American Medical Ass'n v. Board of Review

65 N.E.2d 350, 392 Ill. 614, 1946 Ill. LEXIS 285
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 1946
DocketNo. 28453. Judgment affirmed.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 65 N.E.2d 350 (American Medical Ass'n v. Board of Review) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Medical Ass'n v. Board of Review, 65 N.E.2d 350, 392 Ill. 614, 1946 Ill. LEXIS 285 (Ill. 1946).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court: •

Appellant appeals from an order of the circuit court of Cook county affirming a decision of the Board of Review of the Department of Labor, finding that appellant is not exempt from payment of unemployment contributions on account of the employment of one George James Such for the year 1938.

The sole question presented is whether appellant, as an employer, comes within the exempting provisions of section 2(f)(6)(G) of the Unemployment Compensation Act of Illinois, as in force in 1938. (Ill. Rev. Stat. 1937, chap. 48, par. 218.) The pertinent provisions of that section of the act were as follows: “(6) The term ‘Employment’ shall not include * * * (G) Service performed in the employ of a corporation * * * organized and operated exclusively for * * * charitable, scientific, * * * ór educational purposes, * * * no part of the net earnings of which inures to the benefit of any private shareholder or individual.”

Appellant, a corporation not for profit and having no stockholders, was organized with the objects and purposes shown by its charter. These are “to promote the science and art of medicine and the betterment of public health.” Its constituent associations are the State and territorial medical associations which are, or which may hereafter be, federated to form the American Medical Association, in accordance with its constitution and by-laws. Members in good standing of constituent societies are ipso facto members of appellant, American Medical Association. A member becomes a Fellow of appellant by subscribing for appellant’s Journal and paying annual dues. Participation in the work of the Scientific Assembly is restricted to Fellows who have paid all their current indebtedness. The House of Delegates, approximately 175 members, of whom 153 represent constituent associations, is the supreme policy-making body. It elects the members of the board of trustees, which .functions like a board of directors and is responsible for major decisions in the interim between annual sessions of the House of Delegates. Under the constitution the board of trustees is authorized to appropriate funds to defray the expenses of the association. As of December 31, 1939, appellant’s total assets were $4,429,699.20. Of those assets it owned a printing plant valued at $185,000. It employs approximately 630 persons. Its Journal is the official publication of the association. Its gross revenues for 1939 amounted to $1,700,853.99. Receipts from advertising were $908,790.58. Net earnings were $706,823.02. Income from investments was $84,938.91 and from other sources, $12,973.92, making a total income for that year of $804,735.85. About 30 per cent of the pages of the Journal is devoted to commercial advertising. Among the subjects discussed in the Journal, aside from scientific subjects, are income taxes, court decisions, proposed legislation, medical service plans, insurance policies, collection agencies, payment arrangement for medical care and medical fee schedules. The Journal’s “organization section” is captioned, “Devoted to the Organization, Business, Economic and Social Aspects of Medical Practice.”

This case arises on an application of George James Such on July 3, 1939, for benefits under the Unemployment Compensation Act for the year 1938. A referee of the Department of Labor, under a revised finding, recommended benefits which did not include, in its base, any wages earned by him while employed by appellant, American Medical Association. The Board of Review on July 12, 1943, set aside the decision of the referee and found Such eligible for benefits based on his employment by appellant. The circuit court on certiorari sustained the finding of the Board of Review.

Though it is argued here that appellant is a charitable organization, no such claim was made in the court below and cannot be urged on review. Inter-State Finance Corp. v. Commercial Jewelry Co. 280 Ill. 116; Skinner v. Glos, 274 Ill. 58.

Appellant’s counsel argue that the court gave too limited a scope to the term “scientific or educational purposes that the activities of an enterprise organized for scientific or educational purposes are exclusively for. such purposes if those activities are incidental to, adhere to, and are mediate to and advance such purposes, and that the legislative policy of the State is to exempt from taxation corporations such as appellant.

Appellees, to sustain the judgment appealed from, insist (1) that the decision of the Board of Review should be taken as final unless it is against the manifest weight of the evidence; (2) the act should be liberally construed to the end that benefits are paid to unemployed workers; (3) appellant is not organized nor operated exclusively for charitable, scientific or educational purposes, and (4) appellant’s net earnings inure to the benefit of its members.

That appellant is organized as a scientific and educational association is not denied by appellees. Whether appellant association was organized exclusively for scientific or educational purposes must be determined by its charter and laws. Whether it is operated exclusively as a scientific or educational association must be determined by the facts of its practices. If all be for the ultimate end for which it is organized, and it is organized exclusively for scientific or educational purposes, then it is so operated even though in such operation it may engage in business with the view to profit. If, on the other hand, it indulges in practices as a part, of its method of operation which make no contribution to its exclusive scientific or educational purposes and which are not merely incidental to its main purpose, then it cannot be said to be operated exclusively for scientific or educational purposes! Under the language of the act before us, appellant, to be exempt from the contributions to the unemployment compensation fund, must not only be organized exclusively for scientific or educational purposes, but must also be “operated” exclusively for such purposes.

Appellees argue, and the circuit court held, that evidence showing efforts on the part of appellant to suppress or oppose organizations providing medical care and hospitalization to their members on a risk-sharing basis, indicates that appellant is largely organized and operated for the economic benefit of its members. However, the fact that appellant has opposed efforts in the direction of so-called “group hospitalization” or opposed so-called “socialized medicine,” and may have violated statutory law in so doing, does not of itself indicate that it is not organized and operating exclusively as a scientific or educational, or even as a charitable association. Most religious, charitable, scientific or educational associations, exclusively so operated, espouse causes deemed by them to be for the general good, and give to them devoted and sometimes militant support, though such causes may not be unanimously supported by thinking persons. Such is of the essence of freedom of thought and action as we know it in America. However, this court is not here concerned with the conduct of appellant in its endeavor to foster and promulgate what it, so far as the record shows, holds to be important to the public welfare. The question here is whether appellant is engaged in activities which take it from the realm of exclusive operation for scientific or educational purposes.

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Bluebook (online)
65 N.E.2d 350, 392 Ill. 614, 1946 Ill. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-medical-assn-v-board-of-review-ill-1946.