Stanturf v. Sipes

224 F. Supp. 883, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6468
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedDecember 10, 1963
Docket1211
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 224 F. Supp. 883 (Stanturf v. Sipes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stanturf v. Sipes, 224 F. Supp. 883, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6468 (W.D. Mo. 1963).

Opinion

DUNCAN, District Judge.

The Plaintiff instituted this suit against the defendants as individuals and in their representative capacities, as set out in; the caption of the plaintiff’s Complaint. Recovery is sought in the sum of $350,000.00 actual and punitive damages for the alleged refusal of the defendants to admit the plaintiff to the Wright Memorial Hospital either as a paying or a charity patient. ■

Plaintiff seeks to vest jurisdiction in this court under the Fourteenth Amendment and under § 291 et seq., Title 42 U.S.C.A. designated as the “Hospital Survey and Construction Act”, and more commonly known as the Hill-Burton Act. While there is no allegation in the Complaint that the hospital which is the subject of the controversy here was built with Hill-Burton funds, evidence in the case now before the court does reveal, that it was, and that phase of the case will be discussed hereafter.

Plaintiff alleges in his Complaint that on or about February 26, 1962, as a result of his automobile becoming stuck in a snow drift, he was caused to suffer severe exposure, and that the next day he sought admission to the Wright Memorial Hospital for treatment. He alleges that he was refused admission by the defendant Donald Sipes, who was acting as administrator of said hospital, and for and on behalf of all of the other defendants named in his Complaint.

He first sought admission through his doctor as a charity patient, and having been refused admission as such a patient, the following day he sought to be admitted as a pay patient, and again was refused, even though he alleges he was in position to underwrite and guarantee any and all medical expenses incident to his admission to the hospital.

He further alleges that several days thereafter he was admitted to another hospital, and subsequently it was necessary to amputate both of his legs, and he attributes this injury to the failure of the defendants to admit him to the Wright Memorial Hospital. For this he seeks actual damages in the sum of $250,000.00 and punitive damages in the sum of $100,000.00. The defendants have filed a Motion to Dismiss, as follows: [Caption omitted]

“Come now the defendants, each and all of them, corporate, institutional, and individual, and move the Court for an order dismissing plaintiff’s complaint on the ground that it fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Defendants *885 submit the following reasons in support of their motion:
“1. Wright Memorial Hospital exists and is operated as a nonprofit organization for purely charitable and benevolent purposes, and for that reason it, its corporate trustee, Trenton Trust Company, the Board of Directors or General Staff of the Wright Memorial Hospital, the members of the Board of Directors of the Trenton Trust Company and all individual defendants who are members of these groups are immune from liability for any tort arising out of the operation of said charitable institution unless the individual defendants were personally negligent.
“2. None of the defendants, institutional, corporate or individual, were guilty of negligence under the facts alleged in plaintiff’s petition, since they owed no duty to plaintiff to admit him to said Wright Memorial Hospital as a patient, charitable or otherwise.
“3. There is nothing contained in the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution of the United States or the Hill-Burton Act, or its amendments, referred to in plaintiff’s complaint, placing upon any defendant, institutional, corporate or individual, a duty to admit plaintiff to Wright Memorial Hospital as a patient, charitable or otherwise.
“AND ON THIS MOTION, defendants pray the order of the Court.”

The motion alleges that the Complaint fails to state any ground upon which relief can be granted and that the Wright Memorial Hospital is operated as a nonprofit organization for purely charitable and benevolent purposes, and for that reason its corporate Trustee, the Trenton Trust Company, the Board of Directors or General Staff of the Wright Memorial Hospital, the Members of the Board of Directors of the Trenton Trust Company and all individual defendants who are members of those groups are immune from liability for any tort arising out of the operation of the charitable institution unless individual defendants are personally liable.

In view of the fact that there is nothing in the Complaint to indicate that the hospital was built by Government funds, or by a grant in aid by the Government under the Hill-Burton Act, to determine whether or not the case should be dismissed, we must look to the Request for Admissions, the answers to the Requests for Admissions, the answer to interrogatories and to the depositions which have been taken and are on file and are before the court.

According to the information at hand, the trustees of the Wright Memorial Hospital obtained a grant through the state agency of Missouri under the Hill-Burton Act for approximately $290,000.00 for the purpose of constructing the hospital. The Wright Memorial Hospital came into being as a result of an irrevocable trust agreement dated September 20, 1932, between Dr. J. B. Wright of Trenton, Grundy County, Missouri, and the Trenton Trust Company, a corporation, of Trenton, Missouri.

The court will examine the status of the Wright Memorial Hospital under its original trust agreement, and also the effect upon that status of the receipt of Federal funds under the Hill-Burton Act. The ultimate determination for this court must be whether or not the court has jurisdiction to hear this case.

Let us then examine first the nature of the trust itself. The trust agreement reveals that at the time it was made, the grantor was the owner of a private hospital situated in the City of Trenton, Grundy County, Missouri, known as the “Wright Hospital”, and that he desired to establish a charitable hospital for the benefit of the citizens of Grundy County, and particularly of the City of Trenton, suitable for a training school for nurses and for the gratuitous treatment of the medical and surgical diseases of the sick poor of said city and county.

To carry out his purpose he transferred to the trustee, certain real estate *886 and other property therein described. He provided that said property or equipment or the proceeds thereof, if sold as provided in the trust agreement and the investments and reinvestments thereof, should forever constitute and be a trust fund for such charitable uses.

The hospital was to be known as the Wright Memorial Hospital in memory of Eva Wright, “beloved wife” of grant- or, “now deceased”.

The trust agreement provided that the title to the hospital and all other property transferred to the trustee under the trust, except as otherwise provided, should, at all times remain in the name of the trustee, subject to the terms of the agreement, but the actual management, supervision and operation of the hospital and other real property held thereunder should be left to a “General Staff”; that such management, supervision and operation of said Memorial Hall shall be subject to the approval of the trustee.

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Bluebook (online)
224 F. Supp. 883, 1963 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6468, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanturf-v-sipes-mowd-1963.