Gallon v. House of Good Shepherd

122 N.W. 631, 158 Mich. 361, 1909 Mich. LEXIS 714
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 4, 1909
DocketDocket No. 72
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 122 N.W. 631 (Gallon v. House of Good Shepherd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gallon v. House of Good Shepherd, 122 N.W. 631, 158 Mich. 361, 1909 Mich. LEXIS 714 (Mich. 1909).

Opinion

Ostrander, J.

(after stating the facts). A contention is made which goes to the right of the plaintiff to recover, assuming it to be established that her ward was unlawfully deprived of her liberty — imprisoned—by defendant. It is said (a) that defendant is a governmental agency; (&) that it is a public charitable institution. If it is either, it is not liable to plaintiff for the torts of its officers or servants. The notion that it is a governmental agency is predicated of the statute which has been referred to, which permits certain magistrates and courts to commit offenders to the institution. Assuming that defendant might legally detain a girl committed to its institution by one of the magistrates or courts named in the statute, it does not follow that the institution becomes, by force of this statute, a State institution or, within any definition applicable in this discussion, a governmental agency. In a sense, girls so committed are wards of the State (Hunt v. Wayne Circuit Judges, 143 Mich. 93 [105 N. W. 531, 3 L. R. A. (N. S.) 564]), confided to the custody of the defendant, upon the request of a parent or guardian, as they might be committed by State authority to the custody and care of an individual. Whatever the relation thus created between the State and the institution may be called, and whatever rights and duties would or [366]*366might arise out of such relation of the institution to the girl, it is clear that the general character of the institution is not changed. It remains, in fact and in law, the institution described in its articles of association.

The statute under which defendant is organized does not define a charitable purpose, but only that any three or more persons who may desire to become incorporated for any charitable purpose may do so. Societies organized under the provisions of the act, whose purposes are charitable, are charitable societies. The avowed object of the defendant is charitable. For the purposes of this case, it may be treated as occupying, in the view of the law, the position of a public charitable institution, administering a charitable fund. Bruce v. Methodist Episcopal Church, 147 Mich. 230 (110 N.W. 951, 10 L. R. A. [N. S.] 74). It administers the fund according to rules of its own adoption, by methods of its own choosing. It shelters, clothes, feeds, and instructs the inmates, requiring of them such labor in return as they can perform. Its buildings and premises are erected and arranged with the purpose of detaining those whom it desires to detain. It is intended that girls confided to the institution shall remain until discharged. While it appears that avenues are sometimes open by which an inmate may go out, it also appears that one who thereby goes out escapes. It is a place of detention. Concerning these matters, the record leaves no one in doubt. The rule that one who enters voluntarily may leave at pleasure, said to be in force in the institution, is a rule in recognition of the duty not to detain one not authoritatively committed to the care of defendant.

Upon the facts, the question presented is not one of the responsibility of defendant to those who voluntarily accept the shelter of the institution, to those committed to it by magistrates or courts, or to those detained at the request or by the consent of parents or guardians. It is not pretended that Mabel Wellington was there by order of court or by consent or at the request of parents or of relatives. It is admitted that after she went to the insti[367]*367tution she was not outside its inclosing wall or fence until her release was applied for by her relatives. The jury were instructed that if she voluntarily entered the institution, or voluntarily remained there, thereby subjecting herself to its rules and discipline, she could not recover, and a verdict must be returned for defendant. The question, then, is one of the liability of defendant to one unlawfully detained in its institution — to one deprived of liberty without authority of the law.

To this question there can be but one answer. And liability may not be affirmed or denied upon any application of the doctrine of respondeat superior, if, indeed, upon the facts there is room for its application. The duty not to imprison a citizen in defendant’s institution without lawful authority is not one which may be delegated to servants or agents so as to relieve the principal from responsibility. The argument that a trust fund will be diverted if used to indemnify the injured person, and therefore the defendant is not liable, was answered in Bruce y. Methodist Episcopal Church, supra. See, also, Kellogg v. Church Charity Foundation, 128 App. Div. 214 (112 N. Y. Supp. 566).

We come, then, to the consideration of errors alleged to have been committed in the conduct of the trial and in refusing a new trial. It was the theory of plaintiff, first, that Mabel was an involuntary inmate of the institution, held there against her will; second, that her treatment while there was improper and resulted in injury. As to the second proposition, it should be said that the specific objections to the admission and the exclusion of testimony upon that subject have become unimportant, for the reason that the whole matter was withdrawn from the consideration of the jury. Whether it should be said that defendant was prejudiced generally by receiving some of the testimony offered, the prejudice being reflected in the verdict which was rendered, is a separate matter, which will be later referred to. As to the first proposition, and whichever way one may conclude the [368]*368truth to lead, the testimony presents a very unusual condition of things. Assuming the girl to have been healthy, moral, of good reputation, with relatives in the city of Detroit interested in her welfare, to whose house she was free to go, a Protestant, with no particular religious tendencies,. a girl who had by her own efforts found employment at various places, receiving and disposing of her earnings, the natural inference would be that she did not willingly immure herself in this institution for seven years as one of a class of girls supposed to need reformation. The facts assumed were supported by the testimony produced by plaintiff. We find nothing in this testimony which requires particular notice. None of these facts are seriously disputed by defendant, although testimony was offered tending to prove that upon entering she stated that she was a Catholic, and it is claimed, upon the whole record, that plaintiff is now manifesting an interest in her ward which is in marked contrast to the lack of interest displayed in her sister before she entered defendant’s institution. A peculiar circumstance is that the relatives of Mabel who were witnesses discredit her mental soundness while presenting her, as they are obliged to do, as the principal witness for plaintiff. The sister discredits, not her truthfulness, but her mental competency, in having herself appointed to be her guardian. The brother discredits her in testimony such as the following:

“At present her mind is not what it should be, though she is improving. She is not completely competent to take care of herself, but far from it, and in some particulars she does not know the difference between right and wrong. I cannot say whether she knows the difference between the truth and a lie.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Guardiola v. Oakwood Hospital
504 N.W.2d 701 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1993)
Winslow v. Veterans of Foreign Wars National Home
44 N.W.2d 19 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1950)
Andrews v. Young Men's Christian Ass'n
226 Iowa 374 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1939)
Andrews v. Y.M.C.A.
284 N.W. 186 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1939)
O'Moore v. Driscoll
28 P.2d 438 (California Court of Appeal, 1933)
Daniels v. Milstead
128 So. 447 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1930)
Bruce v. Young Men's Christian Ass'n.
277 P. 798 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1929)
Phoenix Assurance Co. v. Salvation Army
256 P. 1106 (California Court of Appeal, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 N.W. 631, 158 Mich. 361, 1909 Mich. LEXIS 714, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gallon-v-house-of-good-shepherd-mich-1909.