Terry Kuchera v. Jersey Shore Family Health Center (073483) , 221 N.J. 239 ( 2015 )


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  •                                                        SYLLABUS
    (This syllabus is not part of the opinion of the Court. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the
    convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Supreme Court. Please note that, in the
    interest of brevity, portions of any opinion may not have been summarized.)
    Terry Kuchera v. Jersey Shore Family Health Center (A-60-13) (073483)
    Argued December 2, 2014 -- Decided March 31, 2015
    CUFF, P.J.A.D. (temporarily assigned), writing for a unanimous Court.
    In this appeal concerning a premises liability action, the Court addresses whether a health care facility is
    entitled to charitable immunity pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-7, or the limited liability afforded to nonprofit entities
    organized exclusively for hospital purposes pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-8.
    On Saturday, March 7, 2009, plaintiff attended a free eye screening conducted by the New Jersey
    Commission for the Blind and Visually Impaired (Commission) at the Jersey Shore Family Health Center (Family
    Health Center). After registering for her screening, plaintiff slipped and fell on the tile floor. As a result, plaintiff
    allegedly sustained injuries, including a torn ligament in her ankle, and herniated and bulging discs in her back.
    The Family Health Center is a nonprofit charitable clinic in the Meridian Health hospitals system. It is
    located in Neptune in a separate building next to the Jersey Shore University Medical Center (Medical Center). The
    Family Health Center provides medical care for those “who are uninsured, underinsured, without a primary care
    physician and/or who lack access to regular medical care.” The Medical Center, a 600-bed hospital, is one of six
    hospitals that comprise the Meridian Health system. The Medical Center provides a spectrum of specialized care
    including cardiac, oncology, behavioral health, and pediatrics, and conducts several residency programs. Meridian
    Health and its constituent hospitals were organized as a nonprofit organization within the meaning of Section
    501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code. Meridian Health was organized, generally, to operate hospitals and health
    care facilities, to promote or carry on educational and research activities, to render necessary health care regardless
    of the patient’s ability to pay, and to promote and protect the health and welfare of the general public.
    Plaintiff filed a complaint against the Family Health Center, the Medical Center, Meridian Health, and
    Modern Health Realty, the record owner of the property (collectively the Meridian Health defendants), seeking
    compensatory damages for her injuries. An initial motion for summary judgment was denied, but, on the day of
    trial, the Meridian Health defendants renewed their motion, and the trial judge conducted a hearing focused on the
    Medical Center’s status. Noting that the central issue was whether the entity is organized exclusively for hospital
    purposes or for religious, educational, and/or hospital purposes, the court determined that the Medical Center has a
    hybrid purpose that includes educational and charitable services as well as the operation of a hospital. The court,
    therefore, concluded that the Meridian Health defendants are entitled to the absolute immunity conferred on certain
    charitable organizations by N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-7, and dismissed plaintiff’s complaint with prejudice.
    The Appellate Division affirmed in an unpublished decision. The panel accepted the hybrid purpose
    analysis, concluding that “in addition to maintaining a hospital, defendants also provide the beneficial services listed
    in [N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-7] and are, therefore, not engaged solely in hospital functions to the exclusion of educational
    and charitable purposes.” The Court granted plaintiff’s petition for certification. 
    217 N.J. 287
     (2014).
    HELD: The site of plaintiff’s fall was part of a nonprofit health care corporation organized exclusively for hospital
    purposes. Defendants, therefore, are not entitled to absolute immunity, but rather are entitled to the limitation of
    damages afforded to nonprofit institutions organized exclusively for hospital purposes.
    1. The Charitable Immunity Act, N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-7 to -11 (CIA or the Act), provides immunity for certain
    charitable institutions. However, the Legislature’s codification of charitable immunity was not universal: certain
    personnel were not immune from liability for negligence, and nonprofit hospitals were granted a cap on damages
    from liability for negligence rather than immunity. N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-7 to -13.1. (pp. 9-10).
    1
    2. To emphasize the distinction between certain entities, the CIA addressed nonprofits organized exclusively for
    charitable, religious, or educational purposes, and those organized for hospital purposes in separate sections.
    N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-7 and -8. The most prominent distinction between nonprofit entities organized exclusively for
    charitable, religious, or educational purposes and nonprofits organized exclusively for hospital purposes is that the
    former are immune from liability, N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-7(a), while the latter are subject to liability for negligence, albeit
    with a cap on its damages, N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-8. The immunity bestowed by the CIA extends to the buildings and
    other facilities actually used for the purposes of the qualifying organization, such as a hospital. N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-9.
