high ground”. The Chance case had under consideration the question whether Chapter 202, Laws of 1940, violated Section 208 of the Mississippi Constitution which provides: “No religious or other sect or sects shall ever control any part of the school or other educational funds of this state; nor shall any funds be appropriated toward the support of any sectarian school, or to any school that at the time of receiving such appropriation is not conducted as a free school.” The court pointed out in its opinion that under Section 23 of said Chapter 202, Laws of 1940, it was provided that “This act is intended to furnish a plan for the adoption, purchase, distribution, care and use of free textbooks to be loaned to the pupils in the elementary schools of Mississippi. The books herein provided by the board shall be distributed and loaned free of cost to the children .”. The court also pointed out that the books were not purchased out of the school funds of the state
The controlling opinion also cites Bedford County Hospital et al. v. Browning, Tenn. Sup., 225 S. W. (2d) 41, and quotes only one sentence therefrom. An examination of that case shows that Tennessee had adopted a statute similar to that of Mississippi whereby that state formulated a state wide hospital program so that it might take advantage of the provisions for hospital aid made by the Hill-Burton Federal Act, 42 U. S. C. A. Section 291 et seq. Several Tennessee hospitals qualified for grants under this law, and the opinion clearly shows that not a single one of them was operated by any religious sect. There was no question of a sectarian use of the funds, but the sole contention was that the Tennessee Constitution, article 2, Section 31, which provides ‘ ‘ The credit of this State shall not be hereafter loaned or given to or in aid of
I have herein above discussed every case, save one, which is cited in the controlling opinion as dealing with the constitutional question involved and in all sincerity I believe that not one of them supports the conclusion therein reached. The only case which even remotely tends to support it is Kentucky Building Commission v. Effron, 310 Ky. 355, 220 S. W. (2d) 836, in which there was raised the constitutionality of the Kentucky statutes creating a statewide hospital program similar to that of Mississippi. It was contended that grants to a hospital whose board of trustees were all of the Episcopalian faith and another hospital whose trustees were all of the Catholic faith were in violation of Section 5 of the Kentucky Constitution which provides “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. ’ ’ This is quite
Coming now to the provisions of Section 66 of our Constitution, it provides that “No law granting a donation or gratuity in favor of any person or object shall be enacted . . . for a sectarian purpose or use. ’ ’ It will be noted that this section uses the word “donation” and the word “gratuity” in the disjunctive, but the controlling opinion treats them as if they mean exactly the same thing. Thereby the framers of the Constitution are held to have used superfluous words,
The controlling opinion takes' from Bouvier’s Law Dictionary one of the definitions of "donation”, but when we lift mere definitions from court opinions (as is done throughout in Bouvier) it is always necessary to go to the entire opinion to see just what facts the court had under consideration. It is possible to prove almost anything by quoting some brief passage from the Bible where the connecting passages are ignored. I have given Webster’s definition of "grant” and "donation” from which it appears that the two words are used interchangeably, and it must be remembered that we are here dealing with what the statute calls a "grant”. It is a well settled rule governing constitutional interpretations that "The court will look to the dominant object to be accomplished by the constitutional provisions rather than to a literal or technical interpretation.” W. Horace Williams Co. v. Federal Credit Co., 198 Miss. 111, 119, 21 So. (2d) 582, 583. Is it i;ot proper to inquire what was the dominant object to be accomplished by Section 66? Clearly it was intended to maintain inviolate the separation of church and state and to prevent the grant of public funds to the use of a sectarian institution. Those who framed the constitution came from all walks of life; some were lawyers, some were business men, some were farmers. Many were not skilled in legal phraseology or definitions taken from court opinions; they adopted language in its ordinary understanding and interpretation. ‘' Subtility and refinement and astuteness are not admissible to explain away an expression of the sovereign will. The framers of the constitution, and the people who adopted it, must be understood to have intended the words employed in that sense most likely
From these authorities it is plain that the word ‘ ‘ donation” as used in our Constitution, construed in the light of Webster’s definition, which is certainly the common understanding and popular signification and meaning, is one and the same thing as “grant” and that this is true regardless of whether there is or is not a consideration therefor. It must be remembered that we are dealing with the word “grant” as a noun and not a verb, and, as I see it, the reference to the word when used as a verb in the conveying clause of a deed, as is done in the controlling opinion, is wholly beside the point.
