2009 WI 8
|
Supreme Court of |
|
|
|
|
Case No.: |
2007AP45 |
|
Complete Title: |
|
|
|
Nelly De La Trinidad, Individually, and as Special Administrator of the Estate of Elizabeth Callejas-De La Trinidad, Deceased, and Victor Leonardo Aguilar-Hernandez, and Luz Maria Torres-Sanches, Individually, and as Special Administrator of the Estate of Marisol Aguilar-Torres, Deceased, Plaintiffs-Appellants-Petitioners, v. Capitol Indemnity Corporation, a Wisconsin Insurance Corporation, Halter Wildlife, Inc., and Rachel Proko, Defendants-Respondents. |
|
|
|
|
|
REVIEW OF A DECISION OF THE COURT OF APPEALS Reported at: 308 (Ct App. 2008-Unpublished) |
|
|
|
|
Opinion Filed: |
January 23, 2009 |
|
Submitted on Briefs: |
||
Oral Argument: |
November 4, 2008
|
|
|
|
|
Source of Appeal: |
|
|
|
Court: |
Circuit |
|
County: |
|
|
Judge: |
David M. Bastianelli
|
|
|
|
Justices: |
|
|
|
Concurred: |
|
|
Dissented: |
|
|
Not Participating: |
|
|
|
|
Attorneys: |
|
For the plaintiffs-appellants-petitioners there were
briefs by Patrick O. Dunphy, Robert D.
Crivello, and
For the defendants-respondents there were briefs by James S. Smith, Wendy G. Gunderson, and Smith,
2009
WI 8
notice
This opinion is subject to further editing and modification. The final version will appear in the bound volume of the official reports.
REVIEW of a decision of the Court of Appeals. Affirmed.
¶1 N. PATRICK CROOKS, J. Petitioners Nelly De La Trinidad, Victor Leonardo Aguilar-Hernandez, and Luz Maria Torres-Sanches (collectively, De La Trinidad) are the parents of two children who drowned in a pond on the grounds of Halter Wildlife, Inc. De La Trinidad seeks review of an unpublished court of appeals opinion[1] affirming a circuit court order that dismissed their lawsuit against Halter Wildlife, Inc. (Halter); its insurer, Capitol Indemnity Corporation; and lifeguard Rachel Proko, an employee of Halter, on the grounds that the recreational immunity statute[2] applies and bars a suit under these circumstances.
¶2 The sole question before us is whether Halter is "an organization or association not organized or conducted for pecuniary profit" under Wis. Stat. § 895.52(1)(c) and as such entitled to immunity from liability for negligence, as well as for safe place violations, for any deaths occurring during recreational activity on Halter's land.[3] De La Trinidad contends that Halter cannot be a nonprofit organization for two reasons: first, because it was incorporated in 1984 under the statute that since 1953 has governed for-profit corporations; and second, because it supplemented membership dues with revenues from other activities——revenues that created a budget surplus or profit which in turn meant dividends for members in the form of dues that were lower than they would otherwise have been. Halter argues that its articles of incorporation show that it was organized as a nonprofit, and its financial records and its status with the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) and the Wisconsin Department of Financial Institutions (DFI) show that it is not conducted for profit and has never paid any dividends.
¶3 The recreational immunity statute does not define nonprofits by
referencing the chapter under which they were incorporated, either chapter 180
or 181, so that factor is not dispositive of the question. We see no basis in the statute for defining
"profit" as broadly as De La Trinidad urges. Halter's articles of incorporation, tax returns,
and financial statements make clear that it was organized and is conducted as a
nonprofit organization, a fact recognized by both
¶4 We therefore affirm the decision of the court of appeals.
I. BACKGROUND
¶5 Though it filed restated articles of incorporation in 1984 and 1988 which varied in some respects from the original articles, Halter has since its inception consistently defined itself as a nonprofit stock corporation under ch. 180 of the Wisconsin Statutes. These articles and successive restated articles of incorporation were accepted for filing by the secretary of state. The current articles of incorporation describe Halter as a hunt and sportsman club with the purpose of promoting wetlands preservation and environmental education. Its regulations allow its approximately 275 dues-paying members to invite guests[4] to events held on the club's grounds, which include a clubhouse, a picnic area, a ball park, and a beach and pond used for fishing and swimming. In addition to annual membership dues, Halter collects extra fees from members who host picnics and other events to which guests are invited.
