This action arose out of injuries sustained by Sharon Diane Helton, a minor, while being examined at appellee’s hospital in Hot Springs. The suit was filed by the little girl’s father as next friend, and by the father individually, against the Sisters of Mercy of St. Joseph’s Hospital in Hot Springs. On November 22, 1960, appellant filed a tort action in the Garland Circuit Court, alleging that on the 12th day of November, 1959, Sharon was delivered to St. Joseph’s Hospital so that a physical examination could be made; that she was given a general anaesthetic and placed upon a “cystotable in the usual manner required by these examinations”; that employees of the hospital carelessly and negligently injected sodium hydroxide into the bladder of the little girl, instead of *77sodium iodide; that as a result of such negligence Sharon suffered severe permanent injuries, among which was the destruction of her bladder; that it is now necessary for her to wear an artificial bladder on the outside of her body, and she will have to wear it for the rest of her life. The complaint prays for judgment in the sum of $386,250. In response to the complaint, the defendant hospital filed a motion to dismiss, alleging that it is a charitable institution and that as such it is not liable in tort.
On January 25, 1961, appellant filed a second suit against appellee, alleging the same injuries and the same circumstances involved when the injuries were sustained, but instead of alleging that the injuries were caused by the negligence and carelessness of the employees of the defendant hospital, the complaint states “that on or about November 12, 1959, the plaintiff, Sanders Helton, entered into a contract with the defendant under the terms of which for a good and valuable consideration the defendant undertook to furnish to defendant’s daughter, Sharon Diane Helton, an operating room, proper personnel and proper facilities for a cystogram and cystoscopy on plaintiff’s daughter. The defendant undertook that the operating room would be safe and suitable, and that its agents, servants and employees would perform their duties in a reasonable and proper manner and that the said Sharon Diane Helton would be fully protected against all harm that might be reasonably anticipated and forestalled by normal hospital operating procedures. That plaintiff Sharon Diane Helton was a third party beneficiary of said contract.”
By agreement of the parties the cases were consolidated. Defendant filed a motion to dismiss the second suit on the ground that although plaintiff had attempted to allege a breach of contract, the complaint nevertheless sounds in tort and that defendant is therefore not liable.
*78Defendant produced evidence by way of dispositions going to prove that the hospital is a public charity. Although given ample opportunity, plaintiff produced no evidence in contradiction of defendant’s testimony on that point. After considering the evidence on the proposition of whether the hospital is a charitable institution, and the argument of counsel, the trial court granted the motions to dismiss both cases. Mr. Helton on behalf of his minor daughter and himself has appealed.
There are three questions involved:
(1) Is appellee, “Sisters of Mercy of St. Joseph’s Hospital”, a public charity as a matter of law, according to 'the undisputed evidence!
(2) Of course if it is not a public charity, it is liable in tort. On the other hand, is it liable in tort even if it is a public charity?
(3) If the hospital is a public charity and not liable in tort, is it liable on the alleged contract?
We will deal with the questions in the order named. First, is the hospital, according to the evidence, a public charity as a matter of law? The answer is yes. There are several things that inevitably lead to this conclusion. The articles of incorporation provide: “The purpose and essence of this corporation is and shall be purely benevolent, charitable, religious and philanthropic, and it is expressly declared and provided that this Corporation is not for gain or individual profit, and that none of its property, real, personal or mixed, shall ever be used or expended except in carrying into effect the legitimate ends and purposes of its being, and that no person or member shall gain or derive individual profit therefrom.” All taxing authorities consider it a charitable institution; it pays no taxes; it is exempt from sales tax and state and federal income taxes. It is sponsored by the Sisters of Mercy, a Catholic order, but its doors are always open to anyone, regardless of creed, needing hospitalization. No one has ever been turned away be*79cause lié could not afford to pay. No one has ever made oiie: dime profit out of the institution. The Sisters who work at the hospital receive no pay. Over a five-year period the actual physical labor performed for the hospital by the Sisters, figured on a labor basis alone, was worth $170,000 to the institution. During the same period, $328,373 in cash was donated to the hospital by charitably inclined people. True, the hospital has accumulated the sum of about $600,000, which it hopes to use in expanding and improving its facilities, but if it had been compelled to pay taxes and had not had the services of the Sisters donated as charity, and the gifts of money, there would be no surplus; in fact, the hospital in all probability would be bankrupt.