The next question is whether such grant or donation is for a sectarian purpose or use; if it is, then it is prohibited. Section 66 says “for a sectarian purpose or use”. Again we have two words in the disjunctive and we must so
I will not extensively belabor further the question whether appellee is a sectarian institution. All its stock is' owned by the corporation Sisters of Mercy as such and not by its members as mere individuals; all its directors are and must be members of the Sisters of Mercy in their capacity as such members and not as mere individuals. In fact the controlling opinion herein suggests, and I do not question it, that in view of the long and honorable record of sacrificial service of the Sisters of Mercy they will continue to operate the proposed hospital for the additional seventeen years after expiration of appellee Js charter in 1953, but the fact remains undisputed that the Sisters of Mercy is a religious institution composed of members of one sect and pledged and devoted to furthering the principles of that sect under the absolute and complete control and dominion of the head of that sect. That appellee is a sectarian institution and that its successor after expiration of its charter will continue to be a sectarian institution cannot- be successfully denied. Hence 1 must register my dissent from the conclusion in the controlling opinion that the grant in question is not for a sectarian use. As to whether it is, in fact, for such a use, let us briefly review some of the expressions in the decisions' cited herein:
State ex rel. Nevada Orphan Asylum v. Hallock, supra; “The $75.00. appropriated for each orphan is a contribution only. Should it be given it would be used for the relief and support of a sectarian institution, and in part,
Bennett v. City of LaGrange, supra [153 Ga. 428, 112 S. E. 486]: The contract gave “a great advantage and the most substantial aid to the Salvation Army in the prosecution of its benevolent and religious purposes. The giving of loaves and fishes is a powerful instrumentality in the successful prosecution of the work of a sectarian institution.”
Collins v. Martin, supra [290 Pa. 388, 139 A. 127]: “Even if it be conceded that the arrangement entered into between the department and the hospital represents the purchase of a commodity, the all-important fact still remains that, by virtue of that very arrangement, and payment under the act of 1925, the sectarian institution is enabled to furnish the commodity — care of the indigent sick — and it is thereby enabled to do it as a sectarian institution. It still exists as such, and, even though no profit be made, or though the compensation covers only the cost, or less, the institution is thereby, to that extent, enabled to function as a sectarian institution, and on the people’s money.”
Synod of Dakota v. State, supra [2 S. D. 366, 50 N. W. 637]: “But while . . . the board of education reserved to itself large powers in the control and management of this department, it nevertheless clearly appears that the teachers in this department were employed and selected by the plaintiff, subject to the approval of the board of education. They were paid by the plaintiff, and under the control of plaintiff as to all matters not specially reserved to the board of education. They constituted a part of the faculty of a sectarian school, and the funds claimed in this action are not to be paid to such teachers specifically, but, if paid, will be received by the plaintiff, and used for its institution.”
I make no apology for the length of this opinion. The amount of money involved is far greater than in any other case since my tenure of office began, and the principle involved is even more important than the question of money. I am firmly convinced that the men who framed our Constitution never intended that public funds should ever be used by any sectarian institution in the manner which is approved by the majority of the court in this case.
On Suggestion oe Error
In recognition of the searching analyses in the suggestion of error and because of the importance of the issues involved, specific inquiries were propounded by the Court. All of these matters but one were raised and given attention in our former opinion and stressed by able and conscientious dissent but re-examination was invited by the following inquiries:
1. In view of the existence of outstanding capital stock in the sum of $50,000, can Mercy Hospital — Street Memorial quality as a “nonprofit corporation”'? In this connection a reconciliation between Code 1942, Section 5310 and Section 6, Chapter 363, Laws of 1946, as amended, was invited. The former section contemplates that charitable associations, churches, religious societies and the like may be incorporated without the issuance of stock.
The courts of other states together with our own state, have uniformly defined charitable corporations as those which issue no stock and make, no provision for individual profit. But we are not reading into our statute a general definition. It is specific and controls the area in which the state may function. It is part of the statute itself which employs no such generality as “charitable organization” or “nonprofit corporation”, but defines the permissible recipients in the language quoted.
It is the view of the appellant that there are only two types of corporations under our law, those which issue stock and are organized for profit, and those which are nonprofit and issue no stock. Thus appellee is alleged to be of a hybrid status. Whereupon appellant insists that it is not a nonprofit institution because it has stock outstanding, and appellee says that the Act of 1948 recognizes the possibility that there may be outstanding stock in a nonprofit corporation and urges that despite the incident of stock certificates the appellee is a nonprofit institution because it does not, and cannot under the law and its charter, allow any of its profits to inure to the benefit of any shareholder.
We know of no law which would require a conventional corporation which qualifies for tax exemption or grants-in-aid to destroy outstanding stock certificates.
From the view point of the State it matters not that in the meantime the present and ultimate ownership is in those whose title is evidenced by so-called stock certificates or otherwise. All property is under the ownership of some person or body. The attribute which qualifies the appellee for the grant is that, “in all functions which are part of the state hospital plan”, it is in fáct and by law, by charter, and by its contract with the Commission a nonprofit institution under the supervision of the commission. Cf. Brister v. Leflore County, 156 Miss. 240, 125 So. 816. Let the certificates be lost, there is still a residual ownership, made effective upon ultimate dissolution. Woodville Lodge, etc., v. Poole, 190 Miss. 798, 1 So. (2d) 780. Let the certificates be assigned without the Commission’s approval, to another person or corporation with or without a capital gain by the present owners, or be restored to a profit status, and thereupon the entire hospital property is transfixed by a lien in favor of the State to guarantee the reasonable amount of its grant. Ch. 430, Laws 1948; Par. 6(b) of the application agreement.