¶6 It was at one such event, a company picnic hosted on July 13,
2002, by Finishing and Plating Services (FPS) of
¶7 De La
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶8 The application of a statute
to undisputed facts is reviewed de novo.
DOR v. Menasha, 2008 WI 88, ¶44, ___
III.
DISCUSSION
¶9 The question we address is whether Halter was a nonprofit organization under the recreational immunity statute[7] and is therefore entitled to immunity from liability for negligence, as well as for the claimed safe place violations. Nonprofit organizations are among the types of property owners to whom immunity is extended under the statute.[8]
¶10 We
begin of course with the statute's definition of a nonprofit organization
as "an organization or association not organized or conducted for
pecuniary profit."
A. "Not organized . . . for pecuniary profit"
¶11 De
La Trinidad's contention that Halter is organized for pecuniary profit centers
on the fact that, as Halter's restated articles of incorporation provide, it is
organized as a stock-issuing corporation "pursuant to the authority and
provisions of Chapter 180 of the Wisconsin Statutes." De La Trinidad contends that this means it is
by definition a for-profit——or at best a corporation masquerading as a
nonprofit while reserving the legal right to convert to for-profit whenever it
chooses——regardless of what its articles of incorporation currently say.
¶12 Halter
argues that the question of whether it is organized for pecuniary profit is
answered by the statement of purpose in its articles of incorporation: "The corporation will be a non-profit
corporation which is to be formed not for private profit but exclusively for
educational, benevolent, fraternal, social and athletic purposes within the
meaning of Section 501(c)(7) of the Internal Revenue Code of
1954 . . . ."
The articles of incorporation, Halter argues, are consistent with its
status with the federal and state governments:
the Department of the Treasury granted it tax exempt status under § 501(c)(7)
of the Internal Revenue Code, and the state Department of Financial
Institutions has confirmed that it has operated since its inception as a
nonprofit. Halter points to our decision
in Szarzynski v. YMCA, 184
¶13 A
brief summary of the history of chapters 180 and 181 will help make sense of
the parties' arguments. Prior to 1953,
it was not unusual for
¶14 As even that attorney general's opinion acknowledged, however, it
is difficult to reconcile several provisions of the statute.[11] One provision, for example, defines
"corporation" as including "a corporation with capital stock but
not organized for profit."
¶15 The
attorney general's 1958 opinion in response to a query from the secretary of
state acknowledged that the statute "does say that there can be such a
thing as a corporation with capital stock but not organized for profit." 47
¶16 De
La
¶17 Which
brings us to a key point: notwithstanding the attorney general's opinion on the
matter, there is no dispute that the secretary of state did accept and file
Halter's articles of incorporation and restated articles of incorporation. Three times.
From the repeated filing and acceptance it is reasonable to infer that
the acceptance was intentional and that the secretary of state saw no legal
impediment to Halter's incorporation as a nonprofit under ch. 180.[13]
Under Wis. Stat. § 180.0203(2),
filing of the articles of incorporation by the DFI "is conclusive proof
that the corporation is incorporated under this
chapter . . . ."
¶18 That the State of
Regarding your written request involving the corporate status of Halter Wildlife, Inc. I have examined the records for this corporation and have determined that you are correct in that this entity has, since its inception, been a "stock, not-for-profit corporation.["] Unfortunately, when our database was created we did not set forth a specific "status code" for "stock, not-for-profit" entities. Therefore, although it is a not-for-profit entity, it was included with all other corporations formed under Chapter 180 having a status code of "01" which reflects the entity as a business corporation on our records. [Emphasis added.]
¶19 A second, related argument made by De La Trinidad is that an organization formed under ch. 180 cannot be a nonprofit because there is nothing in the law governing it that prevents Halter's members from voting to amend its articles and becoming a for-profit corporation. De La Trinidad notes that Halter's articles of incorporation allow the organization to "engage in lawful activity within the purposes for which corporations may be organized under the Wisconsin Business Corporation Law." Because it was organized under ch. 180, which allows for the distribution of profits to shareholders under Wis. Stat. § 180.0640, De La Trinidad argues that Halter left open the possibility of distributions to shareholders.
¶20 De
La
¶21 While
the "potential for profit" argument may have some merit, it is
essentially an argument that it is not good public policy to provide immunity
under Wis. Stat. § 895.52 to a nonprofit corporation that has, by
incorporating under ch. 180, left open legal avenues for a later change to a
for-profit corporation. In other words,
it can be argued that the better policy is for the benefits afforded to
nonprofits under the statute to accrue only to those nonprofits that are, by
virtue of their incorporation under ch. 181, committed to staying a
nonprofit. It is significant, however,
that the legislature did not choose to define nonprofits in Wis. Stat.
