Bond v. . Tarboro

7 S.E.2d 617, 217 N.C. 289
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 20, 1940
StatusPublished

This text of 7 S.E.2d 617 (Bond v. . Tarboro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bond v. . Tarboro, 7 S.E.2d 617, 217 N.C. 289 (N.C. 1940).

Opinion

WINBORNE, J., dissenting.

STACY, C. J., and BARNHILL, J., concur in dissent. This is a proceeding brought by the trustees of a charitable trust, who operate a hospital in Tarboro, N.C. under the name and style of Edgecombe General Hospital, to secure court authority to borrow from the Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Company the sum of $40,000, on *Page 290 certain terms, to execute a note or notes therefor, and to secure the payment of the note or notes by the execution and delivery of a mortgage or deed of trust on the hospital property. The purpose of the loan is to make certain additions and improvements to the present plant, particularly by the construction of a new building on the site now occupied by what is designated as the Nurses' Home, and also by the erection of a new building to be used as a Nurses' Home. The details of the plan are set forth in the findings of fact of the court below. The present hospital was first established in 1901 and has been operated continuously since that time by various trustees, individual and corporate. In 1928, the Edgecombe Hospital and Benevolent Association, Inc., conveyed the property to the present trustees, by deed dated 6 June, 1938, recorded in Book 288, page 300, Edgecombe County registry, which conveyed the property to the present trustees, as "trustees for the use and benefit of the citizens of the town of Tarboro, of the county of Edgecombe, and of the adjacent counties." Except for the conveying clause, description of the property and the attestation, the deed contained only the following, which is found in thehabendum clause: "To have and to hold the aforesaid real and personal property, together with all the privileges and appurtenances thereunto belonging or in anywise appertaining unto the said parties of the second part, their successors and assigns, for the purpose of owning, equipping, managing, maintaining and supporting a hospital for the care and treatment of the sick and the indigent or any others requiring medical or surgical aid, the dispensing of charity, distribution of funds for charitable and benevolent purposes and for such other and further acts as may be necessary to carry out the purposes aforesaid."

The plaintiffs set forth, and it was found by the court, that the present plant, especially the building designated as the Nurses' Home (which contains other departments as well as room for the nurses) is not safe for use, constitutes a fire hazard, and is not in condition to be so repaired as to render it reasonably adapted for further use. The plaintiffs have secured from the Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Company a commitment to make a loan of $40,000, to be secured by mortgage or deed of trust, and the plaintiffs propose to rebuild the plant as fully set forth. On the findings of fact the court below adjudged and decreed that the plaintiffs (trustees) be authorized to secure the proposed loan and execute necessary note or notes and a mortgage or deed of trust on the property. To this judgment the defendants excepted, assigned error and appealed to the Supreme Court. This exception and assignment of error and other necessary facts will be set forth in the opinion. The questions involved in this controversy are: (1) Has the court, in the exercise of its equity jurisdiction, the power to authorize the trustees of a charitable trust to mortgage the trust property? (2) If so, do the facts in the case justify the exercise of that power? Under the facts and circumstances of this case, we think both the questions must be answered in the affirmative.

The findings of facts by the court below are set out in full in the record and we think are plenary to support the judgment. It is found that "Neither the deed which created the original trust nor any of the mesne conveyances contain any restrictions upon the power of the grantee or grantees therein, to alienate or encumber the trust property."

This proceeding was brought for the purpose of obtaining court authority to borrow an amount not exceeding $40,000 from the Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Company and to execute a note or notes therefor, together with a mortgage or deed of trust on the property described in the petition. The total investment at this time of the Edgecombe General Hospital amounts to $60,000. In the findings of facts is the following: "The present plant of said institution consists of (1) the original brick building in which the hospital began operations in the year 1901, it being then a residence building of more than fifteen years of age; this building houses the home for nurses, the dining room, the kitchen, the deep-therapy X-ray department, and the heating plant; (2) a brick building connected with the above building which was constructed in the year 1916, at a cost of about $15,000, with funds raised by voluntary donations; this building contains thirteen private hospital rooms, four wards, two operating rooms, X-ray room, offices, etc.; (3) a brick building in the rear of the Nurses' Home, constructed in the year 1920, at a cost of about $15,000, with funds also raised by voluntary donations; this building contains rooms for colored people and is connected with both of the above-mentioned buildings. The building referred to above as the Nurses' Home, being old and dilapidated, is dangerous and unsafe, some of the outside walls are cracked from bottom to top in several places, the interior woodwork has rotted in many places, the electric wiring, the plumbing and heating pipes, connections and fixtures are worn out, and there exists a serious fire hazard on account of such conditions. This structure is unsafe and unfit for use in its present condition and on account of its age and plan of construction it is impracticable and economically inadvisable to remodel it for use as a part of a modern and well appointed hospital; and without this building or one erected in its place the petitioners will be unable to discharge the duties imposed upon them in a proper, reasonable and adequate manner. Because of the imperative need of replacing the aforesaid portion of the trust property and the further need of improving generally so as to *Page 292 maintain it as an up-to-date hospital for the practice of modern medicine and surgery and equipped to provide and furnish the kind and measure of service contemplated by the trust have worked out and submitted to the court a plan of improvement and enlargement hereinafter set out in detail, which the court finds to be based upon sound economic considerations and one designed to accomplish the end in view and also to widen and enlarge the scope and field of petitioners' operations; as a part of this plan the petitioners on 9 July, 1938, acquired title to a parcel of land adjoining the parcel of land above referred to and on which the present hospital buildings are located, which was conveyed to the petitioners by deed in Book 366, page 368, Edgecombe County registry."

The details of the improvement and enlargement are set forth and the annual rental is found to be sufficient to operate the hospital and carry the loan. The entire buildings and furniture, fixtures and equipment to cost approximately $40,000.

The court below further found: "That the consummation of the above loan will be to the great, lasting and material advantage of all parties concerned, including the `sick and indigent, or all others requiring medical or surgical aid' in Edgecombe and adjacent counties; and that on the other hand, if authority to consummate said loan is withheld and petitioners are prevented from carrying out the proposed plan of improvement and enlargement the benefits accruing from the original trust property and subsequent donations will be presently materially limited and in the course of time entirely lost.

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Bluebook (online)
7 S.E.2d 617, 217 N.C. 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bond-v-tarboro-nc-1940.