• Despite insistence to the contrary no part of the net earnings or appellee can “inure, to the benefit of any private shareholder” at least for the next twenty years. We are not moved by the argument that the net earnings, by their very absorption into the institution, and its equipment and its enlargement, are thus safely im
The state is content to reap a harvest of public welfare and service for twenty years. In computing the benefits accruing to the State we must put out of view such grants as may be made by the Federal Government. The outlay by the State is $214,000 toward a total expenditure of $1,350,000. The Federal Government is to pay $527,000 and the remainder is supplied by the hospital. The consideration to the State must, therefore, be valued by the reasonably anticipated facilities furnished over a twenty year period, against the background of the State’s grant of $214,000. If there is only a reasonable public demand for charity beds and services, the benefit to the State, by minimum bases of computation, will far exceed its outlay. So that the State is not donating money but purchasing, with no little thrift, benefits for its indigent patients. We shall not enlarge upon nor change the views expressed in our former opinion.
2. Our next inquiry is: Does paragraph 5 (c) of the contract between the hospital and the Commission contemplate that the obligation of the former to maintain the hospital facilities extends only two years? This paragraph is as follows: ‘ ‘ In the event the hospital and/or other facilities involved in. this project as fully described and set forth in said original application should operate at a loss during the first two years after the same is/are ready to begin operations, the applicant will and does hereby underwrite the cost of such operations for such period and will provide funds and make up any such operation deficit; such funds to be provided from funds on hand and available for such purposes or to be raised and so provided by lawful means at the disposal of the applicant.”
As to the possibility of some future application to the state for aid to make up an operating deficit it is a sufficient answer that the purpose of our present law is not maintenance but construction. The application filed by the hospital 'and approved by the Commission was “for the purpose of building a new hospital of 150 bed capacity at Vicksburg.”
To the assurance of appellee in its brief that it is not entitled to and did not and does not contemplate application for aid in maintenance, the appellant replies that this concession or undertaking is ex parte and informal. TIowever, we integrate this concession, conforming as it does to our construction of the applicable statutes, into our opinion. Such view is made a condition of our affirmance and must be the settled law of this case.
3. Our third query is: Does the contract with the Mercy Hospital — Street Memorial contemplate the use of state funds to reimburse the hospital for charity patients or other maintenance costs?
The arguments based upon an assumed obligation of the state to reimburse the hospital for the care of charity'
The contention posed a problem which could not justly be ignored and which could not be solved by the subtle logarithms of sophistry. We need not enter this arena of conflict for the following reasons. (1) Under the contract with the Commission, the hospital has agreed to furnish up to ten per cent of its bed capacity free to indigent patients; (2) Section 7134, Code 1942, forbids any reimbursement to any hospital located in the same county where a state charity hospital is located. We take notice that there is such charity hospital in Warren County; (3) there is no authority in the Mississippi Commission on Hospital Care to make such reimbursement; (4) the appellee concedes and agrees as part of its contention that no such reimbursement can or will be requested.
To these contentions the learned Attorney General replies that by virtue of recent enabling legislation the charity hospital is subject to sale or abandonment; that the so-called agreement of appellee is unilateral and has no sound basis for enforcement.
To the latter contention we add that it is an assumption by this Court and a condition of its affirmance that such reimbursement is not permissible under existing law. This conclusion therefore constitutes part of the law of this case.
Our fourth inquiry is: Does the contract here involved, which provides for the maintenance of teaching facilities, violate the prohibition of Section 208 of our Constitution. This Section is as follows: “No religious or other sect or sects shall ever control any part of the school or other educational funds of this state; nor shall any funds be appropriated toward the support of any sectarian school, or to. any school that at the time of re
We could not forbid a subsequent inauguration of such facilities by the hospital if it had not bound itself to furnish them in the first instance, nor could such installations retroactively invalidate a grant made in their absence. These services approach more closely a donation to the state than does the grant for construction constitute an appropriation of funds for the .support of a sectarian school.
People of State of Illinois ex rel. McCollum v. Board of Education, 333 U. S. 203, 68 S. Ct. 461, 92 L. Ed. 648, 649, 2 A. L. R. (2d) 1338, is not controlling.
We repeat that the grant is only for construction and not maintenance. Such contemplated training is an incident, yet an important one, in the over-all plan to render such hospital an efficient aid in its duty to furnish hospital care. There is nothing in the record to indicate that such facilities are either a "school” or are "sectarian”. The maintenance of such facilities are at the sole expense of the hospital but under the control and supervision of the Commission.. No "part of the school funds” is granted.
Under Section (j) of the contract it is provided that "the hospital will contribute funds, equipment and personnel which it may have available or can make available for such purposes toward the promotion and carrying on of .a state wide program of nursing education to be inaugurated and carried on by the Commission in cooperation with participating hospitals, all to the extent and in the manner provided and contemplated by the terms of House Bill No. 430, Mississippi Laws of 1946, as amended. ’ ’
. It may be stated that this contention is noticed because of its importance and in spite of the fact that it is pressed for the first time upon a suggestion of error.