§ 895.52 with reference to the statute under which they were incorporated.[14]
¶22 Having
established that incorporation under ch. 180 does not preclude Halter from
being organized as a nonprofit, we arrive at the question of what makes a
nonprofit a nonprofit. A leading
treatise says the articles of incorporation are the place to focus, and it
bolsters our view that the chapter under which Halter is organized is not
dispositive here (note especially the second sentence):
In order to determine the purpose for which a corporation was created, courts will primarily refer to the stated purpose in the articles of incorporation. . . . A recitation in the articles of incorporation that an organization is organized under a particular statute is not dispositive of the nature of the organization; instead, a corporation's statement of purpose in its articles determines the corporation's true nature.
1A Carol A. Jones & Britta
M. Larsen, Fletcher Cyclopedia of the Law of Private Corporations § 139 (citing State
v.
¶23 We
thus turn to the substantive provisions of Halter's restated articles of
incorporation, and we see they:
- explicitly
define Halter as a nonprofit;
- forbid income to inure to the benefit of any trustee, director or officer;
- forbid dividends or distributions to be made to stockholders or members;
- limit Halter to activities permissible to a particular type of nonprofit, § 501(c)(7) organizations; and
- provide for its assets to be turned over to a public body or another nonprofit in the event of its dissolution.
¶24 As noted above, this court has said that organizations that are
organized "for purposes other than profit-making" are eligible for
recreational immunity under the statute.
Szarzynski, 184
¶25 The most recent restated articles of incorporation for Halter are those filed with the Office of the Secretary of State in 1988.[15] They were the documents in effect at the time of the drownings in 2002. They state in part:
The purpose of this corporation is to engage in lawful activity within the purposes for which corporations may be organized under the Wisconsin Business Corporations Law. The corporation will be a non-profit corporation which is to be formed not for private profit but exclusively for educational, benevolent, fraternal, social and athletic purposes within the meaning of Section 501(c)(7) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954 and in this connection, to promote a hunt and sportsman club, to preserve the environment in its natural setting and to promote education of citizens and youth as to the need to conserve and retain wetlands and adjacent uplands in a natural state . . . .
¶26 Additional relevant provisions reiterate the nonprofit nature of the organization:
ARTICLE
IV: The corporation has not been
formed for pecuniary profit or financial gain, and no part of the
assets, income or profit of the corporation is distributable to, or inures to
the benefit of, its officers or directors, except to the extent permitted
under
. . . .
ARTICLE VIII: No part of the income of the corporation shall inure to the benefit of any trustee, director or officer of the corporation, except that reasonable compensation may be paid for services rendered to or for the corporation affecting one or more of its purposes. In the event of liquidation of the assets of the corporation any assets available for distribution at the time of such liquidation shall be turned over to an educational, benevolent, fraternal, social, scientific, religious or athletic association within the meaning of Section 501(c)(7) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, or to a public body. Furthermore, no dividends or distributions shall be made to stockholders or members of the corporation during its existence and that upon its liquidation the stockholders or members may receive back no more than their original investment.
(Emphasis added.)
¶27 The language of the articles of incorporation is clear. It directly prohibits distributions to members, trustees, directors and officers, and covers the liquidation of the organization's assets at dissolution. De La Trinidad asserts, rather incredibly, that the articles of incorporation are irrelevant to the determination of whether Halter was organized for profit. We cannot agree. It is clear beyond any doubt that Halter's relevant organizing documents establish an organization with a purpose other than profit-making. As to De La Trinidad's argument about Halter's ability under ch. 180 to amend the articles, that ability would become relevant only at the point the organization chose to do so. The immunity extended to nonprofit organizations under Wis. Stat. § 895.52, in other words, continues to extend to Halter unless it amends its articles to allow for a purpose of achieving pecuniary profit.
B. "Not . . . conducted for pecuniary profit"
¶28 De La Trinidad's second argument, that Halter does not qualify for immunity under the statute because it is conducted for pecuniary profit, depends on a sort of "penny saved is a penny earned" definition of profit. This argument is based on the fact that Halter operated in the black, taking in more revenues than it required for operating expenses; the fact that not all the revenue was from membership dues; and the fact that the income of the organization was therefore distributed, albeit indirectly, to the members, just as if dividends had been paid. This is because those additional fees ultimately reduce the membership dues, De La Trinidad argues; the difference between what the dues are and what they would be without the additional revenues is, according to this argument, the individual member's dividend.