    Further, N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-10 instructs that the CIA is remedial legislation and should be liberally construed so as to
    further the legislative purpose of immunity. (pp. 11-12)
    3. By the plain language of N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-7 and -8, a hospital is subject to limited liability under section 8 if it is
    formed as a nonprofit corporation, society, or association, is organized exclusively for hospital purposes, was
    promoting those objectives and purposes at the time the plaintiff was injured, and the plaintiff was a beneficiary of
    the activities of the hospital. Thus, this appeal is confined to the issue of whether the free eye screening conducted
    at the Family Health Center can be considered a hospital purpose. (pp. 13-14)
    4. Few cases have addressed the phrase “organized exclusively for hospital purposes” in the context of the CIA. To
    begin, the term “exclusively” used in sections 7 and 8 of the CIA has been interpreted as meaning single or sole.
    Recently, the Court discussed the meaning of the phrase “organized exclusively for hospital purposes” in the context
    of considering whether an offsite facility owned and operated by a nonprofit hospital was exempt from local
    property taxation. Hunterdon Med. Ctr. v. Twp. of Readington, 
    195 N.J. 549
     (2008). There the Court stated that
    “the core aspects of a hospital’s purposes are to address the needs of all of the types of patients that a hospital is
    expected to serve,” and further held that the site of the delivery of the service does not detract from its inclusion as a
    hospital purpose. 
    Id. at 572
    . Thus, as recognized by the courts of this State and courts around the country, the
    modern hospital is a place where members of the community not only seek emergency services but also preventative
    services, therapy, educational programs, and counseling, and the conception of “hospital purposes” must expand to
    reflect the many health-related pursuits of the modern hospital. Accordingly, to advance the legislative mandate that
    the CIA be liberally construed to effectuate its purpose, the Court focuses on the many medical pursuits of a modern
    New Jersey hospital. (pp. 14-18)
    5. Whether a nonprofit entity, whose certificate of incorporation and by-laws provide that it is organized exclusively
    for charitable, religious, educational, or hospital purposes, actually conducts its affairs consistent with its stated
    purpose often requires a fact-sensitive inquiry. After reviewing the principles applicable to a modern hospital, the
    Court concludes that the Meridian Health defendants, and specifically the Medical Center and its Family Health
    Center, are governed by the more specific expressions of legislative intent regarding hospitals articulated in N.J.S.A.
    2A:53A-8. Thus, the Meridian Health defendants are subject to liability for negligence applicable to nonprofit
    corporations, associations, and societies organized exclusively for hospital purposes with any damage award capped
    at $250,000. The Appellate Division’s judgment to the contrary – specifically that the Meridian Health defendants
    were immune from liability pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-7 – utilized a restrictive concept of a hospital that did not
    account for the multi-function nature of the modern hospital and its role in the provision of health care in this
    society. (pp. 19-23)
    The judgment of the Appellate Division is REVERSED, and the matter is REMANDED to the trial court
    for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, ALBIN, PATTERSON, FERNANDEZ-
    VINA and SOLOMON join in JUDGE CUFF’s opinion.
    2
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    A-60 September Term 2013
    073483
    TERRY KUCHERA,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    JERSEY SHORE FAMILY HEALTH
    CENTER, JERSEY SHORE
    UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER,
    MERIDIAN HEALTH and MODERN
    REALTY CORPORATION,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    Argued December 2, 2014 – Decided March 31, 2015
    On certification to the Superior Court,
    Appellate Division.
    Steven L. Kessel argued the cause for
    appellant (Drazin & Warshaw, attorneys).
    Richard A. Amdur argued the cause for
    respondents (Amdur, Maggs & Shor,
    attorneys).
    JUDGE CUFF (temporarily assigned) delivered the opinion of
    the Court.
    This is a premises liability case.   Plaintiff slipped and
    fell on a wet spot on a floor in an outpatient health care
    facility owned and operated by a nonprofit hospital.
    The issue before this Court is whether the health care
    facility is entitled to charitable immunity pursuant to N.J.S.A.
    2A:53A-7, or the limited liability afforded to nonprofit
    1
    entities organized exclusively for hospital purposes pursuant to
    N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-8.
    The fall occurred while plaintiff Terry Kuchera was
    attending a free eye screening offered by the New Jersey
    Commission for the Blind and Visually Impaired (Commission) held
    at a family health care facility of a regional teaching
    hospital.   Plaintiff filed a complaint seeking compensatory
    damages for injuries sustained in the fall.   Summary judgment
    was granted in favor of the hospital pursuant to N.J.S.A.
    2A:53A-7, which grants immunity from negligence actions to
    nonprofit entities organized exclusively for charitable,
    educational, or religious purposes.   The Appellate Division
    affirmed, rejecting plaintiff’s argument that the health care
    entity that owned and operated the clinic facility was
    “organized exclusively for hospital purposes,” and, therefore,
    is entitled to the protections of N.J.S.A. 2A:53-8, which
    exposes such entities to actions for negligence but caps the
    amount of damages that may be awarded to a successful plaintiff.