5 Our last inquiry is: Does section (j) of the contract constitute an obligation to carry out the purposes of the Act and the directions of the Commission or con
The text of this section, quoted above, provides for the ‘ ‘ carrying on of a state wide program of nursing education to be inaugurated and carried on by the Commission with participating hospitals, all to the extent and manner provided and contemplated by the terms of House Bill 430 (Chap. 363), Mississippi Laws of 1946.” Only cooperation by the hospital is required. As repeatedly stated, the grant is for construction. The hospital has not been required to set up and guarantee maintenance of a particular standard of nursing education. This policy is to be established by the Commission. We see no vitiating significance in the undertaking by the hospital to make contributions and to extend co-operation to the extent of its ability. This is the language of high purpose and good faith and is not intended as the exigible terms of a solemn engagement. It is indefinite only to the extent that its future financial resources are not presently foreseeable, nor are the demands and requirements of the Commission standardized.
• We need add only that to expand our discussion of these several contentions would be but a repetition of the conclusions and 'the supporting authorities found in our original opinion.
For emphasis, it is again asserted that the concessions and disavowals of appellee in reply to our inquiries numbered two, three and four, to which we assent as being in accord with the law, are integrated into our opinion as a reinforcement of our declaration that the assertions of the appellee now become not only a condition of our affirmance but the settled law of this case.
Overruled.
Concurring Opinion
(concurring).
I am unable to agree with the dissenting view that the sum of $741,000 is the proper basis for determining
As to the opinions written by me on behalf of the Court in the cases of State ex rel. McCullen, Land Commissioner, v. Adams, 185 Miss. 606, 188 So. 551, wherein it was held that a consideration of $160 paid for state lands worth $1,600 was so grossly inadequate as to “virtually” amount to a donation; in Koonce v. Board of Sup’rs. of Grenada County, 202 Miss. 473, 37 So. (2d) 264, 456, wherein we held the same thing as to the sum of $300 paid for timber worth some $4,000 to $5,000; and in State ex rel. Kyle, Attorney General v. Dear, Miss., 46 So. (2d) 100, not yet recorded in State Reports, wherein a consideration of $500 was paid for sixteenth section timber which soon thereafter sold for $4,000, and which were all sales for grossly inadequate considerations and therefore void, I deem it sufficient to say that the philosophy of those decisions is that if a purchaser is permitted to obtain public lands, or sixteenth section timber, for such grossly inadequate considerations it would amount to either a legal or an actual fraud, whereas in the case now before us there is' no contention whatever made by the appellant that the obtaining of an allocation by the appellee hospital of $214,000 in consideration of the benefits to be received by the State in the care of the indigent sick would amount to either a legal or an actual-fraud, but, on the other hand, the proof discloses that the considerations to be received in the treatment of charity patients, training of internes, etc., in return for the $214,000 over a period of twenty years is not grossly
I reaffirm my faith in the correctness of the decisions hereinbefore mentioned, which are discussed in the dissenting opinion, and maintain that there is no departure being taken in the controlling opinions in the present case from the rule announced by the Court in those cases.
It is to be conceded that prior to the enactment of Chap. 430, Laws 1948, under which this allocation of funds was made, the Legislature had defined a nonprofit corporation in the manner stated in the dissenting opinion on this Suggestion of Error, and also that such a corporation had been likewise defined in numerous decisions of various courts, as pointed out and discussed at length in the dissenting opinion now being rendered, but it is pertinent to observe that in the enactment of Chap. 430, Laws 1948, the Legislature had full power and- authority to define a nonprofit hospital within the meaning of that Act in such language as the Legislature saw fit to define it. It so happened that the Legislature did define the privately owned hospitals that were entitled to participate in the hospital program as being “those nonprofit institutions owned and operated by a corporation or association no part of the net earnings of which inures, or may lawfully inure, to the benefit of any private shareholder, group or individual.” (Emphasis supplied.)
In my opinion, the proof discloses without dispute that the hospital involved in the case now before us comes fully and completely within the above definition, which is the same definition given under the Federal Act, 42 U. S. C. A. Section 291 et seq., to nonprofit hospitals that are to participate in the nation-wide hospital program. The rule that the Legislature has the power to define terms which it uses in a statute is, in my opinion, too well-settled in this State to require the citation of authorities to support it. We have repeatedly recognized this right of the Legislature in our construction of the State Sales
I fully concur in the view that none of the new points raised for the first time in the Suggestion of Error in this ease are well taken.
I shall not write more than what is above stated, for the reason that my views are fully stated in the controlling opinion written by me for the Court on April 24, 1950, and reported in Miss., 45 So. (2d) 809, and which opinion could have well ended at the conclusion of paragraph twenty-six thereof, since the remainder of the same is therein acknowledged to be mere dicta written only for the purpose of discussing the other matters particularly emphasized in the dissenting opinion then written.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
Dissenting opinions are seldom written on suggestions, of error, but I am impelled to again register my protest against the action of the court in this case. The principles involved are so far-reaching and the decision so wholly contrary to my conception of the applicable law that I feel a further dissent is justified. I shall endeavor to avoid needless repetition of what has been previously written by me and to confine this dissent to additional reasons in support of the conclusions heretofore advanced.
