Arkansas Baptist State Convention v. Board of Trustees

189 S.W.2d 913, 209 Ark. 236, 1945 Ark. LEXIS 541
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 29, 1945
Docket4-7718
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 189 S.W.2d 913 (Arkansas Baptist State Convention v. Board of Trustees) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arkansas Baptist State Convention v. Board of Trustees, 189 S.W.2d 913, 209 Ark. 236, 1945 Ark. LEXIS 541 (Ark. 1945).

Opinions

Appellees, Board of Trustees of the Baptist State Hospital, made application to the chancery court for instruction as to their duties and powers in relation to a request from appellant, Arkansas Baptist State Convention, for a $30,000 contribution from the hospital, to be used by the convention in partial payment of certain indebtedness of the convention, previously discharged by bankruptcy proceedings.

Their petition set forth that the hospital is a corporation organized for public charity under provisions of 2252 of Pope's Digest of the laws of Arkansas, duly chartered by order of the Pulaski circuit court on February 16, 1921; that as trustees the petitioners have control of the property and administer the business of the hospital, which was established for the hospitalization of the indigent sick, regardless of race, color or religious belief; that it has no capital stock and no one is entitled to any gain from its operation; that the Arkansas Baptist State Convention was incorporated by special act of the General Assembly of Arkansas, approved February 12, 1859, its affairs being managed by an executive board elected by the convention from the membership of the Baptist churches of Arkansas; that the convention has sponsored and caused to be set up the hospital and certain other institutions, each of which was a separate corporate entity; that the original board of trustees of the hospital was appointed by the convention, and that under the charter of the hospital the convention was empowered to continue to appoint these trustees; that in 1937 the convention and its sponsored institutions, including the hospital, owed $1,200,000, of which the hospital owed $475,000; that, for the purpose of adjusting this indebtedness, the convention filed proceedings in bankruptcy, which *Page 238 terminated in a settlement, approved by the bankruptcy court, of all of this indebtedness, for thirty-five cents on the dollar thereof; that at the annual meeting in November, 1943, the convention adopted a resolution asserting that the amount of the above indebtedness, which had been discharged by the bankruptcy proceedings, nevertheless remained the moral obligation of the convention and calling on the hospital to pay $30,000 toward the liquidation of the unpaid portion of the debt; that some of the hospital's trustees desired to comply with the convention's directive, but others were opposed thereto, for the reason, as they asserted, that the debt sought to be paid was not a legal debt of the convention or of the hospital; that the trustees were concerned as to whether this $30,000 payment would be a wrongful diversion of trust funds, such as might render the trustees personally liable therefor and such as might change the status of the hospital from a charitable organization into a private business institution, subject to every form of taxation.

The petition concluded with a prayer that the court "construe their power and supervise their actions in the premises so as to insure legal and faithful performance of their duties as trustees, secure petitioner, Baptist State Hospital, against an improvident and illegal misappropriation of its funds, and to save petitioner trustees harmless in their persons and estates from the consequences of an unwarranted or illegal compliance with the orders and directions of the Arkansas Baptist State Convention."

The State of Arkansas, through its Attorney General, filed in the proceedings an intervention, in which the allegations of the petition were adopted, and it was asserted that, unless enjoined by the court, the trustees of the hospital would make payment of said sum of $30,000, thereby violating their duties and causing an impairment of a trust fund established exclusively for the benefit of indigent persons within the State of Arkansas; and an injunction against the proposed contribution was prayed. *Page 239

The Baptist State Convention also filed an intervention, alleging that the convention and the hospital were not separate entities but that the relation of creator and creature, or of parent and child, existed between them; that the hospital originated with the convention and was a convention institution — a mere agency through which the convention conducted a hospital activity; that the convention had appointed a commission directing it to take out a charter for the hospital, which was done; and that similarly the convention had caused to be created other charitable and educational institutions; that in 1937 the convention had incurred obligations for the use and benefit of the hospital in the aggregate sum of $616,191.16, which, along with the convention's other indebtedness, was settled in the bankruptcy proceedings at thirty-five cents on the dollar; that of the amount required to effect this settlement ($333,350.37) the hospital contributed $150,000, which would leave a balance of $466,191.16 of the hospital debt still in existence, though its enforcement was barred by the order of the bankruptcy court; that the convention, realizing that its debts had not in fact been paid and that the federal court order did not discharge it from its moral obligation to pay its debts, had called on the trustees of the hospital to make from its surplus funds the $30,000 contribution toward the discharge of this moral obligation. The prayer of the convention was that the court find that the hospital is the creature and institution of the convention, that the convention has a legal right to pay the balance of its debt and to call on the trustees of the hospital to contribute thereto, and that the hospital trustees have a legal right to make a contribution for that purpose out of its surplus funds.

After hearing testimony the lower court decreed that payment of the $30,000 contribution by the trustees of the hospital would "be in contravention of its by-laws and of the purpose for which said hospital was incorporated and, therefore, unauthorized," and the making of such contribution was enjoined. The intervener, Arkansas Baptist State Convention, has appealed. *Page 240

The pleadings of the parties in this proceeding did not present any important dispute as to the fact situation underlying the controversy; nor was there any such dispute shown by the testimony. It is admitted that the convention borrowed a large sum of money to pay its debts and those of some of its fostered institutions, including the hospital, and that the trustees of the hospital joined in the execution of a mortgage, by which all property of the hospital and said other institutions was conveyed to secure this loan. It was recited in this mortgage that, of the proceeds of the bond issue ($900,000 in all) the hospital received $420,000, of which $242,000 was used to retire the hospital's existing mortgage indebtedness. The hospital contributed $150,000 of the total amount required to liquidate the debts of the convention, the hospital and the other church institutions, under the terms of the order of the bankruptcy court. To this contribution by the hospital should be added $31,000, the face amount of bonds issued by the convention, purchased by the hospital and surrendered by it as a part of the settlement. It is apparent that, if the payment ($181,000 in all) made by the hospital toward the amount used to obtain the composition is deducted from the amount (not less than $420,000) which the hospital obtained out of the proceeds of the bond issue, there would remain a balance of at least $239,000 as the hospital's part of the obligation canceled under the bankruptcy order, but not paid in full, and the unpaid balance of which, according to the contention of the convention, has continued as a moral obligation.

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Related

Taylor v. Woods
282 S.W.3d 285 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2008)
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317 S.W.2d 286 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
189 S.W.2d 913, 209 Ark. 236, 1945 Ark. LEXIS 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arkansas-baptist-state-convention-v-board-of-trustees-ark-1945.