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Cases citing this case: Supreme Court
Cases citing this case: Circuit Courts
U.S. Supreme Court
BRADFIELD v. ROBERTS, 175 U.S. 291 (1899)
175 U.S. 291
JOSEPH BRADFIELD, Appt.,
v.
ELLIS H. ROBERTS, Treasurer of the United States.
No. 76.
Argued October 27, 1899.
Decided December 4, 1899.
[175 U.S. 291, 292]
This is a suit in equity, brought by the appellant to
enjoin the defendant from paying any moneys to the directors of
Providence Hospital, in the city of Washington, under an agreement
entered into between the commissioners of the District of Columbia and
the directors of the hospital, by virtue of the authority of an act of
Congress, because of the alleged invalidity of the agreement for the
reasons stated in the bill of complaint. In that bill complainant
represents that he is a citizen and taxpayer of the United States and
a resident of the District of Columbia, that the defendant is the
Treasurer of the United States, and the object of the suit is to
enjoin him from paying to or on account of Providence Hospital, in the
city of Washington, District of Columbia, any moneys belonging to the
United States, by virtue of a contract between the surgeon general of
the army and the directors of that hospital, or by virtue of an
agreement between the commissioners of the District of Columbia and
such directors, under the authority of an appropriation contained in
the sundry civil appropriation bill for the District of Columbia,
approved June 4, 1897
Complainant further alleged in his bill:
'That the said Providence Hospital is a private eleemosynary
corporation, and that to the best of complainant's knowledge and
belief it is composed of members of a monastic order or sisterhood
of the Roman Catholic Church, and is conducted under the auspices of
said church; that the title to its property is vested in the
'Sisters of Charity of Emmitsburg, Maryland;' that it was
incorporated by a special act of Congress approved April 8, 1864,
whereby, in addition to the usual powers of bodies corporate and
politic, it was invested specially with 'fully power and all the
rights of opening and keeping a hospital in the city of Washington
for the care of such sick and invalid persons as may place
themselves under the treatment and care of said corporation.'
'That in view of the sectarian character of said Providence
Hospital and the specific and limited object of its creation, the
said contract between the same and the surgeon general of the army
and also the said agreement between the same and
[175 U.S. 291, 293]
the commissioners of the District of Columbia are
unauthorized by law, and, moreover, involve a principle and a
precedent for the appropriation of the funds of the United States
for the use and support of religious societies, contrary to the
article of the Constitution which declares that Congress shall make
no law respecting a religious establishment, and also a precedent
for giving to religious societies a legal agency in carrying into
effect a public and civil duty which would, if once established,
speedily obliterate the essential distinction between civil and
religious functions.
'That the complainant and all other citizens and taxpayers of the
United States are injured by reason of the said contract and the
said agreement, in virtue whereof the public funds are being used
and pledged for the advancement and support of a private and
sectarian corporation, and that they will suffer irreparable damage
if the same are allowed to be carried into full effect by means of
payments made through or by the said defendant out of the Treasury
of the United States, contrary to the Constitution and declared
policy of the government.'
The agreement above mentioned, between the commissioners of the
District of Columbia and the directors of Providence Hospital, is
annexed to the bill, and is as follows:
'Articles of agreement entered into this sixteenth day of August,
in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and ninety-seven,
by the between the commissioners of the District of Columbia and the
directors of Providence Hospital, a body corporate in said District,
whereby it is agreed on the part of the commissioners of the
District of Columbia--
'That they will erect on the grounds of said hospital an
isolating building or ward for the treatment of minor contagious
diseases, said building or ward to be erected without expense to
said hospital, except such as it may elect, but to be paid out of an
appropriation for that purpose contained in the District
appropriation bill approved March 3, 1897, on plans to be furnished
by the said commissioners, and approved by the health officer of the
District of Columbia, and that when the said building or ward is
fully completed it shall be truned
[175 U.S. 291, 294] over to the officers
of Providence Hospital, subject to the following provisions:
'First. That two thirds of the entire capacity of said isolating
building or ward shall be reserved for the use of such poor patients
as shall be sent there by the commissioners of the District from
time to time through the proper officers. For each such patient said
commissioners and their successors in office are to pay at the rate
of two hundred and fifty dollars ($250) per annum, for such a time
as such patient may be in the hospital, subject to annual
appropriations by Congress.
'Second. That persons able to pay for treatment may make such
arrangements for entering the said building or ward as shall be
determined by those in charge thereof, and such persons will pay the
said Providence Hospital reasonable compensation for such treatment,
to be fixed by the hospital authorities, but such persons shall have
the privilege of selecting their own physicians and nurses, and in
case physicians and nurses are selected other than those assigned by
the hospital, it shall be at the expense of the patient making the
request.
'And said Providence Hospital agrees to always maintain a neutral
zone of forty (40) feet around said isolating building or ward and
grounds connected therewith to which patients of said ward have
access.
'As witness the signatures and seals of John W. Ross, John B.
