New Harmony Memorial Commission v. Harris

36 N.E.2d 856, 219 Ind. 73, 1941 Ind. LEXIS 210
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 17, 1941
DocketNo. 27,515.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 36 N.E.2d 856 (New Harmony Memorial Commission v. Harris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New Harmony Memorial Commission v. Harris, 36 N.E.2d 856, 219 Ind. 73, 1941 Ind. LEXIS 210 (Ind. 1941).

Opinion

Swaim, J.

The appellee, Joe C. Harris, was a guest in the inn or hotel, known as “The Tavern,” which was located in New Harmony, Indiana, and which was being operated by the appellant, The New Harmony Memorial Commission. While a guest in said hotel the appellee delivered to one Ola Reece, the commission’s employee in charge of the hotel, the sum of. $212.00, for safekeeping over night. This was done pursuant to a sign in the hotel informing the guests that “all valuables, jewelry and money should be left at the desk for safekeeping.” The employee failed to place the money in the hotel safe, but instead placed it in a clothes closet. During the night the money was stolen and the employee and the appellant refused to make good appellee’s loss.

Appellee filed a complaint in two paragraphs against the appellant commission for recovery of said money. *75 The appellant’s demurrer to each paragraph of the complaint was overruled. The appellant then filed answers of general denial to each paragraph of the complaint, and a third paragraph of answer denying the authority of the employee, to accept the money for safekeeping, and alleging that the safe in the hotel office was in charge of the director of the commission and his secretary, neither of whom was requested by the appellee to deposit the money in said safe. The cause was submitted to the court for trial without the intervention of a jury. The court found for the appellee and rendered judgment against the appellant commission. Appellant’s motion for new trial on the grounds that the decision was not sustained by sufficient evidence and was contrary to law was overruled and this appeal followed.

Counsel for both parties agree that “the whole of appellant’s defense to this action reduces itself to the proposition that the New Harmony Memorial Commission had no authority granted to it to operate this hotel.”

We shall, therefore, limit this opinion to the interpretation of the act creating the New Harmony Memorial Commission and the determination of the question as to whether said commission, in operating said hotel, was acting within the powers granted by said act.

The New Harmony Memorial Commission, as constituted at the time here in question, was created by Acts of 1939, ch. 135, p. 659. By § 4 of said act the commission was authorized “. . . to acquire and purchase all the various buildings and sites of every kind in and about New Harmony that it may deem essential to the completion of the New Harmony Memorial, or for any other purpose or use contemplated in this act. It shall also make all necessary restorations, *76 repairs and improvements that may be required in and about the buildings, and it may restore and erect such other structures as may be necessary and proper to carry out the provisions of this act, . . .”

In § 5 of the act the commission is expressly given further broad powers in these words, “The commission is empowered to attempt every form of experiment that it deems compatible with the establishment of the New Harmony Memorial, including the issuance of all suitable publications for that purpose.”

Section 8 provides, “The commission shall adopt such rules and regulations as may be found necessary . . . (for) the management of the grounds, buildings, structures and premises under its control, and any other matter which may be found necessary and which is not inconsistent with the provisions of this act.” In § 26 the commission is expressly authorized to purchase personal property such as furniture and fixtures “and such other properties as may be necessary to establish the memorial as a going concern, including the maintenance of a radio station, if such proves feasible.” This section also provides that the commission may establish a system of admission charges for individual units as fast as they are completed.

Further enlightenment on the general purpose of the act and on the powers of the commission is given by the recital of the duties of the director which the commission is directed to employ. Section 3 of the act provides as to such director that “It shall be his duty to make diligent research and investigation into all available sources for information as to feasible means for restoring and furnishing buildings and other structures, together with instituting practices and programs connected therewith, and to initiate by and with the approval and support of the commission such plans *77 and projects as shall memorialize substantially the outstanding ideals and customs promulgated by the Rappites and Owenites in New Harmony in such manner as shall reflect those great historic institutions most faithfully and bring the fullest possible measure of inspiration and benefit from the same to modern generations.”

Section 5 of the act is on the programs and projects to be carried out and provides:

“It shall be the duty of the director of the commission, by and with the approval of the commission to institute programs and projects of an educational, recreational, patriotic and cultural nature such as may be found necessary and feasible to restore the working system of the ‘Adventure in Happiness’ of Robert Owen’s ‘New Moral World,’ such as: forums, lyeeums, balls, festivals and public astronomical observations; shell hunts on the river, periodically conducted in memory of Thomas Say, the master conchologist, and his ■ charming wife, Lucy Sistaire; geological expeditions of a similar nature including the gradual development of a great geological museum in memory of William Madure, the Father of American Geology, and of David Dale Owen, who made New Harmony the main geological headquarters of the United States; scientific, literary, historical, and philosophical institutes in memory of Robert Owen and his illustrious sons, Robert Dale Owen and Richard Owen, and other eminent leaders of Owenite days; Harvest Home Festivals and music feasts of the Rappites; and every form of entertaimnent and edification that characterized any phase of the Owenite ‘Adventure in Happiness.’ Arrangements . may be made with one or more higher institutions of learning in Indiana or with individual members of faculties thereof for the most economical and "effective promotion of the uses and purposes of this act; and the most favorable working relations shall be cultivated at all times with public and parochial schools of Indiana especially in the conduct of pilgrimage programs and all forms of his *78 torical site recitals in New Harmony. Special emphasis may be laid upon classical music and cultural dancing and expert instructors may be employed, if necessary, to form and maintain thoroughly trained groups and special organizations for these purposes. Inducements shall be offered through the operation of the Boatload of Knowledge, and other craft, if necessary, to encourage a return to the Wabash river and its inviting banks for boating, swimming, and promenading as in Owenite days of the ‘Adventure in Happiness.’ The mention of specific exercises herein is not intended as mandatory, but merely suggestive, and is not meant to exclude others of a kindred nature that may be found adaptable to the uses and purposes of this act.”

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Bluebook (online)
36 N.E.2d 856, 219 Ind. 73, 1941 Ind. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-harmony-memorial-commission-v-harris-ind-1941.