    The panel held that the parent-hospital’s provision of charity
    care and medical education rendered the hospital a hybrid
    nonprofit institution organized exclusively for charitable and
    educational purposes.   It concluded that the hospital was
    accordingly immune from liability for negligence pursuant to
    section 7 of the Charitable Immunity Act, N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-7 to -
    2
    11 (CIA or the Act), rather than subject to a cap on damages for
    negligence pursuant to section 8 of that statute.
    Whether a nonprofit organization is entitled to charitable
    immunity or subject to the limitation on damages afforded to
    those institutions organized exclusively for hospital purposes
    turns on the purpose of the institution, not the use to which
    the facility is put on any given day.    Here, the site of
    plaintiff’s fall was part of a nonprofit health care corporation
    organized exclusively for hospital purposes.    Defendants
    therefore are not entitled to absolute immunity for a lack of
    due care in the maintenance of their facility.    Rather, they are
    entitled to the limitation of damages afforded to those
    nonprofit institutions organized exclusively for hospital
    purposes.   We reverse the Appellate Division judgment that
    affirmed entry of summary judgment in favor of the hospital.
    I.
    On Saturday, March 7, 2009, plaintiff attended a free eye
    screening conducted by the Commission.    The screening was
    conducted at the Jersey Shore Family Health Center (Family
    Health Center).   The staff, who conducted and assisted the eye
    screening clinic, was composed of Commission representatives, as
    well as Family Health Center employees serving as volunteers.
    After Kuchera arrived at the Family Health Center, she went
    to an office to register for the screening.    As she left the
    3
    office to return to the waiting room, Kuchera fell on the tile
    floor.   She reported that she slipped on an oily substance, and
    asserts that one of the nurses pointed to nearby paper towels
    and said, “oh, I was going to clean it up in a minute.”     As a
    result of the fall, Kuchera alleges that she injured her left
    hip and knee, her shoulder, wrist, and neck, and suffered a torn
    ligament in her ankle, and herniated and bulging discs in her
    lower back.
    The Family Health Center is a nonprofit charitable clinic
    in the Meridian Health hospitals system.   It is located next to
    the Jersey Shore University Medical Center (Medical Center) in a
    separate building.   According to a vice president of the Medical
    Center, the Family Health Center provides medical care for those
    “who are uninsured, underinsured, without a primary care
    physician and/or who lack access to regular medical care.”
    The Medical Center is one of six hospitals that comprise
    the Meridian Health system.   The Medical Center is a 600-bed
    hospital located in Neptune and associated with several
    satellite facilities, including the Family Health Center.    The
    Medical Center provides a spectrum of specialized care including
    cardiac, oncology, behavioral health, and pediatrics, and
    conducts several residency programs.   Meridian Health and its
    constituent hospitals were organized as a nonprofit organization
    within the meaning of Section 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue
    4
    Code.   According to Meridian Health’s 1998 certificate of
    incorporation, they were organized for the following purposes:
    (a) To establish, maintain and operate one or
    more   hospitals   and  other   health   care
    facilities for the treatment and care of the
    sick, injured and disabled without regard to
    race, sex, age, creed, national origin,
    ancestry, marital status, sexual orientation,
    family status or handicap.
    (b) To promote and carry on, by itself or
    together with others, directly or through
    other entities in which it has an interest or
    in which it participates, such other hospital,
    health   care,   educational    and   research
    activities related to its said purpose as the
    Board of Trustees may determine to be in the
    best interests of the general public health in
    the communities which it serves.
    (c) To render necessary health care and
    related services to all who require such care
    regardless of their ability to pay and to
    promote, improve and protect the health and
    welfare of the general public in the
    Communities served by [Meridian Health].
    (d) To carry out such other acts and       to
    undertake such other activities as may     be
    necessary,   appropriate  or   desirable   in
    furtherance of, or in connection with,     or
    complementary to the conduct, promotion    or
    attainment of the foregoing purposes.1
    II.
    Kuchera filed a complaint against the Family Health Center,
    the Medical Center, Meridian Health, and Modern Health Realty,
    1Meridian Health’s 2010 restated certificate of incorporation
    reiterates essentially the same purposes.
    5
    the record owner of the property (collectively referred to as
    the Meridian Health defendants).2      She alleged that she was
    injured when she slipped on the floor at the Family Health
    Center.
