Hunter v. St. Vincent Medical Center (In Re Parkview Hospital)

211 B.R. 619, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 952, 1997 WL 374735
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedJanuary 31, 1997
Docket19-30077
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 211 B.R. 619 (Hunter v. St. Vincent Medical Center (In Re Parkview Hospital)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hunter v. St. Vincent Medical Center (In Re Parkview Hospital), 211 B.R. 619, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 952, 1997 WL 374735 (Ohio 1997).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND DECISION

RICHARD L. SPEER, Bankruptcy Judge.

This cause comes before the Court upon Motion for Summary Judgment of Defendant Betty D. Montgomery, Attorney General for the State of Ohio, and the Responses filed by John J. Hunter, Trustee and Mid-American National Bank and Trust Company. This Court has reviewed the arguments of counsel, exhibits, as well as the entire record in the case. Based upon that review, and for the following reasons, the Court finds that the Attorney General’s Motion should be granted.

FACTS

The Debtor in this case, Parkview Hospital, was a non-profit osteopathic hospital located in Toledo, Ohio, which closed shortly before it filed bankruptcy. At issue in this case is a fund (hereafter “the Fund”) established in the name of Parkview Hospital via an account at Mid-American Bank and Trust Co. (hereafter “Mid-American”). The account is titled “Parkview Development Fund -Restricted” on Mid-American’s account statements. Mid-American is also the largest unsecured creditor in the related bankruptcy case and a Defendant in this adversary proceeding. The Plaintiff, John J. *622 Hunter, is the Chapter 11 Trustee who has been appointed in this case.

First funded in 1971, the Fund was initially called the Research Activity Fund. It was referenced in the Parkview Code of Regulations, which also provided for the appointment of a Research Activity Fund Committee. It was the Committee’s duty to administer and memorialize the legacies and donations to the Fund. In 1980, the Fund’s name was subsequently changed to the Development Fund, and the name of the Research Activity Fund Committee was accordingly changed to the Development Fund Committee. Because no records of periodic reconciliations with bank statements exist, either because they were lost or were never prepared in the first instance, it is not now possible to tie into the balance of the account at Mid-American with the records of the donated funds. What is available are records kept in spiral notebooks which memorialize, in individual handwritten entries, donations to the Fund from hundreds if not thousands of donors. According to this Court’s addition, the sum of the individual entries in the notebooks total One Hundred Seventy-eight Thousand Eight Hundred Fifty-six and 53/100 Dollars ($178,856.53). These entries begin in December of 1974 and continue monthly through December of 1993. Most donations were less than one hundred dollars and are noted to be “in memory of’ what appear to be deceased persons. Other entries include donations of a thousand dollars or more, though only one exceeds five thousand dollars. 1

As of the commencement of this case, the Fund totaled Two Hundred Fifty-two Thousand Two Hundred Eight and 34/100 Dollars ($252,208.34). Though this is more than the donations of One Hundred Seventy-eight Thousand Eight Hundred Fifty-six and 53/100 Dollars ($178,856.53) recorded in the notebooks, this discrepancy is explained at least in part by the fact that the notebooks date back only to December of 1974, whereas the Fund was established in 1971. 2 Also, the entries end December of 1993, though the bankruptcy case was not filed until August of 1994.

Under statutory authority, the Attorney General for the State of Ohio (hereafter the “Attorney General”) has taken the position that the Fund is made up of donations of a charitable character that impose a restriction on the Fund’s use. Accordingly, the Attorney General alleges that the Fund is a charitable trust, and is therefore not property of the bankruptcy estate. The Chapter 11 Trustee and Mid-American disagree. They argue primarily that there is not sufficient evidence to show a charitable trust. As the available evidence is documentary, a Motion for Summary Judgment is the most appropriate method for resolving this dispute.

In support of her Motion, the Attorney General submitted the following exhibits: the Parkview Code of Regulations revised March, 1981 and January, 1984; various Minutes of the Special Meetings of the Research Activity Fund; various Minutes of the Organizational, Reorganizational and Annual Meetings of the Board of Trustees of Park-view Hospital; various Minutes of the Organizational Meetings of the Research Activity Fund Committee; various Minutes of the Organizational, Reorganizational, and Annual Meetings of the Development Fund Committee; various Minutes of the Annual Meetings of the Corporation, various Minutes of the Regular Meetings of the Board of Trustees of Parkview Hospital; various Minutes of the Research Activity Fund Committee Meetings; various Minutes of the Development Fund Committee Meetings; various Minutes *623 of the Executive Committee of the Board of Trustees; various Minutes of the Staff Development Committee Meeting; Inter Office correspondence dated June 7, 1972, to Dr. Naduad; Inter Office correspondence dated June 7, 1972 to Dr. Carlson; Memorandum dated June 19, 1972, to B.A. Zeiher; Park-view Hospital Research Activity Fund Financial Report dated June 30, 1972 and Balance Sheet dated December 31,1977; Administrator’s Annual Report dated January 30, 1973; Minutes of Special Joint Meeting of Research Activity Fund Committee and the Staff Development Committee dated July 16, 1974; letter dated January 24, 1977, to B.A. Zeiher from Harry Feldman; Minutes of the Special Committee of the Board of Trustees to study the Research Activity Fund dated March 7, 19SO; Memorandum dated October 29, 1982 regarding “An Evening of Jazz with Marian McPartland;” various Minutes of the Development Fund Solicitation Committee; and the Corporate Authorization Resolution.

Separately, the Attorney General has also submitted a transcript of the deposition of Bernhardt A. Zeiher who was president of Parkview Hospital for thirty-seven years (having retired in 1991). Both the Trustee and Mid-American were represented at the deposition and engaged in cross examination. Further, the Attorney General has also submitted two brochures which discuss charitable giving to the hospital. One is entitled “When You Ask ‘How Can I Help?’” and contains what this Court believes to be an accurate summarization of the Research Activity Fund as reflected in the available record of the Fund, with a couple of exceptions discussed infra. This brochure reads in pertinent part:

Parkview Hospital has never engaged in active solicitation of funds from the general public, the community it serves. The hospital has received numerous gifts over the years and they have been utilized in the manner prescribed by the donors.
By no means consider this packet a solicitation by Parkview Hospital. It is merely presented as a suggestion for those interested in the development of the hospital and the osteopathic concept of medicine and surgery.
Gifts to the hospital may be stipulated or unstipulated. They may, for example, be designated for the Building Fund or the Research Activity Fund, which are described individually herein. Or they may be designated as a general contribution to the hospital for use as its Trustees see fit. Contributions also may be in the form of memorials for deceased loved ones or friends.
Contributions may be made in several ways.

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211 B.R. 619, 1997 Bankr. LEXIS 952, 1997 WL 374735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hunter-v-st-vincent-medical-center-in-re-parkview-hospital-ohnb-1997.