¶29 Halter argues that profits from picnics do not affect its immunity
because they were returned to the organization, not distributed to
members. The relevant inquiry, Halter
argues, is whether it made distributions to directors, officers, or members,
and its financial statements and tax returns make clear that it never has done
so. Halter further points out that De La
Trinidad's approach, limiting nonprofit status to those organizations operating
at a deficit, is unworkable and undesirable.
¶30 De
La Trinidad's arguments rest on broad definitions of the terms
"profit" and "distribution." In support of its position, De La Trinidad
cites language from State ex rel.
¶31 De
La Trinidad also relies on St. John's Military Academy v. Larson, 168
¶32 De
La
¶33 De
La Trinidad's "indirect benefits" argument is unsupported by
¶34 As the court of appeals observed when it decided the case before us, "even nonpublic-service-oriented nonprofits receive nonprofit immunity under the statute. . . . Bethke specifically rejected the argument that a nonprofit must [] be charitable to claim the benefit of recreational immunity. In Bethke . . . the defendant was a condominium association, and its revenues were presumably used solely for the benefit of the few people who happened to live in the condominium development." De La Trinidad, No. 2007AP45, unpublished slip op., ¶14 (citations omitted).
¶35 Contrary to De La Trinidad's assertions, there is substantial evidence of Halter's being conducted as a nonprofit. Halter is recognized by the IRS as a § 501(c)(7) nonprofit organization;[17] documents from the IRS in the record confirm that Halter qualifies as a tax-exempt organization under the Internal Revenue Code. The record also contains Halter's 2002 IRS Form 990, Return of Organization Exempt from Income Tax, in which Halter identifies itself as a § 501(c)(7) organization. A letter from the IRS dated November 23, 1990, states that Halter's "organization continues to qualify for exemption from Federal income tax" under § 501(c)(7).
¶36 There
is no indication in the record that Halter brings in revenues from outside of
its membership though it could do so under IRS guidelines without forfeiting
its nonprofit status.[18] The record includes regulations from
Halter that show that it requires all invoices to be paid by member
checks. Deposition testimony in the
record is clear that the attendees at the picnic giving rise to this action
were not charged for the picnic; a Halter member, FPS of
¶37 A law review author described the standard controlling inquiry for nonprofits:
The defining characteristic of a nonprofit corporation is that it is barred from distributing profits, or net earnings, to . . . its directors, officers or members. That does not mean that it is prohibited from earning a profit. Rather, it is only the distribution of those earnings as dividends that is prohibited.
Jane C. Schlicht, Piercing the Nonprofit Corporate Veil, 66 Marq. L. Rev. 134, 136 (1982) (internal quotations omitted).
¶38 The record is replete with evidence that supports Halter's 27-year existence as a nonprofit. It would be an absurd result if we were to read the recreational immunity statute as making a for-profit organization out of an organization that throughout its existence has been governed by articles of incorporation that define it as a nonprofit, has been documented by state agencies as a nonprofit, and has been in compliance with IRS regulations as a nonprofit. Like the circuit court and court of appeals, we see no failure on Halter's part to meet the requirements necessary to be a nonprofit and thus to be entitled to immunity here.
IV. CONCLUSION
¶39 The recreational immunity statute does not define nonprofits by
referencing the chapter under which they were incorporated, either chapter 180
or 181, so that factor is not dispositive of the question. We see no basis in the statute for defining
"profit" as broadly as De La Trinidad urges. Halter's articles of incorporation, tax
returns, and financial statements make clear that it was organized and is conducted
as a nonprofit organization, a fact recognized by both
¶40 We therefore affirm the decision of the court of appeals.
By the Court.—The decision of the court of appeals is affirmed.
[1] Nelly De La Trinidad v.
Capitol Indem. Corp., No. 2007AP45, unpublished slip op. (
[2]
[3] Because the statute also
grants immunity to the employees and agents of nonprofit landowners, and
because Proko is being sued in her capacity as an employee of Halter, the resolution
of this question affects the claims against Proko as well. "[N]o owner and no officer, employee or
agent of an owner is liable for the death of, any injury to, or any death or
injury caused by, a person engaging in a recreational activity on the owner's
property. . . ."
[4] The general public does not have access to Halter's facilities; only club members and their guests may be on the property. Payment of invoices or statements is required under the organization's regulations to be made by a member's check.
