Burgess v. Four States Memorial Hospital

465 S.W.2d 693, 250 Ark. 485, 1971 Ark. LEXIS 1283
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 19, 1971
Docket5-5521
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 465 S.W.2d 693 (Burgess v. Four States Memorial Hospital) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burgess v. Four States Memorial Hospital, 465 S.W.2d 693, 250 Ark. 485, 1971 Ark. LEXIS 1283 (Ark. 1971).

Opinion

John A. Fogleman, Justice.

Appellants, who are the County Judge and Tax Assessor of Miller County, assert that the chancery court erred in refusing to dismiss appellee’s suit to require them to remove all of its property from the county tax rolls, claiming exemption from taxation under Article XVI, Section 5, of the Arkansas Constitution. Appellants raised no jurisdictional questions, and the matter proceeded to trial on the merits. The chancellor, after hearing all the evidence, found that one building once used as a nursing home and another built on the premises by appellee, together with the lands upon which they are located, were not exempt from taxes because appellee received rental income from this property and did not use it exclusively for public charity. He found that all other property of appellee qualified for the exemption, but held that he had no jurisdiction to relieve appellee from 1969 taxes.

Appellee, Four States Memorial Hospital, is a nonprofit Arkansas corporation. Its articles of incorporation prohibit the payment of any net earnings, dividends or other distributions to any officer, director, member or private individual, except as compensation for services rendered or reimbursement of expenses incurred in connection with the corporation’s affairs. Its stated general purpose is scientific, educational and charitable, particularly for ownership and operation of hospitals and other facilities for the care and treatment of sick, injured and disabled persons and incidentally for the education and training of medical students, interns, physicians, nurses, technicians, pathologists and other hospital personnel and for carrying on scientific research for alleviation of human suffering. The corporation has no shares or capital stock, but is composed of one class of members with voting rights. On dissolution or liquidation, all its net assets are to be distributed to one or more scientific, religious, charitable or educational organizations exempt from Federal Income Tax under Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 (or the corresponding section of future law). Any such assets not disposed of by the corporation may be distributed for such purposes or to such organizations as may be directed by the circuit court of the county in which the principal office of the corporation is then located.

While appellants refer to their motion as one for a directed verdict, we take it to be a motion challenging the sufficiency of the evidence to warrant the granting of the relief sought pursuant to Ark. Stat. Ann. § 27-1729 (Repl. 1962). In order for the court to have granted such a motion, there must have been no substantial evidence which, when given its strongest probative force in favor of appellee, would have made a prima facie case for appellee. Nowlin v. Spakes, 250 Ark. 26, 463 S. W. 2d 650. We find ample evidence to justify the denial of the motion. As a matter of fact, we could not say that the chancellor’s findings on the merits were not supported by a preponderance of the evidence.

Appellants’ argument is that appellee failed to meet its burden of showing that its buildings, grounds and materials were used exclusively for public charity as required by the pertinent constitutional provision. Its basic premises are:

1. Appellee accepted the property as a gift from St. Louis Southwestern Railroad Company, commonly called the Cotton Belt.
2. The administrator employed by appellee was, at the time his services were engaged, Inspector of Flospital Services in the employment of the railroad.
3. Appellee accepted from the Cotton Belt Employees Hospital Trust Association an unsecured, interest-free loan of $127,000 of which $7,000 was used to improve income-producing property not used by appellee for hospital purposes, but rented to a maintenance employee for $45 per month.
4. Living quarters in a building which had been a nursing home were rented by appellee to a doctor who was not on its medical staff, but was an employee of the Employees Trust.
5. All except two of the members of the board of directors of appellee are the same as the directors of the Employees Trust.
6. Only three charity patients have been treated at the hospital.

It is undisputed that the hospital operated by appellee was formerly owned by the St. Louis Southwestern Railroad Lines Hospital Trust and commonly called the Cotton Belt Hospital. It was used exclusively by employees of the railroad or its subsidiaries who were members of the trust. All of the buildings, equipment and lands which were used in connection with the hospital were donated by the railroad company and the hospital trust to appellee about September 1, 1967. The buildings, in addition to the hospital itself, consisted of a dwelling house, 1 and the former nursing home building.

Sam Raney, appellee’s administrator, was in charge of the operation of the hospital. He testified that the loan from the Employees Trust was to be repaid when and if appellee could do so. The only writing evidencing the loan was in the minutes of the board of directors of the lender. Raney stated that there were 28 doctors from the local community on the actual medical staff and 9 doctors on a courtesy staff. Any number of patients of a member of the actual staff could be admitted to the hospital, according to the skills or ability of the member physician to treat them. Only four patients of a member of the courtesy staff can be admitted in any one calendar year. Raney exercises discretion as to admission of a patient referred by a physician on the staff, but none is refused treatment and service which the hospital and its staff can adequately render. He said that, even though 50% to 53% of the hospital patients were Employees Trust members, 700 to 1,000 patients who were not members had been cared for by appellee at the hospital. In addition, the hospital admitted approximately 2,000 patients under the Medicare program administered by the United States Department of Health, Education and Welfare. The hospital also provided services under the state Medicaid program, whose payments are limited, however, to 20 days of inpatient services and 12 outpatient visits, after which one becomes a charity patient unless he is transferred to a Little Rock hospital. One of these patients had six admissions and four outpatient visits.

Raney said that a new surgical suite, a new recovery room, a clinic, a new conference room, a nurse’s station, an emergency power unit and an x-ray film developer had been added to the hospital by appellee to enable it to adequately serve “public” patients. He also testified that two surgical suites and the second floor of the west entrance had been remodeled and a waiting room converted to a semiprivate visitors’ room for this purpose. He added that new desks, chairs and beds had been purchased. He estimated that appellee had spent a couple of hundred dollars for bulldozer work. He totalled expenditures for such purposes from the loan at $123,000.

The hospital has neither emergency room nor maternity ward. The reason given for not having an emergency room was inability of appellee to find doctors to adequately staff it.

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Bluebook (online)
465 S.W.2d 693, 250 Ark. 485, 1971 Ark. LEXIS 1283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burgess-v-four-states-memorial-hospital-ark-1971.