In addition, a matter of considerable weight to be considered in reaching a conclusion as to whether the hospital is a charitable institution is the fact that the same hospital has heretofore been declared by this Court to be a public charity. Hot Springs School Dist. v. Sisters of Mercy, 84 Ark. 497, 106 S. W. 954. That case was decided in 1907, and there Judge Hart, speaking for the Court, said: “One of the witnesses here said that she had been a member of the Sisters of Mercy for forty years, that the whole object of the order was charity, and that their whole life was devoted to it. In response to the question, ‘This order, the Sisters of Mercy, what is the general work of the order, and to what do your vows pertain?’ she answered, ‘To the poor and sick and educational.’ In this case the buildings were constructed and fitted for use solely as a public hospital. The members of the order receive no compensation for themselves. Their earnings and their lives are devoted to charity. ’ ’
The evidence in the present case is to the same effect. There is no material difference in the operation of the hospital today and the operation when the above mentioned Sisters of Mercy case was decided many years ago. The hospital was established in 1888 and incorporated under Ark. Stat. § 64-1301 in 1951. In the case *80at bar Mother Mary Bertram Daley testified that “We [Sisters of Mercy] are founded to care for the poor, the sick, and the ignorant. That is a very broad field. We take the vows, one of them being poverty and anything that comes to us by our work or given to us as a gift becomes the property of the community and is used for the works of the community.” In Crossett Health Center v. Crosswell, 221 Ark. 874, 256 S. W. 2d 548, there was evidence to the effect that the hospital was not a charitable institution, but here there is no such evidence.
Next, to say that a public charity is liable in tort, we would have to overrule cases holding just the opposite. Woman’s Christian Nat’l. Lib. Ass’n. v. Fordyce, 79 Ark. 532, 86 S. W. 417, and Fordyce v. Woman’s Christian Nat’l. Lib. Ass’n., 79 Ark. 550, 96 S. W. 155, 7 L. R. A., N. S., 485. Arkansas Baptist College v. Wilson, 138 S. W. 2d 376, was a suit on a teacher’s contract. This Court said: “If this were an action to recover for the tort of the trustees, then appellants would be protected under the doctrine of the Fordyce case, . . .”
In Cabbiness v. City of North Little Rock, 228 Ark. 356, 307 S. W. 2d 529, decided in 1957, one of the issues was whether the North Little Rock Boys’ Club, a charitable corporation, was liable in tort. We pointed out that to hold that such liability existed, we would have to overrule the Fordyce and other cases, and we said: “This we refuse to do.” And it was further said in the Cabbiness case: “The Fordyce cases were decided in 1906 and the rule of immunity of a charitable corporation from tort liability, as there recognized, has become a rule of property in this State. It is for the Legislature, rather than the courts, to effectuate a change, if such is desired.” [Emphasis added.]
In a most able manner counsel for appellant urge us to overrule cases holding a charitable institution is not liable in tort, and much authority from other states has *81been cited indicating that the trend is along that line. But in view of our prior holdings, and especially the strong language in the Cabbiness case, we do not feel like taking the liberty of doing so. It will be noticed that in the Cabbmess case it is stated that the rule of immunity of a charitable corporation from tort liability has become a rule of property. In Pitcock v. State, 91 Ark. 527, 121 S. W. 742, Chief Justice McCulloch, speaking for the Court, said: “Decisions which become rules of property should never be overruled, whether they are right or wrong.” And in Burel v. Grand Lodge I.O.O.P., 163 Ark. 131, 259 S. W. 369, it is said: “The decision has become a rule of property, and should not be disturbed, even if the court was otherwise disposed to do so.”
