Bedford County Hospital v. Browning

225 S.W.2d 41, 189 Tenn. 227, 25 Beeler 227, 1949 Tenn. LEXIS 419
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 225 S.W.2d 41 (Bedford County Hospital v. Browning) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bedford County Hospital v. Browning, 225 S.W.2d 41, 189 Tenn. 227, 25 Beeler 227, 1949 Tenn. LEXIS 419 (Tenn. 1949).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Peewitt

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a decree of the Chancery Court of Davidson County, holding Chapter 74, Public Acts of 1949, authorizing the issuance of $15,000,000 of bonds and the donation of the proceeds thereof to various hospitals, constitutional and valid and not in conflict with Article 2, Section 31, of the Constitution.

The complainants, composing a number of hospitals who have duly qualified for Federal Aid under the provisions of the Hill-Burton Federal Act, 42 U.S.C.A. Section 291 et seq., filed this bill against the defendants, who composed the State Funding Board, praying for a declaratory judgment as to the validity of Chapter 74, Public Acts of 1949. It was conceded in the court below that a proper case for a declaratory judgment was presented; and, therefore, the sole question before this Court is whether the above-mentioned Act offends Article 2, Section 31, of our Constitution.

The complainants are in four classes:

1. Certain of the hospitals are owned and operated exclusively by counties.

2. Others are owned solely and alone by certain municipal corporations.

3. One is owned jointly by county and city.

4. Others are owned by nonprofit general welfare corporations.

In 1947 the Legislature enacted two statutes, Chapters 13 and 16 of the Public Acts of 1947. Chapter 13 is a general statute applicable to all hospitals and was enacted in the exercise of the police powers of the State which authorizes it to regulate the healing arts. By express terms, Chapter 13 sets up a board to license [230]*230all hospitals, public or private. It provides that no hospital shall he operated in this State after a day fixed in the Act until the same shall have been duly licensed by this board. It provides for applications for licenses, schedules all fees to be paid by the applicant, provides that the licensing authority shall have authority to make rules and regulations, to set up minimum standards, to revoke licenses theretofore issued upon certain conditions, and for the inspection and enforcement of such regulations and minimum standards theretofore fixed.

Chapter 16, Public Acts of 1947, was enacted in order to allow hospitals in the State to comply with the provisions of the Hill-Burton F'ederal Hospital Statute, which latter Act authorized grants of Federal funds for hospitals under certain conditions. Its relevant provisions are as follows:

1. A survey of existing facilities, both public and private.

2. The development of an overall plan for the construction of hospitals.

3. Complete co-operation with the Federal Government.

4. The establishment of minimum standards for the maintenance and operation of hospitals to be constructed thereunder.

5. The transmission of all plans for the construction of hospitals through the Commissioner of Health to the Federal Government for Federal Aid.

6. Supervision by the Commissioner of Health of the erection and construction of such hospitals.

Construing these two Acts together, they authorize the development of an overall plan, the prospect being for Federal Aid, and after the erection of such hospitals, [231]*231they can be regulated under the provisions of Chapter 13, Public Acts of 1947. There is no doubt, in reading these Acts together, that the State acquires no.proprietary interest in any hospital in the State. Then the Legislature passed Chapter 74, Public Acts of 1949, amending Chapter 16, Public Acts of 1947. This Chapter 74 authorizes the State to make grants to the sponsors of the so-called Federal Aid Hospitals in an amount not to exceed 33%% of the estimated cost of the hospital and equipment, the amount to be granted not to exceed that to be expended by the sponsor thereof. A second provision authorizes the issuance of bonds not to exceed $3,000,000 per annum, for the years 1949-1953 inclusive, to provide funds for these grants. Another provision assured the State of freedom from liability for the cost of operating such hospitals after completion. A fourth provision authorizes retroactive grants in the amounts above set forth where the hospitals had theretofore been completed through the efforts of the sponsor.

It is conceded by the defendants that the erection and maintenance of hospitals constitutes a public purpose, and defendants do not dispute the fact that the State might by direct act establish hospitals and maintain them at such places in the State as it deemed proper. The defendants state that this would be the direct effect of a proper purpose and would not constitute, under any stretch of the imagination, the State lending its credit in aid.

The pertinent part of Article 2, Section 31, of our Constitution reads as follows: “The credit of this State shall not be hereafter loaned or given to or in aid of any person, association, company, corporation, or municipality; . . .

[232]*232The obvious purpose oí this Section of our Constitution was to prevent the State from using its credit as a gratuity or donation to any person, corporation, or municipality. It is further obvious that it was not designed to prevent the State from using its credit to aid persons, corporations, or municipalities if required to accomplish a State or public purpose, or to fulfill a State duty or obligation under its police power. Under the authorization, the Legislature and not the courts is the exclusive judge of the manner, means, agencies, and methods to meet and fulfill these purposes. If the Legislature has taken the position that the public welfare requires the State to participate with the Federal Government and with the proposed hospitals to acquire for the benefit of the State and its people, additional hospital buildings and facilities, even without technical State title or ownership but under reasonable State control and regulation, the courts could not interfere without substituting their judgment upon a matter of policy for that of the Legislature. This grant does not constitute a gratuity or donation of State credit, as under the terms of the Act itself this constitutes performance of public duties and with no right to reap individual profit.

In Baker v. Hickman County, 164 Tenn. 294, 47 S. W. 2d 1090, this Court sustained the validity of an Act of the Legislature which appropriated State funds to reimburse counties for funds used in building roads taken over by the State as a part of the State Highway System and said, 164 Tenn. at page 308, 47 S. W. 2d at page 1094: “The construction of the state highway system at the joint expense of the state and the counties was not a lending of the state’s credit to the counties, because the project was accomplished by direct action of the state, [233]*233for a state purpose, tlie completed system remaining under tire control of the state for regulation and maintenance. Belief of the counties from their assumed share of the cost, by the appropriation of state revenue to reimburse the counties therefor, is not within the purpose or meaning of the constitutional restriction.”

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Bluebook (online)
225 S.W.2d 41, 189 Tenn. 227, 25 Beeler 227, 1949 Tenn. LEXIS 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bedford-county-hospital-v-browning-tenn-1949.