Board of Supervisors v. Vicksburg Hospital, Inc.

163 So. 382, 173 Miss. 805, 1935 Miss. LEXIS 251
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 23, 1935
DocketNo. 31832.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 163 So. 382 (Board of Supervisors v. Vicksburg Hospital, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Supervisors v. Vicksburg Hospital, Inc., 163 So. 382, 173 Miss. 805, 1935 Miss. LEXIS 251 (Mich. 1935).

Opinion

*811 McG-owen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The board of supervisors of Warren county appeals to this court from the judgment of the circuit court setting aside an order of the board of supervisors assessing the real and personal property of the Vicksburg Hospital for taxation. The court below heard the case without the intervention of a jury, and held that the property, real and personal, of the Vicksburg Hospital, was, by statute, exempt from taxation.

Prior to December, 1933, the Vicksburg Hospital was a corporation, duly chartered under the laws of the state with a capital stock of seventy-five thousand dollars, which appears to have been issued and paid in. The major portion of the stock was owned by physicians who constituted the management and a part of the staff *812 of the hospital. In December, 1933, the stockholders, at a call meeting, passed a resolution amending their charter, which amendment was subsequently approved by the duly authorized officers of the state. The actual amendment, as approved, is as follows:

“The Purpose for which the corporation is created is to operate a general hospital for the treatment of diseases of the human body, and may provide, build, equip and maintain operating rooms for the purpose of performing surgical operations and may maintain and operate X-ray machines and other machines, appliances used by the medical profession necessary to operate a modern hospital, and may organize, conduct and carry on a training school for nurses, and may provide a course of study and prescribe a curriculum, which if completed and complied with, may graduate said student nurses and issue certificates of graduation or diplomas thereto, and to this end may buy, equip, and maintain real estate for the purpose of providing a home for said student nurses.
‘ ‘ Provided, however, that all of the income and revenue derived from the operation of said hospital and training school for nurses, be used and appropriated exclusively, for the maintenance and operation of the said Vicksburg Hospital, Incorporated, and that none of said proceeds or receipts so had and received by the said Vicksburg Hospital, Incorporated, and, or, the training school for nurses, be used or paid out as a profit or dividend to said stockholders.”

Subsequent to the charter of incorporation of the hospital, its owners secured a charter from the state for the Vicksburg Hospital training school for nurses. There was to be no capital stock in this corporation, no¡ shares of stock, and its purpose was to organize and maintain a training school for nurses and to provide the necessary rooms and equipment for the conduct of such school.

We think it fair to make the further statement that *813 several physicians were the principal owners of the stock of the Vickshnrg Hospital; that they had offices therein, and that they, with some other physicians, constituted themselves a clinic. They charged patients who came to the hospital for their services as physicians. The corporation charged separately for the service rendered by the hospital, such as is usually charged by hospitals. The physicians called themselves a clinic, and, by agreement between themselves, each individually rendered service as a physician, charged his patient therefor, and the money received therefrom was placed to the credit of the clinic and disbursed to the several physicians participating therein, according to their agreement, the ratio of percentage being different.

It is shown that Dr. Parsons, one of the incorporators, earned about eighteen thousand dollars a year. These physicians had their offices in the hospital, their patients came there, and they had the use of the hospital building, grounds, furniture, appliances and fixtures, and no charge was made by the hospital against them. Doctors Knox and Parsons were required to superintend and supervise the hospital and generally manage all of the affairs of the hospital, for which they were paid, jointly, one hundred dollars a month. The fees collected by the physicians were deposited in a clinical fund and distributed to the several physicians proportionately, according to their agreements, and the fees collected for the hospital were separately collected and accounted for. The record shows that for the six years preceding the trial of this cause in the lower court, the hospital'had lost twelve thousand dollars. The evidence is to the effect that the extra time required of the physicians in the management exacted by the hospital was not compensated for by the privileges granted to them by the hospital in the use of its building and equipment.

There is an agreement in the record that the Vicksburg Hospital owned the nurses’ home used in connec *814 tion with the hospital. There is no showing that the hoard of supervisors ever made any effort to assess separately the nurses’ home. Two wards, one for white patients and the other for colored, were devoted to the use, call, and treatment of charity patients, and such patients were received and treated and no charge made therefor, and the services of its staff of physicians were furnished without charge. If these wards were filled with patients, emergency charity patients were received and cared for in a ward provided for patients who paid for hospital services.

The proof is uncontradicted that the Vicksburg Hospital lost money and had never made any profit from the beginning of its operation, that all the receipts of the hospital were expended upon the maintenance and operation of it. The precise question presented for decision here is: Under the existing controlling statutes, was the real and personal property of the Vicksburg Hospital exempt from taxation?

The statute controlling is section 3108, Code! 19301, subsections (d) and (f), which we set forth for convenience in full:

“(d) All property, real or personal, belonging to any religious society or ecclesiastical body and/or any congregation thereof or to any charitable society, and used exclusively for such society and not for profit, not exceeding however the amount of land which such religious society may own, as provided in the chapter on corporations. All property, real or personal, belonging, to any college or institution for the education of youths, used directly and exclusively for such purpose, provided that no such college or institution for education of youth shall have exempt from taxation more than six hundred and forty acres of land. All property, real or personal, owned and occupied by a fraternal and benevolent organization when used by such organization and. from which no' rentals or other profits accrue to *815 the organization, but any part rented or from which revenue is received shall be taxed. . . .
“(f) All property, real or personal, whether belonging to religious or charitable or benevolent organizations, which is used for hospital purposes, and nurses’ homes where a part thereof, and which maintains one or more charity wards that are for charity patients, and where all the income from said hospital and nurses’ home is used entirely for the purposes thereof and no part of the same for profit.”

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163 So. 382, 173 Miss. 805, 1935 Miss. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-supervisors-v-vicksburg-hospital-inc-miss-1935.