We next come to the proposition of whether the hospital can be liable for the injuries sustained by the little girl on the theory that f was a breach of contract. There was no express contract setting out the duties and the obligations of the parties. Mr. Helton delivered his little girl to the hospital for an examination. At that time he signed an authorization for the examination to be made. In this written document neither party agrees to do anything, and it cannot be called a contract in any sense of the word. In order to invoke the doctrine that it was the duty of the hospital to use due care, and liability on its part for the failure to use such care, resort must be had to operation of law. In ordinary circumstances, no charitable institution being involved, the law would imply that it was the duty of the hospital to use due care, and there could be liability for the failure to use such care. But the law does not imply something that is against public policy. How can it be said that the law implies an obligation to use due care, and liability for the failure to use such care, where the public policy of the state imposes no duty and liability in that respect? The Cabbiness case clearly points out that immunity of a charitable corporation from liability for negligence is so thoroughly established in this State that *82the doctrine has become a rule of property. In these circumstances we cannot say that the law implies that it - tiie duty of the hospital to use due care, and liability to. not doing so. It would appear that if there is any implication supplied by law it would he that there is no liability for the failure to use due care. “The law never implies an agreement against its own restrictions and prohibitions.” Los Angeles Warehouse Co. v. Los Angeles County, 139 Cal. App. 368, 33 P. 2d 1058.
In Lovich v. Salvation Army, 81 Ohio App. 317, 75 N. E. 2d 459, plaintiff was injured by eating contaminated food furnished by the Salvation Army. The complaint was treated as relying on an implied warranty of fitness of the food. The court said: “We think by the greater weight of authority the action in this case is ex delicto and not ex contractu in the sense that it is based upon the violation of an obligation imposed by law ... It would seem that whether the liability is based upon a breach of implied warranty or negligence, that the result is the same. The action for damages for personal injury and illness is tortious in nature and the rule of limited liability in favor of eleemosynary or charitable institutions must he applied.”
In Rudy v. Lakeside Hospital, 115 Ohio St. 539, 155 N. E. 126, the hospital lost jewelry belonging to a patient. The patient filed suit and claimed a breach of contract. The court said: “Under the theory of nonliability of charitable instutions adopted by this court, as heretofore indicated, we are unable to make any distinction between cases involving damages to the person of a patient and damages to his property, where such are caused by the wrongful act of an employee.” The court held there could be no recovery on the alleged breach of contract.
In Greatrex v. Evangelical Deaconess Hospital, 261 Mich. 327, 246 N. W. 137, 86 A. L. R. 487, a baby born in the hospital was by mistake given to the wrong person and was never returned. The father filed suit *83against the hospital. The court said: “Plaintiff, in his suit against the hospital, first declared on a tort count, then on an assumpsit count, and then added the common counts. Recognizing the rule laid down hy this court that a hospital, formed for non-profit purposes and supported by the benevolence of its contributors, cannot be held liable for the torts of its agents or employees, he discontinued all the counts of his declaration except the second one in assumpsit . . . Naming or labeling a count assumpsit does not make it such, when it is apparent on its face that it is one in tort. Nor is there any magic in the use of one term instead of another, when the gravamen of the act' complained of is the negligence or mistake of a servant of an eleemosynary institution, exempted from liability by law under these circumstances. ’ ’
In Davin v. Kansas Medical, Missionary & Benevolent Ass’n., 103 Kan. 48, 172 Pac. 1002, a patient was injured by the failure of the nurse to stay in the room with the patient. The husband of the patient had specifically contracted with the hospital that a nurse would be kept with the patient. The court held there could be no recovery on the alleged contract and gave as one of the reasons “that public policy encourages the support and maintenance of charitable institutions and protects their funds from the law of litigation.”
Of course, no one even contends that a charitable institution is not liable on its contracts such as the one involved in the above mentioned case of Arkansas Baptist College v. Wilson, 138 S. W. 2d 376, where a teacher’s contract was the issue. But our conclusion is that there can be no recovery on the contract alleged here and, since the appellee is a public charity as a matter of law and is therefore not liable in tort, and is not liable on the alleged contract, the trial court did not err in dismissing both complaints. This does not mean, however, that the little girl and her parents are without any remedy. Of course, the indivual or individuals alleged to have caused the injuries by their negligence are not *84immune to a suit for damages, and Ark. Stat. § 66-517 gives the injured parties in a ease of this kind a direct cause of action against any insurance company that has issued a liability policy applying to the situation.
Affirmed.
McFaddin, J., concurs in part and dissents in part.
Johnson, J., dissents.
Harris, C. J., not participating.