    An initial motion for summary judgment was denied.      On the
    day of trial, the Meridian Health defendants renewed their
    motion for summary judgment.     The trial judge conducted an
    evidentiary hearing focusing on the status of the Medical
    Center.   A Medical Center vice president testified that the
    event at the Family Health Center was a Commission-sponsored eye
    screening and that the people who worked at the event were
    Commission employees or volunteers.      He described the Family
    Health Center as a community outreach clinic that provides free
    care to community members.     In response to a question posed by
    the trial judge, the Medical Center representative stated that
    the Medical Center is the academic teaching hospital in the
    Meridian Health system and is affiliated with Robert Wood
    Johnson University Medical Center and the University of Medicine
    and Dentistry of New Jersey.     The trial judge asked whether “it
    [is] fair to say that a fundamental component of the corporation
    or purpose of the corporation is educational purposes?”      The
    2 The complaint against Modern Health Realty was dismissed for
    failure to prosecute, and an amended complaint added Kleen Rite
    Corporation as a defendant.
    6
    Medical Center representative responded affirmatively, citing
    the numerous residency programs based at the hospital that train
    medical students and newly graduated physicians.
    Noting that the central issue was whether the entity
    itself, not the building that it owns, is organized exclusively
    for hospital purposes or for religious, educational, and/or
    hospital purposes, the trial judge determined that the Medical
    Center has a hybrid purpose that includes educational and
    charitable services as well as the operation of a hospital.     The
    judge therefore concluded that the Meridian Health defendants
    are entitled to absolute immunity conferred on certain
    charitable organizations by N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-7, and dismissed
    plaintiff’s complaint with prejudice.
    In an unpublished opinion, the Appellate Division affirmed.
    The panel accepted the hybrid purpose analysis of the trial
    judge.   It concluded that “the undisputed proofs demonstrate
    that, in addition to maintaining a hospital, defendants also
    provide the beneficial services listed in [N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-7]
    and are, therefore, not engaged solely in hospital functions to
    the exclusion of educational and charitable purposes.”   In
    addition, it concluded that the term “educational purposes”
    should be interpreted broadly, extending beyond mere scholarly
    pursuits.   Citing the various residency programs and offsite
    facilities providing medical education and training, the panel
    7
    determined that the Medical Center “has a clear mission to
    promote the educational development of future physicians, and
    provides educational services through a variety of platforms.”
    Furthermore, the panel concluded that the Medical Center
    was organized for “charitable purposes,” based on the
    interpretation of N.J.S.A. 54:4-3.6, as adopted by Presbyterian
    Homes v. Division of Tax Appeals, 
    55 N.J. 275
    , 284 (1970).     As
    support, the panel cited the charitable health clinics operated
    by the Medical Center.
    This Court granted plaintiff’s petition for certification.
    Kuchera v. Jersey Shore Family Health Ctr., 
    217 N.J. 287
     (2014).
    III.
    Plaintiff argues that N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-8 expresses the
    intent of the Legislature regarding a hospital’s liability for
    negligence to a beneficiary of its services.    She contends that
    the Legislature expressly addressed charitable immunity for
    those nonprofit entities organized exclusively for hospital
    purposes and rejected the application of absolute charitable
    immunity to them.   Rather, plaintiff argues that the Legislature
    declared that nonprofit entities organized exclusively for
    hospital purposes are not immune from suit by a person injured
    as a result of its negligence.    She notes that the Legislature
    imposed a cap on damages recognizing the financial impact of
    unlimited monetary damage awards on qualifying hospitals.
    8
    Furthermore, she urges this Court to recognize that hospital
    purposes include teaching and operating community health clinics
    for those unable to pay for medical care.
    Defendants urge this Court to affirm the analysis of the
    Appellate Division.   They contend that the factual record
    demonstrates that the Medical Center is neither organized nor
    operated exclusively for hospital purposes.   Furthermore,
    defendants urge that the immunity analysis should focus on the
    function or use of the facility at the time the negligent act
    occurred on its premises.   They contend that defendants “were
    not engaged in providing medical treatment, clinical instruction
    or in operating an outpatient clinic at the time of plaintiff’s
    injury.   Instead, the activity was the purely charitable one of
    lending the Family Health Center facility to an unrelated entity
    . . . to conduct a charitable event, the free eye-screening.”
    IV.
    A.
    Prior to 1958, the common law recognized charitable
    immunity for charitable institutions such as churches and
    hospitals.   See Bianchi v. S. Park Presbyterian Church, 
    123 N.J.L. 325
    , 330-32 (E. & A. 1939) (recognizing common law
    principle of charitable immunity as bar to negligence actions
    against church by recipient of its benefactions); D’Amato v.
