Burd Orphan Asylum v. School District

90 Pa. 21, 1879 Pa. LEXIS 192
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 5, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 90 Pa. 21 (Burd Orphan Asylum v. School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burd Orphan Asylum v. School District, 90 Pa. 21, 1879 Pa. LEXIS 192 (Pa. 1879).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Truhkey

delivered the opinion of the court,

' The clear and convincing opinion of the learned judge of the Common Pleas comprises all that need be said in support of the judgment. He puts the case on the true ground, namely, that the charity is not purely public, for the reason that it is practically limited to white female orphan children, who shall have been baptised in the Protestant Episcopal Church. His reasoning upon the essential point, accords with the doctrine of Donohugh’s Appeal, 5 Norris 806, where it was'held that private institntions for purposes of purely public charity, and not administered for private gain, may be exempted from taxation. It was there said, “ The essential feature of a public use is that it is not confined to privileged individuals, but is open to the indefinite public. It is this indefinite or unrestricted quality that gives it its public character. The smallest street in the smallest village is a public • highway of the Commonwealth, and none the less so because a vast majority of the citizens will certainly never derive any benefit from its use. It is enough that they may do so if they choose. So there is no charity conceivable which will not, in its practical operation, exclude a large part of mankind, and there are few which do not do so in express terms, or by the restrictive force of the description of the persons for whose benefit they are intended. Thus, Girard College excludes by a single word, half the public, by requiring that only male children shall be received; the great Pennsylvania Hospital closes its gates to all but recent injuries, yet no one questions that they are public charities in the widest and most exacting [29]*29sense. * * * Next, and last, we have to consider the force to he given to the word ‘ purely’ in the constitutional phrase, ‘ purely public charity.’ In this connection, and in its ordinary sense, the word purely means completely, entirely, unqualifiedly, and this is the meaning we. must presume the people to have intended in adopting it in their constitution.” Per Mitchell, J., in C. P.

From the foregoing, it is at once seen that a public use, whether for all men or a class, is one not confined to privileged persons. The smallest street is public, for all have an equal right to travel on it; but a way used by thousands, which may be shut against a stranger, is private. Would Girard College be a public charity if the male children entitled to admission were limited to sons of deceased Masons or Odd Fellows ? If Pennsylvania Hospital closed its gates to all hut Methodists or Baptists, having recent injuries, the people would not believe it a purely public charity in the intendment of their constitution. A charity for the poor of a parish or township is public; but not, if confined to poor Presbyterians in the municipality.

Public charities may be restricted to a class of the people of the state or of a municipal division; at the same time, they must be general for all of the class, within the particular municipality. “ Thus, a blind asylum is only for the blind in the community.” If it be completely public, all the blind in that community are on, an equal' footing, and should its capacity be insufficient for all, there is no mistaking justice in the order of admission. To open its doors only to the blind of a particular religious denomination, or of a beneficial association, or of a. political party, shuts them against the public. A known and recognised class, though not generally poor, or diseased or decrepit, may be the subject of a public charity, as sailors; yet if the endowment were limited in its benefits to sailors who are members of a designated sect, there could hardly be two opinions of its character.

Private or individual gain in a pecuniary sense, is not the sole test. “ The true test is to be found in the objects of the institution.” Where these are to advance the interest of a party, of an association, of a private corporation, of a religious denomination, and the like, however beneficial to the public their growth and success may be, there is a private object to gain; the institution is not unqualifiedly public. In such cases the purpose is wholly private, or the private blends with the public. •

The constitution prohibits appropriations “to any denominational or sectarian institution, corporation or associationand of money raised for public schools, to be “ used for the support of any sectarian school.” It forbids exemption from taxation of all property, except such as may he devoted to public purposes and uses. Among the public purposes, “actual places of religious worship” are named, thereby excluding from the exception other property held by reli[30]*30gious societies. How can it be said that an institution for the support and education of the orphan children of a distinct denomination of Christians, may be exempted from taxation within the spirit of the constitution ?

Judgment affirmed. .

Chief Justice Sharswood and Justices Mercur and Páxson, dissented.

On May 20th 1879, “The Church Home for ChildrenJ” united in an application for a re-argument of the case and through its counsel, George Tucker Bispham, Esq., assigned the following, reasons therefor: >

It is a charity incorporated by the laws of this Commonwealth, whose constitution authorizes it to maintain and educate orphans and desitute white children, to be received without regal’d to the religious belief of their parents, but to be trained in the faith of the Protestant Episcopal Church of the United States. By an Act of the Legislature, passed in 1860, its real estate, which is in the county of Philadelphia, has been exempted from- taxation. It had believed that, by reason of being “an institution of charity,” it came within the provisions of the Act of the 14th of May 1874, and was, therefore, still exempt from taxation.- And such has been the view heretofore adopted by the proper authorities.

The petitioner does not believe that its claim for exemption from taxation rests entirely on the same basis as that of the Burd Orphan Asylum, and it is advised that the decision of the court recently made will not necessarily affect it. Certainly it will not be conclusive as to its rights. It unites, however, in the petition for a re-argument, as it believes that, upon careful reconsideration, the Burd Orphan Asylum will be considered as exempt from taxation, and a fortiori, that the property held by the petitioner will be exempt.

Its view of the questions involved is, in brief, as follows:

1. It involves the constitutionality of the Act of 14th of May 1874, under which the corporation in question was expressly exempted as “ an institution of benevolence or charity,” and the act, though not referred to in the opinion, is in effect decided to be unconstitutional.

In five states similar constitutions have been identically interpreted by their various legislatures, and the constitutionality expressly sustained by the court. It is submitted that this question is too important to be determined without the fullest presentation and investigation.

2. It is conceived that no logical distinction can exist between classification by creed and classification by race, age, color, sex, birth, or physical or mental disabilities.

3. The constitutional provisions that the legislature shall not [31]*31appropriate money to any sectarian institution, was not intended to apply to laws exempting such institutions from taxation; for,

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Bluebook (online)
90 Pa. 21, 1879 Pa. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burd-orphan-asylum-v-school-district-pa-1879.