Rush Hospital Benev. Ass'n v. Board of Sup'rs

192 So. 829, 187 Miss. 204, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 208
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 1940
DocketNo. 33918.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 192 So. 829 (Rush Hospital Benev. Ass'n v. Board of Sup'rs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rush Hospital Benev. Ass'n v. Board of Sup'rs, 192 So. 829, 187 Miss. 204, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 208 (Mich. 1940).

Opinion

*208 Ethridge, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Prior to the 28th of December, 1937, Mrs. J. H. Bush owned a hospital and nurses’ home, called Bush’s Infirmary. Two of her sons, who were physicians, made use of the hospital in the treatment of their patients, having purchased and installed certain valuable equipment, suitable for hospital purposes. On the 28th day of December, 1937, a charter of incorporation was taken out under the name given in the style of the case, said charter, among other things, containing the following provision:

“The purpose for which it is created: Is to acquire, own and operate a general hospital in the City of Meridian, Mississippi, for the care of the sick, injured and infirm and others needing hospital care; for the treat- ■ ment of diseases of the human body and may provide, *209 build, equip and maintain operating rooms for the purpose of performing surgical operations and may maintain and operate X-Bay machines and other machines and appliances used by the medical profession necessary to operate a modern hospital; and may organize, conduct and carry on a training school for nurses and may provide a course of study and prescribe a curriculum which, if completed and complied with may graduate said nurses and issue certificates of graduation or diplomas thereto and to this end may buy, equip and maintain real estate for the purpose of providing a home for said nurses. Provided, however, no profit or gain shall be made from the operation of said hospital and nurses’ home. There shall always be maintained one or more charity wards for charity patients; and that all the income and revenue derived from the operation of said association and nurses’ home be used entirely and appropriated exclusively for the maintenance and operation of the said Bush Hospital Benevolent Association and nurses’ home and that none of said proceeds or receipts so had or received by said Bush Hospital Benevolent Association and/or the home for nurses be used or paid out as a profit or dividend to said stockholders.
“That all income from said Bush Hospital Benevolent Association shall be used entirely for the purpose thereof, and no part of same shall be used for profit.”

After the incorporation of the hospital Mrs. J. H. Bush (Mary C. Bush) conveyed the hospital building and grounds, including the nurses ’ home, to the hospital, and Drs. H. Lowry Bush and Leslie V. Bush, sons of Mrs. Bush, conveyed to the hospital their equipment, etc., to be used for hospital purposes, and for a clinic, operating room, etc. Mrs. J. H. Bush and her sons, Drs. H. Lowry Bush and Leslie Y. Bush, were owners of the stock of the corporation; and they became officers of the said corporation. They passed a resolution reading: “Be it resolved by the incorporators and stockholders of Bush Hospital Benevolent Association that one or *210 more charity .wards for charity patients be established and maintained in the hospital owned and operated by the association and that all the income from said hospital, and the nurses’ home constituting a part of, and operated therewith, shall be used entirely for the purposes thereof, and no part of same for profit.”

Subsequently, on the 30th of December, 1937, the directors passed a similar resolution.

Drs. H. Lowry Rush and Leslie V. Rush maintained offices in the hospital for private practice, and also a clinic and operating room, used for both pay and charity patients. Two rooms were set apart for charity patients, each containing two beds, one room for the white race, and one for the colored. Patients were received and treated in the charity wards from time to time during the year 1938, varying in number, of course; sometimes when charity wards were filled with patients, other rooms were assigned to additional charity patients; and again, when the pay rooms were filled and the charity wards not in use, pay patients were placed therein. The charity patients were given the identical treatment, care, nourishment, etc., as was given to the pay patients. Other doctors brought patients to the hospital, and there treated them as in any other hospital. "When any doctor recommended that a patient be received as a charity patient, such recommendation was received and acted upon by the hospital, without formal inquiry and proof as to whether or not the patient was entitled to charity. Some patients were able to pay small, but inadequate compensation for hospitalization and treatment, and were received on those terms, it being deemed better to treat such patients for an inadequate consideration than to turn them away, or force them to declare themselves charity patients.

The hospital equipment was used for both charity and pay patients. The Drs. Rush maintained their private offices and clinic in the hospital without charge to them, and part of the time used a stenographer employed by *211 the hospital, and the telephone installed therein. They were also paid a salary of $2,500 each out of the funds of the hospital, for their services in treating the charity patients, instructing the under-graduate nurses and training them, and for various services rendered in overseeing and managing the hospital.

In the beginning the hospital is said to have had neither money nor debts. Each of the Drs. Rush advanced $3,000 to it, without interest, to be used in its operation; which loan was repaid — without interest as stated. There were twenty-one. nurses, three of whom were trained graduate nurses, the others student nurses, who were fed and lodged in the nurses’ home. Mrs. J. B. Rush was given a salary of $150' per month as superintendent of nurses, and as dietitian of the hospital; and she maintained rooms in the nurses’ home for her own purposes as a place to live; but no part of the nurses’ home was rented to any one. There were other employees, including another physician, called a house physician, who resided in the hospital, receiving as compensation a salary of $100 per month, with room and board.

The hospital was operated for the year 1938 with a deficit of about $250. It applied to the board of supervisors for exemption from taxes, under paragraph (f) of section 3108, Code of 1930, which was brought forward in subsequent laws, being chapter 137, Laws of 1932, and chapter 157, Laws of 1934, without change except that in later acts the paragraph was numbered (g) instead of (f); otherwise it was verbatim.

On the hearing before the board of supervisors the testimony by two disinterested physicians, and by the Drs. Rush, showed without dispute that all salaries were reasonable, considering the services rendered, or to be rendered, under the employment or resolutions. The board of supervisors denied the application for exemption, and appeal was taken to the-Circuit Court, where the case was tried anew, on substantially the same testimony as was given before the board of supervisors; *212 there was no testimony to show that the charges were not reasonable; but on the contrary the two disinterested physicians and the Drs. Bush testified that all compensation paid for services was reasonable.

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Bluebook (online)
192 So. 829, 187 Miss. 204, 1940 Miss. LEXIS 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rush-hospital-benev-assn-v-board-of-suprs-miss-1940.