163 N.E. 732 | NY | 1928
This is an action brought by the plaintiff against the town of Brant, Erie county, to recover damages for the death of his intestate by drowning by reason of the negligent act of defendant in maintaining a public park and bathing beach on the shore of Lake Erie without giving warning of its dangerous character and without providing proper means of protecting the safety of the bathers. The question is as to the liability of the town, as town, not as to the negligence of its servants and agents or as to the freedom of the deceased from contributory negligence. It is contended that the town is not liable (a) because maintenance of the park was an ultra vires act; and (b) because the maintenance of town parks according to law is the exercise of a governmental function.
The authority of a town to acquire lands for the purpose of establishing thereon a public park or playground and to equip the same with suitable buildings, structures and apparatus is contained in Town Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 62), art. 17-A. The town board may establish public parks and play-grounds "when authorized by a special meeting of the taxpayers therein." (§ 342.) No vote was had on the question whether the town board should be authorized to purchase the land in question for park purposes or to equip the same as provided in the Town Law. The town board leased the land without authority. But the town in fact holds a long term lease or leases of the park or pleasure grounds. "The town board is authorized to provide for the care and maintenance of such parks and playgrounds and for the improvement thereof, and the cost thereof shall be a town charge." (Town Law, § 346.) "Such parks and playgrounds shall be under the care and control of the town board, and the town board may adopt * * * rules and regulations for the use of such public parks and playgrounds." (Town Law, § 347.) The town board had for some eleven years maintained the place as a public park. It had *202 constructed bath houses. It had fixed a charge for out-of-town people of fifty cents for each automobile entering the park.
The Appellate Division has held that because the land was not acquired under the provisions of the Town Law cited above, the town was not maintaining the park and was not liable for the negligence of the town board in relation thereto.
The want of original authority to establish the park is not to be received as conclusive evidence that the town did not maintain it. Municipal corporations are not wholly exempt from liability for wrongful acts done with all the evidences of being acts of the corporation to the injury of others. (Salt Lake City v.Hollister,
If the negligent acts are ultra vires in such a sense as to be wholly without the scope of the corporate powers of the *203
municipality, the municipality is not answerable for the consequences resulting from them, although the persons causing the work to be done were its officers and agents, and assuming to act as such in doing it. (Mayor, etc., of Albany v. Cunliff,
Was the act of the town in maintaining the park done in the discharge of a governmental duty? Did the town, in maintaining the park, act as the agent of the State for the benefit of the people of the State so that the rule of non-liability for negligence may be applied? Or did it perform mere quasi-private duties *204
for the peculiar advantage of the municipality and its inhabitants in the discharge of which it is held responsible for its negligent acts? Is the power governmental and public, or proprietary and private? The distinction is pointed out inWilcox v. City of Rochester (
Public duties properly styled governmental in character include, among others, the functions of fire and police protection, the protection of health and the administration of public charities. Within this field the rule of non-liability prevails. Towns and counties have been *205
held to be merely divisions of the State organized for the convenient exercise of portions of the political power of the State (Lorillard v. Town of Monroe,
The modern tendency is against the rule of non-liability. (Borchard, Government Liability in Tort, *206 supra, p. 258.) Liability for highway negligence has been imposed by statute upon towns (Highway Law [Cons. Laws, ch. 25], § 75) and counties (County Law, § 6).
The establishment of a town park may incidentally benefit the public health but that fact does not make the acts of the town in maintaining the park the exercise of a governmental function. (Missano v. Mayor, etc., supra, p. 129.)
A wise public policy forbids us to recognize the town of Brant as acting as a sovereign when it maintains its park. It acts as a legal individual voluntarily assuming a duty, not imposed upon it, for the benefit of a locality rather than the general public. When it assumes such a duty it also assumes the burdens incident thereto.
The judgment of the Appellate Division should be reversed and that of the Trial Term affirmed, with costs in this court and in the Appellate Division.
CARDOZO, Ch. J., CRANE, ANDREWS, LEHMAN, KELLOGG and O'BRIEN, JJ., concur.
Judgment accordingly.