SACRED HEART HOSPITAL v. Lanshe

282 A.2d 331, 445 Pa. 57, 1971 Pa. LEXIS 648
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 12, 1971
DocketAppeal, 304
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 282 A.2d 331 (SACRED HEART HOSPITAL v. Lanshe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
SACRED HEART HOSPITAL v. Lanshe, 282 A.2d 331, 445 Pa. 57, 1971 Pa. LEXIS 648 (Pa. 1971).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Roberts,

In this appeal we must decide whether it was error to dismiss without a hearing a petition claiming certain provisions of a consent decree had been violated. We hold that in the circumstances of this case, a hearing on the issues raised by the petition for supplemental relief is necessary.

A brief review of the factual background follows. The City of Allentown has three hospitals: Allentown General, Allentown Osteopathic, and Sacred Heart, a Catholic, church-related hospital. Some time ago it became evident that all three institutions were in need of extensive improvements. A joint campaign was agreed upon to raise the necessary funds, and the hospitals organized a non-profit corporation, Allentown Ahead Fund, Inc., primarily for this purpose. Over |6,800,000 has been raised in cash and pledges for the contemplated renovations. However, a dispute eventually developed as to the degree to which the hospitals would participate in establishing a joint facility.

On September 15, 1969, Sacred Heart Hospital by a member of its Board of Managers, as well as two members of the hospital’s professional staff and a member of the community filed a complaint in equity against other members of Sacred Heart’s Board of Managers, Ahead Fund, Inc., Allentown Osteopathic, and the Allentown Hospital Association seeking to prevent certain amendments to Sacred Heart’s charter and *59 articles of incorporation. The proposed amendments would have authorized a joint facility that allegedly would have reduced Sacred Heart’s status as a general services hospital and school of nursing and destroyed the character and integrity of Sacred Heart as an independent, church-related institution. The complaint also sought, inter alia, to restrain Ahead Fund from disbursing funds held for Sacred Heart, and to prevent any encumbering of Sacred Heart’s assets or transferring of any of its services to the proposed joint facility.

The answer denied the allegations in the complaint and attacked what appellees have characterized as the “remarkable” legal position that the power conferred by the Pennsylvania Non-Profit Corporation Law 1 to amend a charter is suspended whenever the power comes into conflict with the hospital’s Catholic character.

The litigation was terminated by a settlement agreement executed on March 3, 1970, and approved by the court on March 4, 1970, “. . . with the same force and effect as though fully and completely set forth in this order.”

On January 16, 1971, the same appellants and the Most Reverend Joseph McShea, Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Allentown, 2 filed a “Petition for Supplemental Relief and Enforcement of ‘Final Decree’ Entered March 4, 1970”, naming certain members of Sacred Heart’s Board of Managers and Ahead Fund as defendants. The petition averred the Board had breached its fiduciary duty and violated the March 3, *60 1970 agreement by talcing steps to implement construction of a joint hospital facility -without the approval of Bishop McShea and before a consultant retained to analyze the financial feasibility of the project had completed his study. The petition sought to enjoin the Board and representatives of the Joint Planning Committee from entering into any joint venture agreement with the Allentown Hospital Association, encumbering Sacred Heart’s assets for the advancement of the joint facility, transferring any of the hospital’s services or staff, and taking any action inconsistent with the operation of Sacred Heart as a church-related institution. The petition also requested an accounting from defendants as well as their removal from the Board of Managers.

The answer by defendants admitted most of the factual allegations of the petition but denied the conclusion of unlawfulness or impropriety.

When the matter came before the court on January 22, 1971, defendants orally moved to dismiss the petition. The motion was granted, and the present appeal ensued.

Preliminarily we are confronted with a motion to dismiss for mootness filed by appellees on April 12, 1971. It is argued that the primary reason for appellants’ petition for supplemental relief is that appellees approved certain expenditures for the joint hospital project prior to the receipt of the consultant’s report. The completed report is attached to the motion, and the report concludes the joint facility is financially feasible. The motion also avers that on March 12,1971, the Boards of Sacred Heart and Allentown Hospital Association approved a joint venture agreement, and articles of incorporation and bylaws of a new nonprofit corporation established to implement the joint hospital venture with full recognition of the obligations of the parties under the March 3, 1970, settlement agreement.

*61 Appellants by tbeir answer dispute the mootness of the appeal, contending the issue is whether their petition should have been dismissed without a hearing. They also assert that the consultant’s report did not necessarily determine the propriety of the Board’s expenditures in light of the settlement agreement.

In our view the appeal is not moot. It is true that, as the Superior Court has noted: “We cannot decide moot or abstract questions. Faust v. Cairns, 242 Pa. 15, 88 A. 786. We cannot enter judgments or decrees to which effect cannot be given. Winston v. Ladner, 264 Pa. 548, 108 A. 22; Com. ex rel. v. Lawler, 343 Pa. 353, 22 A. 2d 900. The rule is that where, as here, pending an appeal, an event occurs which renders it impossible for the appellate court to grant any relief, the appeal will be dismissed. Com. ex rel. v. Cairns, 48 Pa. Superior Ct. 265; Reichard’s License, 45 Pa. Superior Ct. 606; Mills v. Green, 159 U.S. 651, 16 S. Ct. 132.” O’Donnell v. Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board, 158 Pa. Superior Ct. 533, 536, 45 A. 2d 369, 370 (1946). However, as will appear more fully, we believe the petition for supplemental relief still raises at least one issue requiring a hearing, despite the subsequent submission of the consultant’s report.

Before discussing the reason necessitating a hearing, the provisions of the March 3,1970 settlement must be summarized.

The parties entered into the agreement because of their desire to resolve the issue amicably and without further litigation. They agreed that the charter of Sacred Heart was to be amended to provide that Sacred Heart is a church-related institution of the Allentown Roman Catholic Diocese organized to render medical treatment “. . . in accordance with the Ethical and Religious Directives for Catholic Hospitals as promulgated, from time to time, by the Catholic Hospital As *62 sociation.” The charter was also amended so that the Board of Managers of Sacred Heart might transfer, eliminate, or combine services . . without loss of accreditation as a general hospital under the standards of the American Hospital Association, and consistent with . . . [the above quoted provision and Sacred Heart’s integrity as a church-related institution.]”

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Bluebook (online)
282 A.2d 331, 445 Pa. 57, 1971 Pa. LEXIS 648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sacred-heart-hospital-v-lanshe-pa-1971.