People ex rel. New York Institution for the Blind v. Fitch

16 Misc. 464, 39 N.Y.S. 926
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 Misc. 464 (People ex rel. New York Institution for the Blind v. Fitch) 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
People ex rel. New York Institution for the Blind v. Fitch, 16 Misc. 464, 39 N.Y.S. 926 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

Beekman, J.

The relator was incorporated under chapter 214, Laws of 1831, for the purpose of instructing children who have been born' blind or who may have become blind by disease • or accident.” By chapter 166 of the Laws of 1870, the managers of the institution were authorized to receive for maintenance, education and support, upon the appointment of the superintendent of public instruction for a term not exceeding five years, all blind persons between the ages of eight and twenty-five years, residents of the. counties of New York and Kings, acceptable to such managers, upon compensation therefor to be made by the state. The act further provides as follows: Section 3. The supervisors of the county of New York or Kings from which state pupils shall be sent to and received in said institution, whose parents or guardians shall, in the opinion of the superintendent of public instruction, be unable to furnish them with suitable clothing, are [465]*465hereby authorized and directed, in every year while such pupils^ áre in said institution, to raise and appropriate fifty dollars for each of .said pupils from said counties respectively, and to pay the sum so raised to the said institution, to be by it applied to furnishing such pupils with suitable clothing while in said institution.

“ Section 4. If in .any year hereafter there shall be any surplus of the amount above required to be paid yearly by the said counties for clothing for pupils from said counties, respectively, then such surplus shall be deducted pro rata the ensuing year from the amount above required to be paid by the said counties respectively.”

Under this authority, the city of New York from year to year has paid to this institution the amount so directed to be raised and applied, until the year 1895, when payment was withheld by reason of á claim made by the state board of charities that the -relator was a charitable or eleemosynary institution, and had not complied with certain rules and regulation's which said board had assumed to make for it, under the authority of section 14 of article 8 of the state Constitution. This section reads as follows: Section 14. Nothing in this Constitution" contained shall prevent the legislature from making such provision for the education and support of the blind, the deaf and dumb, and juvenile delinquents, as to it may seem proper; or prevent any county, city, town or village from providing for the care, support, maintenance and secular education, of inmates of orphan asylums, homes for dependent children or correctional institutions, whether under public or private control. Payments by counties, cities," towns .and villages to charitable, eleemosynary, correctional and reformatory institutions, wholly or partly under private control, for care, support and maintenance, may be authorized, but shall not be required-by the legislature. No such payments shall be made -for any inmate of such institutions who is not received and retained therein pursuant to rules established by the state'board of charities. Such rules shall be subject to the control of the legislature by general laws.” ■

In answer to this claim, the relator contends that it is neither a charitable nor an eleemosynary institution, within the meaning of the section, and is not, therefore, subject to the jurisdiction of said board, or in any way constrained or affected by any rules or regulations which may have been so made. The words “ charitable and eleemosynary ” are practically synonymous, the latter being technically employed to designate a class of corporations organized for charitable purposes (4 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 188); the [466]*466object of the associated use in the Constitution being, doubtless, to cover in a coinprehensive way all charitable enterprises instituted and maintained through corporate or other form of association; the purpose being to completely cover all institutions designed for the ■care and relief of those who come under the well-understood definition of objects of charity, namely, persons who, through disease or ■other disability, are incapable of caring for themselves, and through lack of means, incapable of purchasing it from others. For such as these it has become the recognized duty of the state to provide —- a duty which in every civilized community is assumed without question, and more or less fully performed. The benevolence of the people has also led to the establishment of institutions administered through private agencies and supplied with funds by individual contribution," which take under their care a very large number of unfortunates who would otherwise become charges upon the state. The propriety, therefore, of state aid to such institutions, where it may rationally be extended, is obvious, and it was for the purpose of securing a proper application and use of the public money thus contributed that the Constitution demands that those receiving it shall be subject to certain rules and regulations adopted by the state board of charities — an official body established by section 11 of article 8 of that instrument, and charged with the duty of visiting and inspecting all institutions which aré of “ fi charitable, eleemosynary, correctional or reformatory character.”

Not only does the context of the various provisions of the Constitution dealing with the subject show that the institutions referred to as “ charitable or eleemosynary ” were intended to be' those which cared for the class of persons to whom I have referred, but the address to the people which was issued by the delegates to the Constitutional Convention of 1894, explanatory of their work, contains this statement, which shows quite clearly in what sense the words under discussion were intended by them" to be understood.In section 13 of the address they say: “We have provided also for regulating and limiting the payment of public' money to private institutions for the support of the poor by depriving the legislature of the power to pass mandatory laws requiring such payments from counties, cities, towns and villages, and by subjecting such expenditures to the control of-the state board of charities.”

' It would, therefore, seem to bé plain that the institutions charitable and eleemesynary within the meaning of the Constitution are those whose primary object it is to take" finder their protecting [467]*467care the destitute poor. Is the relator such an institution?-For it is upon the determination of this question that the decision of this application must rest. I do not think that it is, for the following reasons: By the very terms of its charter its corporate purpose is limited to “ the instruction of children who have been born blind, or who may have become blind by disease or accident.” It was designed to provide an education through the use of peculiar methods, suited to the deprivation of this unfortunate class of persons,' which were impossible in the ordinary schoolroom. The art of such instruction itself was in process of development, and for this as well as other reasons, there existed a necessity, that pupil and teacher should be in constant association under the same roof, each learning from the other. The function was purely educational, and the advantages which the institution offered were and still are desirable and suitable for all persons so afflicted, without regard to their pecuniary condition. It receives pupils from their parents and guardians from this state and from other states, but always upon all agreed compensation, at rates which it has established.

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Related

People ex rel. New York Institution for Blind v. Fitch
42 N.Y.S. 1131 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1896)

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Bluebook (online)
16 Misc. 464, 39 N.Y.S. 926, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-new-york-institution-for-the-blind-v-fitch-nysupct-1896.