General Hospital, Inc. v. City of Grangeville

201 P.2d 750, 69 Idaho 6, 1949 Ida. LEXIS 200
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 1949
DocketNo. 7477.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 201 P.2d 750 (General Hospital, Inc. v. City of Grangeville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Hospital, Inc. v. City of Grangeville, 201 P.2d 750, 69 Idaho 6, 1949 Ida. LEXIS 200 (Idaho 1949).

Opinion

HOLDEN, Chief Justice.

In May, 1946, M. L. Ayers commenced an action in the District Court of the Tenth Judicial District in and for Idaho County against General Hospital, Inc., City of Grangeville and the First National Bank of Lewiston. Ayers alleged in his complaint he was suing for and in behalf of himself and all citizens of Grangeville, and also the stockholders of General Hospital, Inc., against General Hospital, Inc., and *8 others for a declaratory judgment determining the conflicting claims, rights and status of General Hospital, Inc., City of Grangeville and the First National Bank of Lewiston. The City and the Bank demurred to the complaint upon the ground it did not state a cause of action. The trial o court sustained the demurrers and dismissed the action. From the judgment of dismissal, Ayers appealed to this court. Ayers v. General Hospital, Inc., 67 Idaho 430, 182 P.2d 958.

On that appeal, the decisive question presented for determination was: Did the complaint state a cause of action ?

In passing on that question, this court pointed out the complaint alleged that in 1938, “ ‘the General Hospital’ was organized as a domestic business corporation to construct and operate a hospital in Grange-ville; that 1315 shares at a par value of $32,875.00 were issued and subscribed for; and additional donations of upward of $2,-500.00 were received, but were insufficient and on solicitation to the U. S. Government for assistance, it was found a grant could be made only on application by a municipality. Thereupon, agreements were reached between the United States Government and the City of Grangeville, whereby the funds of the General Hospital, placed in a fund in the City Treasury, were matched in whole or in part by Federal funds and the hospital was thereby constructed on land owned by the city; the hospital was furnished in large part by funds of the General Hospital, Inc.; that the operating funds were deposited in the Grangeville branch of the First National Bank of Lewiston; and managed and controlled by directors of the General Hospital, Inc., and a committee of the City of Grangeville from 1940 to 1945, when such funds ‘without any action on the part of the Corporation (Hospital) were made a part of the City funds’ and since operated by the city; and that since December 1945, the management and control of the hospital and funds (then $13,909.00) have been in the hands of a committee appointed by the Mayor of •the city; that plaintiff believes the management and control of the hospital can be handled better by the General Hospital, Inc., which was organized for that purpose and if so operated, it will repay the stockholders and subscribers; and appellant prays that the conflicting claims, rights and status of the General Hospital, the bank and the city be determined.” Ayers v. General Hospital, supra, 67 Idaho at page 433, 182 P.2d at page 958.

It will be noticed the complaint alleged a disagreement between the parties touching the management and operation of the Hospital “without pleading the facts disclosing the grounds for and at least the basis for plaintiff’s [Ayers] claims in connection with the disagreement”. On that point this court held: “A pleading should allege facts as distinguished from mere conclusions”, further holding: “Conceding the Declaratory Judgment Act confers *9 broad powers and that courts may anticipa-torily decide status, rights, etc., nevertheless, facts must be alleged and the complaint was fatally deficient in not setting forth the agreements and contracts under which the hospital was constructed and-initially operated, the respective parties’ rights, or in what way the city had violated such agreements, or any one’s rights, etc. Therefore, the court properly sustained the general demurrers.” Ayers v. General Hospital, supra, 67 Idaho at pages 434 — 435, 182 P.2d at page 960.

Having pointed out with great particularity wherein the complaint was deficient, leave was granted Ayers to amend his complaint in order that he might allege the omitted facts and thus state a cause of action. It is clear leave was not granted to plead a new or different cause of action.

While amendments and the filing of amended pleadings rest in the sound, legal discretion of a trial court and, further, in determining the question of discretion, the power of the court should be freely and liberally exercised under the statute (Section 5-905, I.C.A.), it must be kept in mind in the instant case, that application for leave to file an amended complaint was not made in the lower court; hence, the discretion of that court was not invoked nor was leave granted to file the second amended complaint. In these circumstances leave to amend was limited to amending in the particulars pointed out by this court.

Nevertheless, a second amended complaint was filed by General Hospital, Inc., and M. L. Ayers, as plaintiffs, against the City of Grangeville as defendant. In the second amended complaint, in so far as pertinent here, it is alleged:

“II. That said defendant, City of Grangeville, now has, and has had at all times herein mentioned, the express statutory power to erect, establish and regulate hospitals, and to provide for the management and support of the same;
“III. That the plaintiff corporation and the defendant, City of Grangeville, through its Mayor, C. O. Vincent, and the members of the City Council who were in office, during the year 1938 entered into an oral agreement with the plaintiff corporation that funds of the plaintiff corporation were to be loaned to the City for the purpose of the construction, erection and equipping of a hospital to be located on * * certain land owned by the City of Grange-ville, the hospital being later constructed on such land.
“IV. That in consideration for all funds loaned to the City in pursuance to this oral agreement, the defendant, City of Grange-ville, through its Mayor, C. O. Vincent, and City Council, orally agreed that said funds should be repaid with interest at six per cent (6%) per annum to the plaintiff corporation out of the earnings of said hospital, such moneys to be returned to the plaintiff corporation from the profits of said hospital, or from such other sources as, *10 the City should determine; and until the corporation was fully repaid with interest, the management, control and handling of said hospital were to be placed in the hands of the plaintiff corporation;
“V. That $21,786.00 were loaned by the plaintiff corporation to the City of Grange-ville in pursuance to this agreement up to the 1st day of March, 1939; that a new Mayor, Al. J. Wagner, and City Council were duly elected to office by the city elections held in Grangeville during the month ■of April, 1939, and that these new city officials were desirous of showing their good •faith in honoring the prior agreement between the City of Grangeville and the -plaintiff corporation, and by their official act passed a resolution on May IS, 1939, affirming the prior actions of the city officials of- Grangeville and pledging the support of the Mayor and City Council for any plan of financing, equipping and operation of said hospital proposed by the committee; * * *.
“VI.

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Bluebook (online)
201 P.2d 750, 69 Idaho 6, 1949 Ida. LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-hospital-inc-v-city-of-grangeville-idaho-1949.