delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellee, the Louisville Industrial School of Reform, was created a body-corporate by an act of the General Assembly in 1854, under the name of the Louisville House of Refuge. Its object and business was to take charge of such youths as might be committed to it, .and care for their moral and physical training and education. It was a charity, and its purpose was reformation by training its inmates to habits of industry and by instilling into their minds the principles of right living to the end that they might become useful citizens of the State, rather than fill its prisons and poorhouses.
*252The incorporators and their successors are under the control and oversight of the Legislature, and are mere instrumentalities of the Commonwealth. The State interposed in behalf of neglected and abandoned children within its confines in its ’capacity of parens patria, and assumed the guardianship' of such children as were committed to the institution. It was an agency of the State,, and maintained by taxation and State aid.
The appellant, a boy of ten years of age, was committed to the care, control and restraint of the institution,, and his petititon brought by his next friend, Thomas, alleges that without fault on his part, one of the servants and employes of the appellees, and known by it to be incompetent and unfit for such service, struck and beat the appellant in such cruel and inhuman manner that he was caused great suffering in mind and body, and was permanently injured and damaged, etc.
To this petition a general demurrer was sustained and the petition dismissed. The correctness of this judgment is the question on this appeal, and while it has been determined directly, the general principles are well established. The functions of the institution are governmental. As said in Farnham v. Pierce, 141 Mass., 203, “It is a provision by the Commonwealth, as parens patria,. for the custody and care of neglected children, and is intended only to supply to them that parental custody which they have lost.”
In Perry v. House of Refuge, 63 Md., 20, it was held that an action does not lie against a State House of Refuge for an assault made on an inmate by an officer thereof. It is there said: “ Youths, in whom the seeds of vice have already germinated, are placed there under proper re*253■straint, so that the growth of crime may be arrested or ■eradicated in its incipiency. Ennds are contributed by individuals impelled by philanthropic motives, and donations are obtained from municipal and State treasuries. These are the funds of the institution, controlled by the managers, not for their own profit or benefit, but solely for the charitable pmrposes designated by its organic law. . . . Several of the most eminent judges in England expressed themselves with much emphasis in opposition to an allowance of damages out of a fund so held by fiduciary agents; ” and the principle determined in a number of English cases that “ damages are to be paid out of the pocket of the wrongdoer, and not from the trust fund,” was approved.
It is contended that these cases followed the older decisions in England, and that the latter have been since overruled. Be this as it may, the principle announced seems entirely just and reasonable. If the funds of these institutions are to be diverted from their intended beneficent purposes by law suits and judgments for damages for negligent or malicious servants, their usefulness— indeed their existence — will soon be a thing of the past.
The judgment dismissing the petition is affirmed.
With this case as re-published in 23 L. R. A., 200, is a note reYieving the English and American decisions on the subject of the liability of a charitable institution for negligence.