    Orange Mem’l Hosp., 
    101 N.J.L. 61
    , 65 (E. & A. 1925) (holding
    9
    that public policy requires immunity from liability of
    charitable institution maintaining hospital for negligent acts
    of medical personnel even for paying patients).    That principle
    was discarded by this Court in Benton v. Young Men’s Christian
    Ass’n of Westfield, 
    27 N.J. 67
     (1958); Collopy v. Newark Eye &
    Ear Infirmary, 
    27 N.J. 29
     (1958); and Dalton v. St. Luke’s
    Catholic Church, 
    27 N.J. 22
     (1958).    The Legislature promptly
    responded by passing the CIA to restore charitable immunity.
    See Lawlor v. Cloverleaf Mem’l Park, Inc. 
    56 N.J. 326
    , 336
    (1970); L. 1959, c. 90 (codified as N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-7 to -11).3
    The CIA serves two primary purposes.    First, immunity preserves
    a charity’s assets.   O’Connell v. State, 
    171 N.J. 484
    , 496
    (2002).   Second, immunity recognizes that a beneficiary of the
    services of a charitable organization has entered into a
    relationship that exempts the benefactor from liability.       
    Ibid.
    Generally stated, the restoration of charitable immunity
    was not universal.    The legislative scheme imposes certain
    conditions: certain personnel were not immune from liability for
    negligence, and nonprofit hospitals were granted a cap on
    damages from liability for negligence rather than immunity.
    3 Subsequent amendments provide that members of volunteer public
    assistance squads, such as volunteer first aid personnel and
    volunteer fire personnel are immune from liability for acts or
    omissions arising out of and in the course of rendering first
    aid or emergency services. N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-12 to -13.1.
    10
    N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-7 to -13.1.   To emphasize the distinction
    between certain entities, the CIA addressed nonprofits organized
    exclusively for charitable, religious, or educational purposes,
    and those organized for hospital purposes in separate sections.
    N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-7 and -8.    The most prominent distinction
    between nonprofit entities organized exclusively for charitable,
    religious, or educational purposes and nonprofits organized
    exclusively for hospital purposes is that the former are immune
    from liability while the latter are subject to liability for
    negligence, albeit with a cap on its damages.
    Specifically, N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-7(a) grants immunity from
    liability for negligence to nonprofit corporations, societies,
    or associations organized exclusively for religious, charitable,
    or educational purposes.    It provides:
    No   nonprofit    corporation,    society   or
    association    organized    exclusively    for
    religious, charitable or educational purposes
    or   its   trustees,    directors,   officers,
    employees, agents, servants or volunteers
    shall, except as is hereinafter set forth, be
    liable to respond in damages to any person who
    shall suffer damage from the negligence of any
    agent or servant of such corporation, society
    or association, where such person is a
    beneficiary, to whatever degree, of the works
    of such nonprofit corporation, society or
    association[.]
    [N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-7(a).]
    By contrast, N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-8 provides that
    11
    [n]otwithstanding the provisions of [N.J.S.A.
    2A:53A-7], any nonprofit corporation, society
    or association organized exclusively for
    hospital purposes shall be liable to respond
    in damages to such beneficiary who shall
    suffer damage from the negligence of such
    corporation, society or association or of its
    agents or servants to an amount not exceeding
    $250,000,4 together with interest and costs of
    such suit[.]
    The immunity bestowed by the CIA extends to the buildings
    and other facilities actually used for the purposes of the
    qualifying organization, such as a hospital.   N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-9.
    Section 9 provides in relevant part that, “[f]or the purposes of
    this act but not in limitation thereof, the buildings and places
    actually used for [educational purposes,] . . . religious
    worship, charitable or hospital purposes, . . . when so operated
    and maintained by any such nonprofit corporation, society or
    association, shall be deemed to be operated and maintained for a
    . . . hospital purpose.”   Finally, N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-10 instructs
    that the CIA is remedial legislation and should be liberally
    construed so as to further the legislative purpose of immunity.
    B.
    Plaintiff contends that the Family Health Center is an
    integral part of the health care provided by defendant Medical
    Center.   She argues that providing educational programs and
    4 Initially, the Legislature capped damages at $10,000.    L. 1959,
    c. 90, ¶ 48.
    12
    services related to health and operating neighborhood health
    clinics without regard to ability to pay for the provided
    services fall within the term “hospital purposes.”    The Meridian
    Health defendants contend that the Family Health Center engages
    in activities that stray beyond the stated purpose of a
    hospital.    Defendants claim that, having ventured into
    charitable activities, albeit health-related, those activities
    cloak defendant hospital with the immunity afforded to nonprofit
    charitable organizations.    The Appellate Division determined
    that defendant hospital was not organized exclusively for
    hospital purposes but was actually a hybrid hospital and
    charitable institution due to its public health and educational
    offerings.   The panel concluded that hybrid status afforded
    defendant hospital complete immunity from liability under the
    CIA.
