96 P.2d 1078 | Or. | 1939
The amended complaint discloses that defendant City of Toledo is a duly incorporated city *187 in Lincoln county, Oregon, maintaining a fire department and employing a fire chief; that plaintiffs are the owners of certain real property lying immediately west of and fronting upon Railroad street in said defendant city; that until the same was destroyed by the fire hereinafter mentioned, there was upon said parcel of real property a frame or wooden building used by plaintiffs for residential and commercial purposes.
The further pertinent allegations in plaintiffs' amended complaint are as follows:
[Here follows an itemized list of buildings and personal property consisting of furnishings, etc., destroyed, together with values, amounting in the aggregate to $7,539.90, which list is omitted here as serving no purpose in this opinion.] *189
In support of its demurrer to plaintiffs' amended complaint defendant city contends that only the common council of said city is charged with the tortious actions upon which plaintiff's case is based; that said tortious conduct was ultra vires; and that in destroying the unoccupied building defendant city was acting in its governmental or political capacity.
We are unwilling to hold that the City of Toledo is not charged with said tortious conduct by the allegations that it was the common council of said city that did the things comprising such conduct. The charter granting municipal power and authority to said city employs the same phraseology as that which plaintiffs use.
We quote from section 8 of said charter:
"Section 8. The Mayor and Councilmen shall comprise the Common Council of said city of Toledo, and at any meeting shall have exclusive power —"
Here follows thirty-four subdivisions covering practically all the municipal functions to be performed by said city, except those pertaining to the waterworks and the lighting plants which prerogatives are reposed in a water and light commission.
To hold that the city is not charged with conduct set forth in plaintiffs' amended complaint would be tantamount to holding that the city of Toledo is not given any express municipal authority by its charter. This charter was enacted more than a third of a century ago and the practical construction given to it dispels the criticism which otherwise might occur because of its rather restrictive phraseology. We think that no one could be misled by the language in plaintiffs' *190 amended complaint into thinking that the city of Toledo was not charged with the tort therein alleged.
We are also unable to agree with defendant city that its alleged conduct, of which plaintiffs complain, was ultra vires. It will be noted that it is alleged in said amended complaint that —
"The common council of said city of Toledo ordered and directed said Owen Hart to destroy said unoccupied building for the reason that the same was a fire menace or hazard and dangerous to said city of Toledo."
Subdivision 5, of section 8, of the said charter of Toledo grants the power "to prevent and remove nuisances, and to declare by general rules what shall constitute the same".
Subdivision 12 thereof grants the power "to establish and regulate a fire department; to provide for the prevention and extinguishment of fire".
We think that for the purpose of deciding the question presented by defendant's demurrer, namely, whether plaintiffs' amended complaint states a cause of action against demurrant, we are justified in holding that said amended complaint alleges that said defendant city abated a public nuisance by destroying it. Construing the charter of said city as it has been understood for more than thirty years, we hold that such a course was within the authority and power of said defendant city and hence its alleged acts were not ultra vires.
We agree with defendant city that in abating the public nuisance said city acted in its political or governmental capacity.
Said city contends that it is immune from liability for the negligent manner in which a governmental or political act is performed. *191
On rehearing of the case of Giaconi v. City of Astoria,
"The Supreme Court of Minnesota * * * holds the municipality liable for turning an unusual quantity of water from the street upon plaintiff's premises. Although the city had right under its governmental functions to abate the nuisance of standing water, yet, says the court, `the act of removal was a ministerial one, in the performance of which the defendant was legally bound to take all such reasonable care and precaution against possible and contingent injuries to others as a discreet and cautious individual would and ought to exercise under like circumstances, were the whole loss or risk to be his alone.'"
Moreover, there are exceptions to the rule that a city is immune from liability for the manner in which it performs a governmental act. One of these exceptions is that, even, in the performance of a governmental act, if the municipality is guilty of active wrongdoing, there is no immunity for damages resulting from such active wrongdoing: Allas v. Borough of Rumson,
Another exception arises where a municipal corporation creates and maintains a nuisance: Hoffman v. City of Bristol,
In effect, it is charged in the amended complaint herein that under the authority and direction of the common council of the City of Toledo, after having saturated dry wooden boxes, paper and other inflammable *192 rubbish, in said unoccupied building, with a large quantity of gasoline, kerosene or other inflammable liquid, the fire chief of said city kindled and set a fire in said material for the purpose of destroying said building. Such a course was active wrongdoing, as distinguished from negligence; and the result was to create a temporary nuisance.
This court, through Mr. Justice HENRY J. BEAN, has defined a nuisance thus:
"A nuisance is public where it affects the rights enjoyed by citizens as part of the public, that is, the rights of which every citizen is entitled. A private nuisance is anything done to the hurt, annoyance or detriment of the lands or hereditaments of another, and not amounting to a trespass. The difference between public and private nuisances does not depend upon the nature of the thing done, but upon the question whether it affects the general public or merely some private individual. Therefore the same act or structure may be a public nuisance and also a private nuisance as to a person who is thereby caused a special injury other than that inflicted upon the general public." State v.Ringold,
A city has no more right than an individual to create a nuisance, and if it does so it is subject to the same liability as an individual: Miller v. City of Woodburn,
The demurrer to plaintiffs' amended complaint should have been overruled. The judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause remanded for such further proceedings as may not be inconsistent herewith.
RAND, C.J., and ROSSMAN, J., concur.
BAILEY, J., concurs in the result. *193