It is my opinion that the appellee is not a nonprofit corporation, and since the controlling opinion herein concedes that a majority of the court knows of no law which would require a stock corporation to destroy its outstanding stock before it can qualify as a uonprofit institution and cites no law to support its conclusion, I shall endeavor to present some of the authorities and to show that the translation of a stock corporation to a nonprofit corporation does not render the stock inert save for voting purposes as asserted in the controlling opinion herein.
Let us consider in this connection what has already occurred in appellee’s corporate structure. It was organized in 1903 as a stock corporation for profit under the name of Vicksburg Sanitarium. In 1918 it undertook to obtain exemption of its property from taxation and this court held that it was not entitled to such exemp
The authorities are numerous as well as unanimous in holding that a nonprofit or charitable organization shall issue no shares of stock. It would unduly extend this
In Congregational Sunday School & Publishing Society v. Board of Review, 290 Ill. 108, 125 N. E. 7, 10, it was held: “The principal and distinctive features of a charitable organization are that it has no capital stock and no provision for making dividends or profits”. This was quoted verbatim in People ex rel. Hellyer v. Morton, 373 Ill. 72, 25 N. E. (2d) 504.
In People v. Y. M. C. A. of Chicago, 365 Ill., 118, 6 N. E. (2d) 166, 167, 169, it was said: “The principal and distinctive features of a charitable organization are that it has no capital stock and no provision for making dividends or profits for private gain.”
The opinion in Stearns v. Association of the Bar of City of New York, 154 Misc. 71, 276 N. Y. S, 390, 394, in discussing charitable or nonprofit organizations said: “Their principal and distinctive features are that they have no capital stock and no provision for making dividends or profits”.
The case of Baptist Hospital v. City of Nashville, 156 Tenn. 589, 3 S. W. (2d) 1059, 1060, involved a claim for tax exemption by the hospital as a charitable or nonprofit corporation, and the Supreme Court of Tennessee said: “Their principal and distinctive features are that they have no capital stock and no provision for making-dividends or profits”.
In Farm & Home Savings & Loan Ass’n. of Missouri v. Armstrong, 337 Mo. 349, 85 S. W. (2d) 461, 467, the Supreme Court of Missouri said: “Under the weight of authoritative decisions, Hardin College is classifiable as a charitable educational corporation. The distinctive features of a charitable corporation are that it has no capital stock and no provisions for dividends or profits”.
In Southern Methodist Hospital and Sanatorium of Tucson v. Wilson, 45 Ariz. 507, 46 P. (2d) 118, 119, it was said: “when charity is to be extended, not sporadically and to a few individuals, but to a large number over a long period of time, it is generally administered by some association, corporation, or institution, and principal and distinctive features of institutions of this character are that they have no capital stock and no provisions for making dividends or profits”.
Cases by the dozen following the above quoted views may be found in 11 C. J. p. 304, Note 67, and the supplemental Corpus Juris Annotations, 14 C. J. S., Charities, Section 2. It is established everywhere except in Mississippi that a nonprofit corporation cannot issue any shares of corporate stock and this is for the reasons hereinabove discussed, and yet the two controlling opinions in the case at bar hold outright that the outstanding-stock of appellee corporation is of no import in determining whether or not it is a nonprofit corporation. With due deference, I am reminded of the title of the song which was quite popular during World War I, — “They Were All Out of Step but Jim.”
The original controlling opinion herein quotes at length from the bylaws adopted by appellee just two days before approval of its application by the Mississippi Commission on Hospital Care and plants a goodly portion of its decision upon the recitals in those bylaws which, as pointed out in my original dissent, may be- repealed or amended at any time. I contended then and still
The case from which I have just quoted involved a suit for damages in tort against the hospital corporation which defended upon the ground that it was a nonprofit and charitable corporation and hence- not subject to liability in such a suit. The trial court sustained this position but the Supreme Court of Utah reversed it on the ground that the very charter of incorporation showed that it had outstanding shares of capital stock. In this connection the court said: “The law under which the defendant was organized required that the objects of the corporation should be fully set out in the articles of incorporation. This was done by the defendant. . . . The law further required that, if the corporation is organ
In Sussex Trust Co. v. Beebe Hospital of Sussex, Inc., 25 Del. Ch. 172, 15 A. (2d) 246, 247, the court had under consideration the question whether the hospital was a nonprofit corporation so as to be entitled to benefits under a will, and the court pointed out only the provision of the charter which authorized the issuance of corporate stock, and said:
“Although some of its purposes are of a charitable nature, the certificate of incorporation, upon its face, purports to create an organization for pecuniary profit. Article 4 of the certificate provides:
“ ‘The amount of the total authorized capital stock of this corporation is Ten Thousand Dollars ($10,000.00) divided into One Hundred (100) shares of the par value of One Hundred Dollars ($100.00) each.