    By the plain language of N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-7 and -8, a
    hospital is subject to limited liability under section 8 if it
    is formed as a nonprofit corporation, society, or association,
    is organized exclusively for hospital purposes, was promoting
    those objectives and purposes at the time the plaintiff was
    injured, and the plaintiff was a beneficiary of the activities
    of the hospital.    Cf. Hardwicke v. Am. Boychoir Sch., 
    188 N.J. 69
    , 95 (2006).   This appeal is confined to the issue of whether
    13
    the free eye screening conducted at the Family Health Center can
    be considered a hospital purpose.
    We have identified few cases that address the phrase
    “organized exclusively for hospital purposes” in the context of
    the CIA, and those cases shed little, if any, light on the issue
    presented in this appeal.    The term “exclusively” used in
    sections 7 and 8 of the CIA has been interpreted as meaning
    single or sole.   Kirby v. Columbian Inst., 
    101 N.J. Super. 205
    ,
    208 (Cty. Ct. 1968).    There, the trial court held that a
    fraternal organization, that was at least partially organized to
    promote the welfare of its members, was not afforded the shelter
    of charitable immunity because it was not exclusively or solely
    organized for charitable purposes.    
    Id. at 209-10
    .
    In Gould v. Theresa Grotta Center, 
    83 N.J. Super. 169
    , 174-
    75 (Law Div. 1964), aff’d, 
    89 N.J. Super. 253
     (App. Div. 1965),
    a trial judge strictly interpreted the term organized
    “exclusively for hospital purposes” and refused to consider a
    nursing home as a qualifying entity, notwithstanding the
    provision of some incidental health care to its residents.      The
    judge further determined that an entity organized for hospital
    purposes “must necessarily import an absence of the additional
    charitable and beneficial functions of a nursing home.”       Id. at
    176.
    14
    Recently, the Court discussed the meaning of the phrase
    “organized exclusively for hospital purposes” in Hunterdon
    Medical Center v. Township of Readington, 
    195 N.J. 549
     (2008).
    The discussion arose in the context of whether an offsite
    facility owned and operated by a nonprofit hospital was exempt
    from local property taxation.     We recognize that whether real
    property and improvements thereon are exempt from local property
    taxation and whether an entity satisfies the criteria for
    immunity from liability for negligence implicate different
    statutory provisions and public policy concerns.    Nevertheless,
    the view expressed by this Court regarding the organization and
    role of a modern hospital is instructive.
    The Court observed that any analysis of the meaning and
    scope of “hospital purposes must take into consideration the
    many medical pursuits permitted to the ‘modern’ hospital in New
    Jersey.”   
    Id. at 553
    .   It emphasized that the analysis of the
    term “hospital purposes” starts with the accepted concept of a
    hospital as “a place where a patient can obtain twenty-four hour
    continuous care.”   
    Id. at 569
    .
    However, the Court’s analysis did not end there.
    Concluding that confining the definition of hospital to a
    twenty-four hour continuous care facility for an inpatient
    population ignores the larger role of a hospital “as an expected
    and, to be sure, legitimate, provider of numerous patient
    15
    services,” the Court stated that the analysis must focus on the
    core aspects of a hospital’s purposes.      
    Id. at 572
    .   The Court
    stated that
    the core aspects of a hospital’s purposes are
    to address the needs of all of the types of
    patients that a hospital is expected to serve.
    Therefore, we hold that any medical service
    that a hospital patient may require pre-
    admission, during a hospital stay (whether it
    is for less than a day or for one or more
    days), or post-admission, constitutes a
    presumptive core “hospital purpose” under
    N.J.S.A. 54:4-3.6. Our definition amplifies
    the more abbreviated explanation of “hospital
    purposes”     previously     articulated    in
    connection      with     N.J.S.A.     54:4-3.6
    applications.
    [Ibid.]
    The Court also held that the site of the delivery of the
    service did not detract from its inclusion as a hospital
    purpose.   
    Ibid.
         Thus, if the service was delivered in a
    facility on the main campus or in a hospital-owned building
    adjacent to the hospital campus, “[t]he use is presumptively for
    core ‘hospital purposes.’”      
    Ibid.
    Indeed, in various contexts, courts throughout the country
    have recognized the evolving character of hospitals and
    healthcare.   A hospital is no longer viewed as simply a facility
    at which medical professionals treat their patients.       See Clark
    v. Southview Hosp. & Family Health Ctr., 
    628 N.E.2d 46
    , 53 (Ohio
    1994) (explaining courts have recognized “the status of the
    16
    modern-day hospital and its role in contemporary society” as
    “the only place where the best equipment and facilities and a
    full array of medical services are available at any time without
    an appointment.   With hospitals now being complex full-service
    institutions, the emergency room has become the community
    medical center, serving as the portal of entry to the myriad of
    services available at the hospital”); Burless v. W. Va. Univ.