[5] The picnic guests were not charged admission; in keeping with Halter's regulations, FPS, which held a corporate membership with Halter, paid the invoice for the picnic.
[6] The present version of ch.
180 of the Wisconsin Statutes governs "Business Corporations," which
include those issuing stock.
[7]
No duty; immunity from liability. (a) Except as provided in subs. (3) to (6), no owner and no officer, employee or agent of an owner owes to any person who enters the owner's property to engage in a recreational activity:
1. A duty to keep the property safe for recreational activities.
2. A duty to inspect the property, except as provided under s. 23.115(2).
3. A duty to give warning of an unsafe condition, use or activity on the property.
(b) Except as provided in subs. (3) to (6), no owner and no officer, employee or agent of an owner is liable for the death of, any injury to, or any death or injury caused by, a person engaging in a recreational activity on the owner's property . . . .
Subsections (3) to (6) do not apply in this case. They deal with government property, malicious acts, and private property owners who collect fees for recreational use of the land in excess of $2,000 per year.
There is no dispute here either as to the ownership of the land or as to the recreational nature of the activity.
[8]
(c) "Nonprofit organization" means an organization or association not organized or conducted for pecuniary profit.
(d) "Owner" means either of the following:
1. A person, including a governmental body or nonprofit organization, that owns, leases or occupies property. . . .
[9] Wisconsin Stat. § 895.52(1)(c) uses the wording "not organized or conducted for pecuniary profit," which can be read as intending to mean both prongs would have to be met (as in, "neither organized nor conducted for pecuniary profit") or as intending to mean that at least one prong would have to be met (as in, "not organized or not conducted for pecuniary profit").
Yet, in Szarzynski, this court has called the
language "clear on its face and capable of one simple construction——that the organizations that
are organized and/or conducted for purposes other than profit-making are
eligible for recreational immunity under the statute." Szarzynski v. YMCA, 184
[10] In fact, part of the dictionary's definition of "nonprofit corporation" not quoted in Szarzynski refers readers to I.R.C. § 501(c) "for a list of exempt organizations." Black's Law Dictionary 1056 (6th ed. 1990). The clear inference from that definition is that it intends to define all § 501(c) organizations as nonprofit corporations.
[11] The opinion noted,
"It would have been much more explicit if the legislature had stated
plainly that no stock nonprofit corporations are to be organized under ch. 180
after July 1, 1953." 47
[12] Even if the secretary of state erred in permitting a nonprofit to organize under ch. 180 rather than requiring it to organize under ch. 181, it does not follow that such an error alone would convert Halter into a for-profit organization. The court of appeals accordingly held that "whether Halter's form of organization is lawful or not is not the issue in this case." De La Trinidad, No. 2007AP45, unpublished slip op., ¶8. We agree.
[13] It is clear that a
different policy was in effect in 1958 in the secretary of state's office; the
attorney general's opinion from that year makes reference to the fact that the
office at that time was "refus[ing] to accept such articles for
filing[.]" 47
[14] We note that in some
other cases, the legislature has defined nonprofit organization in those
terms. See, e.g.,
[15] We take judicial notice of the
1988 Restated Articles of Incorporation as we are authorized to do under Wis.
Stat § 902.01(2)(b), which provides that "A judicially noticed fact
must be . . . [a] fact capable of accurate and ready
determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be
questioned."
[16] "When giving a
statute its plain and ordinary meaning, courts refer to dictionaries to define
those terms not defined by the legislature.
Wisconsin Stat. § 990.01(1)
provides that '[a]ll words and phrases shall be construed according to common
and approved usage; but technical words and phrases and others that have a
peculiar meaning in the law shall be construed according to such
meaning.'" Rouse v. Theda Clark
Med. Ctr., Inc., 2007 WI 87, ¶21,
302
[17] The Internal Revenue Code exempts from taxation "[c]lubs organized for pleasure, recreation, and other nonprofitable purposes, substantially all of the activities of which are for such purposes and no part of the net earnings of which inures to the benefit of any private shareholder." I.R.C. § 501(c)(7) (2006).
[18] According to an official IRS publication, "A section 501(c)7 organization may receive up to 35% of its gross receipts, including investment income, from sources outside of its membership without losing its tax-exempt status. Of the 35%, up to 15% of the gross receipts may be derived from the use of the club's facilities or services by the general public or from other activities not furthering social or recreational purposes for members." IRS Publication 557 at 49 (Rev. June 2008).