“ ‘The amount of capital stock with which this corporation will commence business is One Thousand Dollars’.
*507 “There is nothing in the charter to prevent participation in corporate profits by private shareholders. It is when income may loe applied to the profit of the founders or shareholders that ’business has a beginning and charity an end’. Butterworth v. Keeler, 219 N. Y. 446, 114 N. E. 803, 804. Such an organization is not a charity. William Budge Memorial Hospital v. Maughan, 79 Utah 516, 3 P. (2d) 258, 13 P. (2d) 1119; Stratton v. Physio-Medical College, 140 Mass. 505, 21 N. E. 874, 5 L. R. A. 33, 14 Am. St. Rep 442; 2 Restatement of the Law of Trusts, Section 376; 2 Bogert on Trusts and Trustees, Section 365; 3 Scott on Trusts, Section 376.”
The case of William Budge Memorial Hospital v. Maughan, 79 Utah 516, 3 P. (2d) 258, 262, 13 P. (2d) 1119, involved a claim for tax exemption on the ground that the hospital was a charitable corporation. It was organized in 1914 and up to the time of the trial in 1928 it had never paid out any dividends to its stockholders, but all profits had been used for increasing its hospital facilities. The Supreme Court of Utah pointed out that the corporation had $50,000 outstanding capital stock and said:
“It is also urged in behalf of the plaintiff that the hospital was never carried on for pecuniary profit for the reason that no dividends were ever declared or paid to the stockholders and none were declared or paid for the year 1928.
“The fact that the managing directors of a hospital operated for profit deemed it advisable to permit the earnings of the institution to accumulate and then appropriate such funds into buildings and equipment for the benefit of the hospital, rather than to pay them out as dividends to the stockholders, is not necessarily indicative of either a benevolent or charitable purpose. It often is in line with sound business principles to withhold dividends and convert the money into increased facilities of the institution. Certainly every stockholder is pecuniarily*508 benefited. His holdings in the corporation are enhanced in value. The management which dictated such a policy, in the course of years, when the plant had increased in value to considerable proportions, largely because it was not burdened by the payment of taxes, might be able to dictate a dissolution of the corporation, to the immense profit of all the stockholders.”
A petition for rehearing was filed in the last cited case and disposing of the same the Supreme Court of Utah said in 13 P. (2d) 1119: “Plaintiff corporation, as shown by its articles of incorporation, was organized for profit. Its property was used for the purposes mentioned in its articles of incorporation, and hence the use to which the property was put- was likewise for profit and not for charitable purposes. The mere fact that the profits derived from conducting the hospital were used for its enlargement rather than disbursed to the stockholders in dividends did not change the character of the use to which the property of plaintiff' corporation was put. Increasing the assets of the corporation and hence the value of the-stock held by its stockholders is in no sense a charitable purpose.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Upon the expiration of appellee’s charter of incorporation all of its property will become vested in Sisters of Mercy, a sectarian corporation which owns all its outstanding stock. The sole stockholders will reap the benefit of every dollar of increase in value of appellee’s assets and will thereby indirectly make a profit on its investment while urgently proclaiming to this court that it is a nonprofit corporation because it has not declared any dividends to its stockholders. Furthermore the stockholders may in the meantime sell their shares of stock for more than par value and thereby make a profit without declaring any dividends. I confess that I am intellectually unable to follow the controlling opinion in its conclusion on this point. Under the plain provisions of the statute which authorizes grants to hospitals, no hospital can
But it is said in the controlling opinion on suggestion of error, without the citation of any authority, that if the stock certificates be assigned without the approval of the Commission on Hospital Care, either with or without a capital gain to the present owners, the entire property is thereupon transfixed by a lien in favor of the state to guarantee the reasonable amount of its grant, whereupon the conclusion is reached that for at least the next twenty years no part of the net earnings can possibly inure to the benefit of any shareholder. I disagree with both the premise and the conclusion. The only law for a lien in favor of the state is found in Chapter 430, Laws of 1948, which provides that if any hospital or institution to which funds have been paid shall at any time within twenty years be sold or transferred to any person, agency or organization which is not qualified
In my opinion the grant in this case is a donation, and in this connection there is hardly any ground for argument as to the amount of the donation. The majority opinion on the suggestion of error points out that the state’s share of this grant is a mere $214,000, and that the federal government is putting up an additional $527,000 to bring the total up to $741,000; but what that opinion fails to take into consideration is that the federal government has turned over to the Mississippi Commission on Hospital Care a large sum of money to be used in the state’s hospital construction program,
The concurring opinion rendered herein upon the original consideration of this case states that appellee’s new hospital is to have 175 wards and that the hospital contracts to use and maintain 10% of such wards for charity patients for twenty years. This figure was taken from appellee’s brief which is not supported by one word in the record. The record shows that appellee proposes to erect a hospital of 150 beds, — not 175 wards. Upon the original consideration of this case the court proceeded upon the assumption that the appellee had contracted and agreed to keep 10% of these beds constantly occupied by charity patients, at its own expense, for a period of twenty years. Such is absolutely not the ease. Its entire obligation to the state is set out in its application for this grant of $741,000 of public funds. That application contains this obligation: “In the event the hospital and/or other facilities involved in this project as fully described and set forth in said original application should operate at a loss during the first two years after the same is/are ready to begin operations, the applicant will and does hereby underwrite the cost of such operations for such period and will provide funds and make up the operation deficit; such funds to be provided from funds on hand and available for such purposes or to