    Hosps., Inc., 
    601 S.E.2d 85
    , 93 (W. Va. 2004) (noting “[t]he
    public’s confidence in the modern hospital’s portrayal of itself
    as a full service provider of health care”); Lewis v. Physicians
    Ins. Co., 
    627 N.W.2d 484
    , 493 (Wis. 2001) (“As full-care modern
    health facilities, hospitals are no longer mere structures where
    physicians treated and cared for their patients.” (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted)).
    The modern hospital is now a place where members of the
    community not only seek emergency services but also preventative
    services, therapy, educational programs, and counseling.    For
    instance, New Jersey supports several “Quit Centers,” which
    operate in some hospitals across the State and provide a number
    of services to help residents quit smoking.5
    5 NJ Quit Centers, New Jersey HealthLink,
    http://www.nj.gov/njhealthlink/addict/quitcenters.html?pageID=NJ
    (last visited Feb. 23, 2015).
    17
    Similarly, many hospitals, including the Medical Center,
    provide specialized and comprehensive services pertaining to
    particular diseases, such as diabetes.   One major hospital
    operates an education center for adults and children, which
    provides inpatient and outpatient diabetes care, educational
    programs certified by the American Diabetes Association,
    individual diabetes counseling, nutritional counseling, and
    psychosocial support services through a licensed clinical social
    worker.   As these programs illustrate, hospitals now provide
    comprehensive services beyond acute inpatient care, and our
    conception of “hospital purposes” needs to expand to reflect the
    many health-related pursuits of the modern hospital.
    We discern no reason to confine the term “hospital
    purposes” to the vintage conception of a hospital as a facility
    providing a site for physicians to provide acute and continuous
    inpatient care for their patients.    Rather, to effectuate the
    legislative mandate that the CIA should be liberally construed
    to effectuate its purpose, we focus on the many medical pursuits
    of a modern hospital in New Jersey.
    C.
    Whether a nonprofit entity, whose certificate of
    incorporation and by-laws provide that it is organized
    exclusively for charitable, religious, educational, or hospital
    purposes, actually conducts its affairs consistent with its
    18
    stated purpose often requires a fact-sensitive inquiry.       Bieker
    v. Cmty. House of Moorestown, 
    169 N.J. 167
    , 175 (2001).       The
    Court recognized in Bieker that some nonprofit associations,
    such as churches, provide a wide range of services beyond their
    core purpose.    
    Id. at 176
    .   The Court embraced the idea that a
    church may engage in various activities and services and that
    its status as a nonprofit corporation or association organized
    exclusively for religious purposes is not eviscerated as long as
    the services or activities further the charitable objectives the
    church was organized to advance.       
    Ibid.
     (citing Loder v. St.
    Thomas Greek Orthodox Church, 
    295 N.J. Super. 297
    , 302 (App.
    Div. 1996)); accord Ryan v. Holy Trinity Evangelical Lutheran
    Church, 
    175 N.J. 333
    , 349 (2003) (noting ancillary services that
    enhance mission of qualifying entity do not undermine
    exclusivity of qualifying entity’s purpose); Estate of Komninos
    v. Bancroft Neurohealth, Inc., 
    417 N.J. Super. 309
    , 320 (App.
    Div. 2010) (recognizing nonprofit organizations are afforded
    wide latitude to determine how they shall achieve their stated
    objective).     Applying that approach to the defendant, a
    community house organized and maintained “as a center of
    community life for the people of Moorestown and its surrounds,”
    the Court held that it served a recognized charitable purpose.
    Bieker, supra, 
    169 N.J. at 177
    .     The Court remanded, however, to
    determine the quantity of income received from its rental of
    19
    facilities to for-profit entities and whether that share of its
    income required a finding that the community organization lost
    its charitable status.     
    Id. at 179-80
    .
    V.
    Defendant Medical Center is a member of Meridian Health,
    which is a nonprofit corporation organized to engage in a series
    of activities relating to the improvement of human health and
    the provision of care to the sick, injured, and disabled.      To
    that end, Meridian Health and its constituent medical centers
    engage in educational and research programs and coordinate,
    sponsor, promote, and advance activities to improve the physical
    health and welfare of persons living in and around the
    geographic area it serves.    Notably, Meridian Health views its
    core hospital mission as providing not only inpatient but also
    outpatient medical care.     It also identifies its core hospital
    mission as addressing the public health needs of the community
    in which its constituent units are located.
