Newton v. Lewis

118 Misc. 382
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 118 Misc. 382 (Newton v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newton v. Lewis, 118 Misc. 382 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

Staley, J.

The attorney-general of the state of New York makes application herein for a writ of mandamus, commanding the board of trustees of the New York State School for the Blind, at Batavia, N. Y., to make written reports to the state board of charities of the following matters :

(1) As to the visits and inspection of said institution by the said board of trustees, and the condition of said institution.

(2) Written reports of the attendance of said board of trustees at its regular and special meetings.

(3) The minutes of the regular and special meetings of said board of trustees.

[384]*384The inception of the New York State School for the Blind, at Batavia, N. Y., is found in chapter 587 of the Laws of 1865, which provides for the appointment of five commissioners to select a site upon which to erect the institution.

It also provides for the appointment of commissioners to contract for the erection of the necessary buildings and makes an appropriation of $30,000 for the purchase of a site. The institution was then known as the New York State Institution for the Blind.”

Chapter 744 of the Laws of 1867 stated the objects of the institution and made provision for its management. By chapter 66 of the Laws of 1868 an appropriation of $100,000 was authorized for the completion of the buildings. Chapter 563 of the Laws of 1895 changed the name of the institution to the New York State School for the Blind.”

The institution is maintained partly at state expense, partly through county aid, and partly through the payment of tuition by individual students.

By chapter 136 of the Laws of 1919 it is provided that All the powers of regulation, supervision and control heretofore exercised by the state board of charities upon, over and in relation to the New York State School for the Blind at Batavia, by virtue of the state charities law, are hereby transferred to and vested in the commissioner of education in addition to his other powers and duties, and the commissioner of education shall hereafter exercise and perform in relation to such state school for the blind all the powers and duties heretofore exercised and performed by the state board of charities relating to the regulation, supervision and control of such school under the provisions of the state charities law. Nothing herein contained shall in any way deprive the state board of charities of its powers of visitation and inspection in regard to said school for the blind as provided in the constitution nor affect in any way the fiscal control of said school now exercised under the state charities law by the fiscal supervisor of state charities.”

Since the enactment of the last-named statute, the board of trustees of the New York State School for the Blind has refused to furnish the state board of charities a statement of the attendance of the board of trustees at regular and special meetings and a transcript of the records of such meetings. Such refusal is based upon the claim that since the passage of the last-named act, said reports cannot be required, because they do not come within the meaning of the power of visitation or inspection expressly conferred upon the state board of charities by the Constitution of the state and are specifically excepted by the provisions of the act of 1919.

Section 11, article 8 of the New York State Constitution provides [385]*385for a state board of charities as a constitutional body and confers its powers and duties as follows: “ The Legislature shall provide for a State board of charities, which shall visit and inspect all institutions, whether State, county, municipal, incorporated or not incorporated, which are of a charitable, eleemosynary, correctional or reformatory character, excepting only such institutions as are hereby made subject to the visitation and inspection of either of the commissions hereinafter mentioned, but including all reformatories except those in which adult males convicted of felony shall be confined.”

The New York State School for the Blind comes within the class of institutions subject to the power of visitation and inspection by the state board of charities. People ex rel. N. Y. Inst. for Blind v. Fitch, 154 N. Y. 14.

The enactment of the legislature in 1919 limited the state board of charities to such jurisdiction of this particular institution as is conferred by the constitutional power and obligation of visitation and inspection. These terms in the New York Constitution have never received judicial interpretation so far as I am able to ascertain.

It is contended here that these words are to be construed according to their commonly accepted colloquial meaning. A review of the history of the law of charities makes it manifest that the words visit,” “ visitation,” “ visitor,” and visitatorial power,” have a special and technical significance when used in connection with charitable or eleemosynary corporations, and a correct determination of the extent and nature of the constitutional power conferred must depend upon the status and exercise of such power as it has been established in the development of the law regulating and controlling private and public charities.

The existence and exercise of a visitatorial power over charitable, eleemosynary and educational institutions is as old as the human impulse and bounty of man which created them for the relief of the sufferings of the distressed and for the improvement, refinement and culture of the mind.

In early times it became a maxim that he who gave the property, who founded the charity, might regulate it in the future. Cujus est dare, ejus est disponere. This right of visitation descended from the founder to his heirs, as a right of property, and precisely as his other property went to his heirs. In default of heirs it went to the king, as all other property went to the king for the want of heirs. It was a right that grew out of the donation and endowment of the property. The founder might part with it and vest it in others and his power of visitation was transferred to them instead [386]*386of descending to his heirs. The right of visitation was a private right which could be asserted in law and which had the same protection of the law as other rights. A transgression of the right in an attempted exercise of it, under some circumstances, might be redressed by the courts.

The English law controlling the right of visitation of private charitable institutions is tersely stated by Mr. Justice Washington in Dartmouth College v. Woodward, 4 Wheat. (U. S.) 518, 660, as follows: But private and particular corporations for charity, founded and endowed by private persons, are subject to the private government of those who erect them, and are to be visited by them or their heirs, or such other persons as they may appoint. The only rules for the government of these private corporations are the laws and constitutions assigned by the founder. The right of government and visitation arise from the property which the founder had in the lands assigned to support the charity; and, as he is the author of the charity, the law invests him with the necessary power of inspecting and regulating it.”

In the same case Mr. Justice Story, referring to the power of visitation which attached to a corporation of private foundation observed at page 673:

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Bluebook (online)
118 Misc. 382, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newton-v-lewis-nysupct-1922.