The controlling opinion on sugggestion of error says that “Under the contract with the Commission, the hospital has agreed to furnish up to ten per cent of its bed capacity free to indigent patients”. With the utmost deference, I challenge a quotation from the contract to this effect. Aside from the paragraph last above quoted wherein appellee is obligated to underwrite the cost .of operation and maintenance for two years and no longer,, the only other obligation to charity patients contained in the application and contract is this: ‘ ‘ That at all times at least ten per cent of the bed capacity of the hospital shall be made available as charity facilities for the use of charity patients qualified under State Charity Hospitalization, Section 7130, Code of 1942, and amendments thereto and under other laws on' the subject.” This obligation is of course limited to a period of twenty years for by the terms of the contract and the statute everything provided by this $741,000 grant is free from all lien of the state for a breach thereof after twenty years. Now under the first quoted provisions the appellee is obligated to furnish the facilities at its own expense and out of its own funds for a period of only two years, and when it obligates to make 10% of its bed capacity available for the use of charity patients there' is not included in this obligation that it will care for these patients at its own expense and out of its own funds. The very law which authorizes grants to nonprofit hospitals, Ch. 430, Laws of 1948, in the last paragraph pro
The whole organization for administration of the per capita fund for charity hospitalization is set out in Sections 7130-7146 of the Code of 1942, where there was created in 1936 the State Hospital Commission to which was vested this duty, and which Commission is not to be confused with the Mississippi Commission on Hospital Care created by Ch. 363, Laws of 1946. Appropriations to the per capita fund for charity hospitalization are made by the Legislature every two years and are administered by the State Hospital Commission, — not by the Mississippi Commission on Hospital Care. There is nothing whatsoever in said Ch. 363, Laws of 1946, or Ch. 430, Laws of 1948, manifesting any intention of the Legislature to abandon appropriations for said per capita fund which have been regularly made since 1936.
Section 12 of Ch. 363, Laws of 1946, authorizes a disposition of the five charity hospitals now owned and operated by the state, and it is contemplated that under the state-wide hospital program these five hospitals will be disposed of or abandoned in due course. And while at the present moment appellee could not qualify to participate in the state-wide charity hospitalization fund because one of the charity hospitals owned by the state is situated in'the same county as appellee’s hospital, it is quite manifest that as soon as the State Charity Hospital in Vicksburg is abandoned or disposed of as specifically contemplated by said Section 12, there will no longer remain any obstacle to prevent appellee from participating in the distribution of state funds for the care of charity patients. The controlling opinion says that the
Appellee’s counsel was referring to the Mississippi Commission on Hospital Care. That commission did not exact of appellee any sort of agreement that it would not receive per capita charity hospitalization funds after the expiration of two years, but, on the contrary, was very careful to provide in the contract that appellee should underwrite the entire expense of operation for two years and no longer. With no imputation whatsoever of bad faith upon the part of appellee in this matter, and viewing the question solely upon the basis of its legal right to apply for a grant of such funds for the care of charity patients after the expiration of two years, there is absolutely nothing to prevent it from obtaining such a grant from the State Hospital Commission, an entirely different agency of the state, after closing of the State Charity Hospital at Vicksburg; Senate Bill No. 499, Laws of 1950, specifically authorizes the State Hospital Commission to disburse the chárity hospitalization funds “to those counties in the state in which state supported charity hospitals are not operated” and as soon as the State Charity Hospital at Vicksburg ceases to operate, as it assuredly must under the provisions of Section 12, Chapter 363, Laws of 1946, the door is wide open for
Under the first quoted paragraph of the contract the appellee is definitely obligated to operate the hospital with its own funds for two years. If it were contemplated that after two years the 10% of beds were to accommodate charity patients at the expense of the hospital, then why did not the contract so state? After the expiration of two years the beds are to be made available as charity facilities for the use only of those charity patients who can qualify for participation in the per capita fund to be appropriated biennially by the legislature out of the state treasury. That is exactly what is written into the very law which authorizes a grant to private nonprofit hospitals and which is referred to in the provision of the contract last above quoted. Prom the whole contract the only reasonable conclusion is that the state will be expected to pay for the maintenance of charity patients out of the per capita fund. I readily concede that the Mississippi Commission on Hospital Care has no authority to obligate the state to provide a per capita fund out of which payments will be made for charity patients, but the point is that appellee is not obligated to take care of a single charity patient after two years unless the state does make such funds available 'to it. It is certainly true that the appellee has not bound itself to take care of these patients at its own expense and out of its own funds; its only ob
In State ex rel. McCullen, Land Commissioner, v. Adams, 185 Miss. 606, 188 So. 551, in an opinion written by the present Chief Justice, it was held that a consideration of $160 paid for state lands worth $1,600 was so inadequate as to amount to no consideration, and the patent from the state to the purchaser was held void.
