Bodenheimer v. Confederate Memorial Ass'n

5 F. Supp. 526, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1440
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedDecember 1, 1932
DocketNo. 895
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 5 F. Supp. 526 (Bodenheimer v. Confederate Memorial Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bodenheimer v. Confederate Memorial Ass'n, 5 F. Supp. 526, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1440 (E.D. Va. 1932).

Opinion

WAV, District Judge.

This is an action instituted by Mrs. Bodenheimer, a citizen and resident of North Carolina, against “Confederate Memorial Association,” a corporation chartered under the laws of Mississippi.

In her declaration plaintiff alleges that defendant is the owner of a parcel of land sit-, uate in the city of Richmond, on which is located a building known as “Battle Abbey,”, in which building defendant conducts a mu[527]*527seum and art gallery to which admissions are charged to the members of the public; that on the 28th of November, 1931, in company with her husband, she visited the building and grounds so owned and operated by defendant, paying the usual admission fees charged by defendant to members of the public, and, upon the payment of such fees, she and her husband entered “Battle Abbey,” and, after viewing the exhibits, met the superintendent, who invited them to visit the buildings and grounds known as “Confederate Soldiers’ Home,” located nearby. Plaintiff alleges that she and her husband accepted the invitation, and in leaving “Battle Abbey” by a regular exit they passed over a concrete walkway on the property of defendant, maintained by it for the use of plaintiff and other’s visiting “Battle Abbey,” which walkway it is alleged, due to improper and negligent construction and to improper repairs, had become broken, buckled, and uneven, thereby rendering it unsafe to walk thereon; that said walkway had been in such bad state of repair for a long time prior thereto and defendant’s agents and servants had failed to repair the same, although the condition of the walkway was well known to them and to defendant; that as plaintiff emerged from the building, and while she was passing over the walkway in question, and in the exercise of due care for her own safety, she stepped on a part of the walkway where the same was buckled and broken, which gave way in such manner as to throw her violently against the walkway, as a result of which fall she sustained serious permanent injuries.

Plaintiff further alleges in general terms that defendant corporation was also guilty of negligence in the selection of its agents, servants, and employees whom it had placed in charge of the museum and grounds, but there is no showing in the declaration of any causal connection between the alleged failure to exercise reasonable care in the selection of its agents, servants, and employees and plaintiff’s injuries.

Defendant pleaded the general issue, and filed a special plea in which it avers that defendant association is a charitable institution, and for that reason cannot be held liable to plaintiff for the damages sustained by her as the result of the negligence charged in the declaration. With its special plea defendant filed a duly certified copy of its charter of incorporation, from which document it appears that the purposes for which defendant association was formed are as follows:

“The purpose of this incorporation is, to erect at some suitable place to be hereafter selected as herein provided for, a building to be known and designated as The Confederate Memorial Institute and to collect, arrange and preserve therein statues, portraits, photographs and other pictures of the soldiers and sailors of the Confederate States Army and Navy of every rank, from that of the private to that of the General Commanding, who served faithfully the Confederate Cause, and also of civilians, including our noble women, who were devoted to the South; also such archives, relics, mementoes, records, histories, papers, books, orations, poems, paintings, pictures and literature of every kind, and everything else illustrative of the self-sacrifice and denial of the Confederate soldiers and sailors, and the Southern people, their courage- and heroism during said war, and their constancy and devotion to the cause for which they fought, together with the official acts of each of the States of the Southern Confederacy, and all debates therein and proclamations of their Governors, just before, during, and just after the war, and all other matters illustrative of the character, life, spirit and motives of the South and her people, including the period anterior, during and subsequent to the war, calculated to enable future historians to obtain such reliable facts and data as will assist them, in writing fair, accurate and impartial history of said war and of the South, the said Association being educational, patriotic and historical at all times. And this Corporation shall have the right to compile and publish, and to have compiled and published books, plans, charts, and other papers and documents relating to the purposes for which it is organized and to apply for and hold copyrights and patents neeessary for its- protection and to sell and dispose of the same.” (Italics supplied.)

Plaintiff .traversed the special plea; by agreement of the parties a jury was waived, and all matters of law and fact presented by the special plea were submitted to the court for decision. At the hearing on the special plea, defendant, to show that it had adhered in its activities to the purposes set forth in its charter of incorporation, introduced two witnesses who described somewhat in detail its activities from its incorporation until the present time. No other testimony was offered by either side. This testimony shows beyond doubt that those in charge of the association have at all times adhered strictly to the purposes for which it was originally created.

[528]*528From the testimony it clearly appears that the funds derived from admission fees are scarcely sufficient to pay the necessary expenses of keeping “Battle Abbey” open for the benefit of historians, students, and the general public; that there has never been any profit from the operations of the association, and, even if there were profits therefrom, the trustees, under the terms of the charter, would be required to expend such profit in the acquisition of additional historical data; that defendant is a nonstock corporation, and the sole purpose for which the institution is maintained is to make available for historians, students, and the public generally valuable Confederate historical documents, portraits, paintings, and the like, which purpose is wholly public in its nature; and that the only paid employees of the association are a hostess, a superintendent of buildings and grounds, and an assistant to such superintendent. It further appears from the testimony that the total income for the year was $4,665, $2,565 of which was derived as income from endowments and from other sums donated for the purpose of furthering the objects of the association, that the remaining $2¡,100' was derived from gate receipts or fees, and that the association ever since its organization has been, and still is, dependent upon the voluntary contributions and services of its members and friends for the continuance of its existence and activities.

Is defendant a strictly charitable institution in the broader and more inclusive sense? The text-books and decisions contain numerous definitions and descriptions of charitable institutions, but it is deemed desirable to refer here to a few only of them. In Ettlinger v. Trustees of Randolph-Macon College (C. C. A. 4th) 31 F.(2d) at page 870, it is said:

“It is clear that a corporation is to be deemed eleemosynary or charitable where its property is derived from charitable gifts or bequests and is administered, not for the purpose of gain, but in the interest of humanity; and an educational institution, established and endowed by private charity, falls clearly within the classification.”

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Bluebook (online)
5 F. Supp. 526, 1932 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bodenheimer-v-confederate-memorial-assn-vaed-1932.