Wight, and Edward Burr, acting commissioners of the District of
Columbia, and the corporate seal of the said The Directors of
Providence Hospital and the signature of president thereof, this
sixteenth day of August, A. D. 1897.'
The contract, if any, between the directors and the suregeon
general of the army is not set forth in the bill, and the contents or
conditions thereof do not in any way appear.
The defendant demurred to the bill on the ground that the
complainant had not in and by his bill shown any right or title to
maintain the same; also upon the further ground that the complainant
had not stated such a case as entitled him to the relief thereby
prayed or any relief as against the defendant.
[175 U.S. 291, 295]
Complainant joined issue upon the demurrer, and at a term of
the supreme court of the District of Columbia the demurrer was
overruled and the injunction granted as prayed for. 26 Wash. Law Rep.
84. Upon appeal to the court of appeals of the District the judgment
was reversed, and the case remanded to the supreme court, with
directions to dismiss the bill. 12 App. D. C. 453. Whereupon the
complainant appealed to this court.
Mr. Joseph Bradfield for appellant
Assistant Attorney General Hoyt and Attorney General Griggs for
appellee.
Mr. Justice Peckham, after stating the facts, delivered the opinion
of the court:
Passing the various objections made to the maintenance of this suit
on account of an alleged defect of parties, and also in regard to the
character in which the complainant sues, merely that of a citizen and
taxpayer of the United States and a resident of the District of
Columbia, we come to the main question as to the validity of the
agreement between the commissioners of the District and the directors
of the hospital, founded upon the appropriation contained in the act
of Congress, the contention being that the agreement if carried out
would result in an appropriation by Congress of money to a religious
society, thereby violating the constitutional provision which forbids
Congress from passing any law respecting an establishment of religion.
Art. 1 of the Amendments to Constitution.
The appropriation is to be found in the general appropriation act
for the government of the District of Columbia, approved March 3,
1897, 29 Stat. at L. 665, 679, chap. 387. It reads: 'For two isolating
buildings, to be constructed, in the discretion of the commissioners
of the District of Columbia, on the grounds of two hospitals, and to
be operated as a part of such hospitals, thirty thousand dollars.'
Acting under the [175
U.S. 291, 296] authority of this appropriation the
commissioners entered into the agreement in question.
As the bill alleges that Providence Hospital was incorporated by an
act of Congress approved April 8, 1864 (13 Stat. at L. 43, chap. 50),
and assumes to give some of its provisions, the act thus referred to
is substantially made a part of the bill, and it is therefore set
forth in the margin.
The act shows that the individuals named therein and their
successors in office were incorporated under the name of 'The
Directors of Providence Hospital,' with power to
An Act to Incorporate Providence Hospital of the City of
Washington, District of Columbia.
Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the
United States of America in Congress assembled, That Lucy Gwynn,
Teresa Angela Costello, Sarah McDonald, Mary E. Spalding, and Mary
Calloll, and their successors in office, are hereby made, declared,
and constituted a corporation and body politic, in law and in fact,
under the name and style of the directors of Providence Hospital, and
by that name they shall be and are hereby made capable in law to sue
and be sued, to plead and be impleaded, in any court within the county
of Washington, in the District of Columbia; to have and use a common
seal, and to alter or amend the same at pleasure; to have, purchase,
receive, possess, and enjoy any estate in lands, tenements, annuities,
goods, chattels, monyes, or effects, and to grant, devise, or dispose
of the same in such manner as they may deem most for the interest of
the hospital: Provided, That the real estate held by said corporation
shall not exceed in value the sum of one hundred and fifty thousand
dollars.
Sec. 2. And be it further enacted, That the said corporation and
body politic shall have full power to appoint from their own body a
president and such other officers as they may deem necessary for the
purposes of their creation; and in case of the death, resignation, or
refusal to serve, of any of their number, the remaining members shall
elect and appoint other persons in lieu of those whose places may have
been vacated; and the said corporation shall have full power and all
the rights of opening and keeping a hospital in the city of Washington
for the care of such sick and invalid persons as may place themselves
under the treatment and care of the said corporation.
Sec. 3. And be it further enacted, That the said corporation shall
also have and enjoy full power and authority to make such by-laws,
rules, and regulations as may be necessary for the general
accomplishment of the objects of said hospital: Provided, That they be
not inconsistent with the laws in force in the District of Columbia:
And provided, further, That this act shall be liable to be amended,
altered, or repealed, at the pleasure of Congress.
[175 U.S. 291, 297]
receive, hold, and convey personal and real property, as
provided in its 1st section. By the 2d section the corporation was
granted 'full power and all the rights of opening and keeping a
hospital in the city of Washington for the care of such sick and
invalid persons as may place themselves under the treatment and care
of the said corporation.' The 3d section gave it full power to make
such by-laws, rules, and regulations that might be necessary for the
general accomplishment of the objects of the hospital, not
inconsistent with the laws in force in the District of Columbia.