In State ex rel. McCullen, Land Commissioner, v. Tate, 188 Miss. 865, 196 So. 755, 756, this court had under consideration a similar state of facts and held a state patent void, and in so doing, speaking through Judge Griffith, said: “This matter of the sufficiency of the consideration for a patent to state tax forfeited land was fully explored in Slay v. Lowery, 152 Miss. 356, 119 So. 819, and the report of that case shows that the judges were all in agreement that a patent for a grossly inadequate con
Later, in Koonce v. Board of Sup’rs. of Grenada County, 202 Miss. 473, 32 So. (2d) 264, 265, 456, in an opinion written by the present Chief Justice, where timber on sixteenth section school lands worth $4000 to $5000 was sold for $300, it was held that the transaction was void because the consideration was so inadequate as to amount to a donation in contravention of Section 95 of the Constitution, and in this connection the court said: “. . . the Board of Supervisors had no right to sell this trust property, which it was administering as an agency of the State on behalf of the educable children of the township in the capacity of a trustee, at such a grossly inadequate price in violation of Section 95 of the State Constitution, which prevents ‘lands belonging to, or under the control of the state (from being) donated directly or indirectly, to private corporations or individuals, ’ etc. ’ ’ The Court then cited with approval State ex rel. McCullen v. Tate, supra.
In State v. Roell, 192 Miss. 873, 7 So. (2d) 867 in an opinion written by the present Chief Justice, it was reiterated that a purchase price for state lands may be so inadequate as to amount to a donation in contravention of Section 95 of the Constitution.
In spite of these decisions the majority of the court held in the case at bar, on April 24, 1950, with reference to the word “donation” as used in Section 66 of the Constitution, that “. . . only one meaning can be ascribed to the word ‘donation’ — a transfer of the property from the owner to another without any consideration in return”. (Emphasis supplied.) [45 So. (2d) 815.]
Now, if, as held in the foregoing authorities, a donation may result from an inadequate consideration, it is well to examine the consideration for the $741,000 grant in this case, and when that is done we find that the only return which is absolutely assured to the state over the two year period is a maximum'of $43,800, or approximately one-seventeenth, of the grant, while in State ex rel. Kyle v. Dear, supra, a conveyance for one-eighth of the true value was held to he so inadequate as to constitute a donation. I cannot bring myself into accord with such a vacillating position. If the grant in the Dear case, and the others which follow the same pattern, was a donation, then the grant to appellee must of necessity likewise be a donation, if it is a donation, it violates Section 66 of the Constitution and should not be permitted to stand.
The original charter of incorporation, approved in 1903, declares the purposes of appellee corporation to be twofold, viz., (1) to construct, maintain and operate a sanitarium for the treatment of sick or injured persons, and (2) “to maintain in connection therewith a training school for nurses.” That was when appellee was admittedly a corporation organized for profit. When the charter was amended in 1935 the purposes were declared to be (1) to construct, maintain and operate a hospital or sanitarium for the treatment of sick-or injured persons and (2) “and to provide, maintain and operate in connection therewith, and as a part of said hospital or sanitarium, a training school and home for nurses.” This portion of the charter has never since been altered in any manner. Thus it is seen that the avowed purpose of appellee for forty-seven years has been and still is to provide, maintain and operate a training school for
The majority opinion further says in justification of its conclusion that no part of the school funds is granted by the commission. Said Section 208 begins with a prohibition against the control of any part of the school funds of the state by any religious sect; I have never contended that the appropriation to appellee is out of the school funds, but I do contend that the last portion of Section 208 prohibits the appropriation of “any funds ... to any school (sectarian or otherwise) that at the time of receiving such appropriation is not conducted as a free school.” This covers institutions such as Gulf Park College, Gulf Coast Military Academy, and many others throughout the state, which are not controlled by or connected with any religious sect.
The majority opinion furthermore repeatedly points out that the grant here in question is for construction only and is not for maintenance. I must confess that I cannot see where this makes any difference so far as the constitution- is concerned; it prohibits the appropriation of any funds to any school that is not operated as a free school regardless of whether such funds are for construction or for maintenance. Appellee makes no contention that its -nursing school is a free school. According to this portion of the conclusions of the majority of the court, the constitution would not be violated by the appropriation of $741,000 to Gulf Park College, or even church owned schools such as Millsaps College, Missis
For the reasons hereinabove given, as well as those set out in my original dissent, I respectfully dissent from the court’s action in overruling the suggestion or error.
Concurring Opinion
(concurring).
I place my concurrence in the majority opinion primarily on the ground that this is not a donation or a gratuity. This hospital is to have one hundred and seventy-five wards. The hospital contracts to use and
Reference
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