People ex rel. State Board of Charities v. New York Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Children

162 N.Y. 429
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 17, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 162 N.Y. 429 (People ex rel. State Board of Charities v. New York Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Children) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People ex rel. State Board of Charities v. New York Society for Prevention of Cruelty to Children, 162 N.Y. 429 (N.Y. 1900).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

The counsel for the respective parties in this case have submitted voluminous papers and elaborate briefs in support of, and in opposition to, a motion for a re-argument. In the notice of motion, numerous grounds for a rehearing are to be found, but only one of them need be considered. That is, that the court, in the decision of the case, has overlooked certain constitutional and statutory provisions relating to the visitorial power of the board of charities, through the inadvertence of counsel. Upon this ground, substantially every feature of the case has been presented for the second time. On many of the points the prevailing opinion of this court is quoted, not to show that the particular point was overlooked, but that our conclusion was wrong in point of law. The whole discussion resolves itself, in- the end, into the inquiry : what is a charitable institution within the meaning of the Constitution and the statutes. When that term, as used in the Constitution, is defined, the controversy is settled, since the statutes are no broader than the Constitution, and whatever construction is to be placed upon the fundamental law, the same construction would follow with respect to the same terms when used in the statute. The brief upon this motion is signed by the attorney-general and his predecessor in office, who appeared as counsel in the case, and also by two other distinguished members of the bar who did not participate in the original argument. It is somewhat remarkable that in all the discussion upon the only question in the case the counsel have not attempted to furnish a definition of a charitable institution, as that term is used in the Constitution. All must admit that it does not include every corporation or society that has some charitable feature or is engaged in some good work, but that the meaning of those terms must be limited. This, much, it is safe to premise, has already been demonstrated and. [431]*431must be conceded. Assuming that this proposition is beyond dispute, the question is, and always has been, where is the line to be drawn ? The learned counsel who have presented the brief in support of this motion have not attempted to draw it. It is true that they earnestly contend that this court, in the decision of the case, has drawn the line at the wrong point, but they have not attempted to inform us at what other point it should be placed. They evidently have contented themselves with attempting to show that wherever it is drawn this defendant should be included within the powers of the board of charities.

It is quite obvious, however, that if any limitations at all are to be placed upon those powers the language of the Constitution must be construed by some reasonable rule or upon some rational principle. We have attempted to do that by holding that a charitable institution must be one that in some form or to some extent receives public money for the support and maintenance of indigent persons. By public money is meant money raised by taxation not only in the state at large but in any city, county or town. The adoption of this principle will permit the board to visit, inspect and regulate every institution in the state, public or private, where children or adults are supported or maintained, in whole or in part, by the use of public money, and every institution, public or private, where children or adults are sent or detained for support or maintenance in pursuance of any law. But we are informed by the papers upon this motion that this rule would deprive the board of jurisdiction over half the charitable institutions in the state. The papers presented in opposition to this motion show that the institutions thus excluded, with the' exception, perhaps, of about half a' dozen, have never been visited by the board in the past; and obviously, if it be true, as the relator asserts, that there are over twelve hundred charitable institutions in the state, it would be impossible to exercise the power of visitation by the board with respect to all of them in any one year. There must, in the nature of things, be a distinction in this respect between private institu[432]*432tions receiving public money in some form or in some measure as charity and the same class of institutions that do not. This may be illustrated by reference to a class of institutions mentioned in the moving papers. We will suppose that a private individual is wealthy and benevolent enough to found and endow a private hospital. When complete the building and everything in it is his private property. Eo one is compelled by any law to go there or remain there, and the founder is under no legal obligation to receive patients. It is purely a private concern, and it is difficult to understand upon what legal ground the state can claim the right to inspect his books, or to make rules and regulations for the transaction of the business. There must be" some limit to the power of government to interfere in purely ]irivate affairs; and what is true of a hospital is equally true of many of the other private institutions referred to in the moving papers. But when any of these institutions become, in any form or to any' extent, the recipients or beneficiaries of public money as charity, there is a just and reasonable ground upon which the state may claim the right of visitation. And it is by the application of this principle that a charitable institution, as used in the Constitution, is to be defined and understood.

It was upon this principle that the decision in this case attempted to define what is and what is not a charitable institution. We are satisfied, upon further examination of the case, that the rule adopted is not only just and reasonable in itself, lint it was the principle which the convention intended to engraft upon the Constitution, and this really presents the only disputed question of law in this case. The learned counsel for the relator do not assent to this construction. Their position to the contrary is distinctly stated in the moving papers in these words: The main purpose and intention of the constitutional provisions and the statutory enactment are not so much to supervise the pecuniary affairs of institutions as to provide for an inspection of the management of the institutions and to see that the inmates are properly treated, and, if not, so to secure the correction through due process of [433]*433law of whatever abuses, evils or defects which may be found to exist.” It is not very easy to see how the state can examine into the evils or correct the abuses in a purely private unincorporated institution to which no one could be sent, or in which no one can be detained by any law, and where the inmates may come and go at pleasure. If the framers of the Constitution had any such purpose in mind it is remarkable that no trace of it is to be found and no reference was made to it in the proceedings and debates upon those provisions of the Constitution relating to charities. The proceedings of the convention do not disclose any purpose to interfere with private institutions that were not in any form, or to any extent, the beneficiaries of public money. I refer, of course, to those private institutions that admit or care for children or adults without any compensation from the public and where the inmates are in the institution solely by their own volition. If the inmates in these institutions are not properly treated they are not obliged to stay there or to go there. If they are detained there against their will the process of the courts is open to them to secure their enlargement or liberation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 N.Y. 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-state-board-of-charities-v-new-york-society-for-prevention-ny-1900.