Nothing is said about religion or about the religious faith of the
incorporators of this institution in the act of incorporation. It is
simply the ordinary case of the incorporation of a hospital for the
purposes for which such an institution is generally conducted. It is
claimed that the allegation in the complainant's bill, that the said
'Providence Hospital is a private eleemosynary corporation, and that
to the best of complainant's knowledge and belief it is composed of
members of a monastic order or sisterhood of the Roman Catholic
Church, and is conducted under the auspices of said church; that the
title to its property is vested in the Sisters of Charity of
Emmitsburg, Maryland,' renders the agreement void for the reason
therein stated, which is that Congress has no power to make 'a law
respecting a religious establishment,' a phrase which is not
synonymous with that used in the Constitution, which prohibits the
passage of a law 'respecting an establishment of religion.'
If we were to assume, for the purpose of this question only, that
under this appropriation an agreement with a religious corporation of
the tenor of this agreement would be invalid, as resulting indirectly
in the passage of an act respecting an establishment of religion, we
are unable to see that the complainant in his bill shows that the
corporation is of the kind described, but on the contrary he has
clearly shown that it is not.
The above-mentioned allegations in the complainant's bill do not
change the legal character of the corporation or render it on that
account a religious or sectarian body. Assuming
[175 U.S. 291, 298]
that the hospital is a private eleemosynary corporation, the
fact that its members, according to the belief of the complainant, are
members of a monastic order or sisterhood of the Roman Catholic, and
the further fact that the hospital is conducted under the auspices of
said church, are wholly immaterial, as is also the allegation
regarding the title to its property. The statute provides as to its
property and makes no provision for its being held by anyone other
than itself. The facts above stated do not in the least change the
legal character of the hospital, or make a religious corporation out
of a purely secular one as constituted by the law of its being.
Whether the individuals who compose the corporation under its charter
happen to be all Roman Catholics, or all Methodists, or Presbyterians,
or Unitarians, or members of any other religious organization, or of
no organization at all, is of not the slightest consequence with
reference to the law of its incorporation, nor can the individual
beliefs upon religious matters of the various incorporators be
inquired into. Nor is it material that the hospital may be conducted
under the auspices of the Roman Catholic Church. To be conducted under
the auspices is to be conducted under the influence or patronage of
that church. The meaning of the allegation is that the church
exercises great and perhaps controlling influence over the management
of the hospital. It must, however, be managed pursuant to the law of
its being. That the influence of any particular church may be powerful
over the members of a nonsectarian and secular corporation,
incorporated for a certain defined purpose and with clearly stated
powers, is surely not sufficient to convert such a corporation into a
religious or sectarian body. That fact does not alter the legal
character of the corporation, which is incorporated under an act of
Congress, and its powers, duties, and character are to be solcly
measured by the charter under which it alone has any legal existence.
There is no allegation that its hospital work is confined to members
of that church or that in its management the hospital has been
conducted so as to violate its charter in the smallest degree. It is
simply the case of a secular corporation being managed by people
[175 U.S. 291, 299]
who hold to the doctrines of the Roman Catholic Church, but
who nevertheless are managing the corporation according to the law
under which it exists. The charter itself does not limit the exercise
of its corporate powers to the members of any particular religious
denomination, but, on the contrary, those powers are to be exercised
in favor of anyone seeking the ministrations of that kind of an
institution. All that can be said of the corporation itself is that it
has been incorporated by an act of Congress, and for its legal powers
and duties that act must be exclusively referred to. As stated in the
opinion of the court of appeals, this corporation 'is not declared the
trustee of any church or religious society. Its property is to be
acquired in its own name and for its own purposes; that property and
its business are to be managed in its own way, subject to no
visitation, supervision, or control by any ecclesiastical authority
whatever, but only to that of the government which created it. In
respect, then, of its creation, organization, management, and
ownership of property it is an ordinary private corporation whose
rights are determinable by the law of the land, and the religious
opinions of whose members are not subjects of inquiry.'
It is not contended that Congress has no power in the District to
appropriate money for the purpose expressed in the appropriation, and
it is not doubted that it has power to authorize the commissioners of
the District of Columbia to enter into a contract with the trustees of
an incorporated hospital for the purposes mentioned in the agreement
in this case, and the only objection set up is the alleged 'sectarian
character of the hospital and the specific and limited object of its
ereation.'
The other allegations in complainant's bill are simply statements
of his opinion in regard to the results necessarily flowing from the
appropriation in question when connected with the agreement mentioned.
The act of Congress, however, shows there is nothing sectarian in
the corporation, and 'the specific and limited object of its creation'
is the opening and keeping a hospital in the city of Washington for
the care of such sick and invalid persons as
[175 U.S. 291, 300]
may place themselves under the treatment and care of the
corporation. To make the agreement was within the discretion of the
commissioners, and was a fair exercise thereof.
The right reserved in the third section of the charter to amend,
alter, or repeal the act leaves full power in Congress to remedy any
abuse of the charter privileges.
Without adverting to any other objections to the maintenance of
this suit, it is plain that complainant wholly fails to set forth a
cause of action, and the bill was properly dismissed by the Court of
Appeals, and its decree will therefore be affirmed.


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