    The record reveals that the Family Health Center is a
    nonprofit, charitable ambulatory care facility located on the
    main campus of the Medical Center in Neptune.     It is an integral
    unit of the Meridian Health system.     It provides numerous
    specialized free clinics to the community.     The eye screening
    offered by the Commission at the Family Health Center attended
    20
    by plaintiff was an example of the clinics offered by this
    facility.
    The modern hospital in New Jersey offers a variety of
    inpatient and outpatient services.     Some of the outpatient
    services, as discussed in Hunterdon Medical Center, supra, are
    related to medical services that will be administered on an
    inpatient basis in the acute care hospital facility.      
    195 N.J. at 554
    .   Some services, however, will be offered on an
    outpatient ambulatory basis because the medical service need not
    be performed on an inpatient basis or the medical service is in
    the nature of preventative care.     The delivery of such services
    in an outpatient setting is consistent with the nature of modern
    health care and a hospital's role as a facility that engages in
    care for more than the acutely ill or injured person.
    The modern hospital in New Jersey may also include a
    teaching component.   The education of medical students,
    physicians, nurses, and other health professionals is a
    significant core hospital purpose related to the provision of
    quality health care to patients.     The modern hospital in New
    Jersey also provides medical care to those who can pay for the
    care and to those who cannot.   In fact, every acute care
    hospital in this State is required to provide care to anyone who
    seeks care without regard to the ability to pay.     N.J.S.A.
    21
    26:2H-18.64.   The provision of charity care is a core function
    of a hospital.
    Applying these principles, we conclude that the Meridian
    Health defendants, and specifically the Medical Center and its
    Family Health Center, are governed by the more specific
    expressions of legislative intent regarding hospitals
    articulated in N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-8.     In short, the Meridian Health
    defendants are subject to liability for negligence applicable to
    nonprofit corporations, associations, and societies organized
    exclusively for hospital purposes with any damage award capped
    at $250,000.   
    Ibid.
       Here, the Appellate Division utilized a
    restrictive concept of a hospital that did not account for the
    multi-function nature of the modern hospital and its role in the
    provision of health care in this society.     By focusing on the
    use of a facility on any given day, the panel failed to consider
    the relationship of that single activity to the central
    organizing principles of the hospital.    In addition, the panel
    misapprehended the role that public health activities -- such as
    eye screenings, provision of health care without consideration
    of the patient’s ability to pay, and educational programs for
    health professionals -- play in advancing the core organizing
    purposes of the modern hospital.
    We recognize that charitable immunity has historically been
    considered a means to conserve assets of the qualifying entity.
    22
    It is therefore significant that when the Legislature raised the
    cap on damages, it did so believing that additional monetary
    exposure for negligent acts might encourage heightened oversight
    of the quality of care thereby reducing incidents of medical
    malpractice and containing the costs of care.   See Schiavo v.
    John F. Kennedy Hosp., 
    258 N.J. Super. 380
    , 384 (App. Div. 1992)
    (holding 1991 amendment should be applied prospectively), aff’d,
    
    131 N.J. 400
     (1993).   In premises liability actions, such as
    this one, any concerns that this ruling may sap nonprofit
    hospital resources is ameliorated by the opportunity of the
    organization to obtain indemnification from those entities with
    which the hospital contracts to maintain its facilities.
    We, therefore, conclude that the Appellate Division
    incorrectly held that the Meridian Health defendants were immune
    from liability pursuant to N.J.S.A. 2A:53A-7.
    VI.
    The judgment of the Appellate Division is reversed and the
    matter is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER and JUSTICES LaVECCHIA, ALBIN,
    PATTERSON, FERNANDEZ-VINA, and SOLOMON join in JUDGE CUFF’s
    opinion.
    23
    SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    NO.   A-60                                     SEPTEMBER TERM 2013
    ON CERTIFICATION TO              Appellate Division, Superior Court
    TERRY KUCHERA,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    JERSEY SHORE FAMILY HEALTH
    CENTER, JERSEY SHORE
    UNIVERSITY MEDICAL CENTER,
    MERIDIAN HEALTH and MODERN
    REALTY CORPORATION,
    Defendants-Respondents.
    DECIDED               March 31, 2014
    Chief Justice Rabner                         PRESIDING
    OPINION BY                   Judge Cuff
    CONCURRING/DISSENTING OPINIONS BY
    DISSENTING OPINION BY
    REVERSE AND
    CHECKLIST
    REMAND
    CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER                      X
    JUSTICE LaVECCHIA                         X
    JUSTICE ALBIN                             X
    JUSTICE PATTERSON                         X
    JUSTICE FERNANDEZ-VINA                    X
    JUSTICE SOLOMON                           X
    JUDGE CUFF (t/a)                          X
    TOTALS                                    7
    1