Miami Retreat Foundation v. Ervin

62 So. 2d 748, 1952 Fla. LEXIS 1937
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedDecember 19, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 62 So. 2d 748 (Miami Retreat Foundation v. Ervin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miami Retreat Foundation v. Ervin, 62 So. 2d 748, 1952 Fla. LEXIS 1937 (Fla. 1952).

Opinion

62 So.2d 748 (1952)

MIAMI RETREAT FOUNDATION et al.
v.
ERVIN, Atty. Gen., et al.

Supreme Court of Florida, Special Division B.

December 19, 1952.
Rehearing Denied February 9, 1953.

*749 Bell & Bell, Brown and Koller, and Francis M. Miller, Miami, and J. Lewis Hall, Tallahassee, for appellants.

Richard W. Ervin, Atty. Gen., George E. Owen and Mallory H. Horton, Asst. Attys. Gen. and Sibley & Davis, Miami Beach, for appellees.

FABISINSKI, Associate Justice.

The background of Miami Retreat Foundation, as outlined in the report of the Special Master appointed by the Court below to make findings in this matter, and which we adopt as sufficient to provide a prologue, is as follows:

"Charles A. Reed and Ruth Reed, his wife, came to Miami, Florida, from the State of Indiana in 1926, with limited assets and began to operate in a small way a private sanitarium for alcoholics, drug addicts and mentally disturbed persons. The sanitarium grew. It was changed twice to the third and present location and prosperity came as the County of Dade and other governmental agencies began sending patients to Mr. and Mrs. Reed's sanitarium. After a time a corporation for profit, Miami Retreat, Inc., was organized and it conducted the sanitarium until some time in 1939 when Miami Retreat Foundation was organized under the laws relating to non-profit corporations, and thereafter all of the property used in the operation of the sanitarium was transferred to Miami Retreat Foundation. Miami Retreat Foundation was a `semi-charitable' corporation in the beginning, but in 1941 the charter was amended and it became `charitable, educational, scientific and non-sectarian'.
"There was and is a need for an institution of the type conducted by Miami Retreat Foundation in this community and it has, at a respectable profit, rendered a real service to the community, especially as to mentally disturbed persons. For a long time there was, and, it is said, at present there is no place in Southeastern Florida to send a mentally disturbed person while he is awaiting transportation to the Florida Hospital for the Insane at Chattahoochee, Florida, except the jail or the Miami Retreat Foundation. Usually it is some weeks after lunacy proceedings before a place is available at Chattahoochee, so while this practice entails a great public expense, at present it appears to be an unavoidable expense, and Miami Retreat Foundation does well in rendering the service in keeping these mentally disturbed people until they can be put in the State Hospital.
"The evidence is convincing that Ruth Reed had at least an equal part with Charles A. Reed in creating what became Miami Retreat Foundation and that she was a donor to the Foundation to the same extent as Charles A. Reed."

The Attorney General, on behalf of the State, acting under authority of Section 617.09, F.S.A., brought a bill in Chancery to annul the franchise of the Corporation, and for incidental relief, — for appointment of receiver to liquidate the corporation, temporary injunction, etc., and added a prayer for general relief.

Principally, the main allegations of the bill of complaint are that the Miami Retreat Foundation is not a scientific institution of learning, that it is not a benevolent or charitable organization and has never engaged in any charities; that on the contrary the Miami Retreat Foundation is engaged solely in the business of operating a private sanitarium for profit, that it has amassed a tremendous profit from its operations consisting of real estate, bonds, cash and other real and personal properties, in excess of *750 $500,000; that all of this property, real and personal, is under the domination and control of the defendant Charles A. Reed, none of which is diverted toward charitable, benevolent work or scientific learning.

Ruth Reed, who was named as a defendant and who is the divorced wife of the Charles A. Reed mentioned above, filed a cross-complaint, admitting the truth of the allegations of the bill of the Attorney General, elaborating upon the method in which the corporation was purportedly used as a cloak to permit her former husband to amass a large fortune without paying taxes on the profits derived from the business, and asserting that she was an equal partner in the venture, and entitled to distribution of one-half the assets after liquidation of the Corporation.

Miami Retreat Corporation, answering the cross-complaint, among other defenses filed a plea of res adjudicata, basing such claim on the final decree of the Court in the divorce action (it having been made a party thereto), and claimed an estoppel by reason of a marriage settlement agreement entered into between the contesting husband and wife, and which settlement was confirmed by such decree. Paragraph 12 of that decree contained the following:

"That the plaintiff, Ruth H. Reed, do forthwith assign, endorse and transfer and deliver unto Charles A. Reed any and all stock certificates now held or owned by her in Miami Retreat, Inc., and shall tender her resignation to any office or directorship she may have in Miami Retreat, Inc., and Miami Retreat Foundation."

Appellee Ruth Reed has accepted all of the provisions for alimony made to her consequent upon confirmation of the settlement agreement, and has also received $5,000 in cash under its terms. Provision was also made for annuity to be paid to her by Miami Retreat Foundation in the sum of $150, should she outlive her former husband.

There are other provisions for Ruth Reed in the settlement agreement and final decree consequent thereupon, of more or less inconsequential nature and not material to our discussion.

There is no serious claim made by appellant that its purposes or functions are educational or scientific within the meaning of Chapter 617, F.S.A., under which non-profit corporations are authorized and exist. Hence the sole issue as between the Attorney General and the corporation, is its character vel non as a charitable organization.

No good purpose would be served by our attempting to analyze and apply the evidence. The Special Master found that under the method of operation in effect in the conduct of the physical establishment of the appellants, it was purely and simply a business operated for profit, and did no substantial charity work. The profits have not inured to the benefit of Charles A. Reed, or to any other person connected with the Corporation, by any division, diversion or payment, but have been allowed to accumulate and have been carefully invested. They are available for future application to some benevolent or charitable purpose, but have not been so applied.

It is provided in the Charter that surplus funds "shall be placed in insured savings accounts or invested in marketable government bonds for safety with moderate income". And by amendment to its original charter there is a provision that "its incorporators, members and directors shall not have any vested right, interest or privilege of, in or to the assets, functions, affairs or franchises of the Foundation which may be transferable or inheritable", and that "this Corporation will not * * * distribute profits or dividends".

The Special Master found as a fact, as to the amount of charity work done by the Foundation, that only 2 1/2 per cent of all patients receive charity, and found as a conclusion of fact that this was inconsequential, and was insufficient in itself to constitute it a charitable organization.

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Bluebook (online)
62 So. 2d 748, 1952 Fla. LEXIS 1937, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miami-retreat-foundation-v-ervin-fla-1952.