Plaintiff, a minor, who was negligently shot by a patrolman of the city of Glendale, a city of the sixth class, of which the defendants are the duly elected and acting trustees, brings this action against defendants to recover of them damages for the negligent shooting by the police officer. A general and special demurrer was interposed to plaintiff’s complaint. .The demurrer was sustained. Plaintiff, declining to amend, appeals from the judgment entered after the order sustaining the demurrer.
The complaint alleges that, prior to the time when plaintiff was negligently shot by the patrolman, the defendants, as the city trustees, had adopted an ordinance—a copy of which is attached to the complaint as an exhibit—whereby five city departments for the administration of the business of the city were established, the appointment of certain city officials was provided for and their powers and duties defined. One of the five departments thus established, or attempted to be established, is designated in the ordinance as the “Public Safety Department.” It is provided that one of the officers of that department shall be the city marshal, who shall be ex-officio chief of police, who shall have command and control over the police force, and who shall recommend for appointment such officers as are authorized by the board of trustees, and that, upon appointment by the board, such appointees shall be the authorized police officers of the city and become members of the police force. The ordinance declares that the chief of police shall be appointed by the board of trustees upon the nomination of the city manager.
The ease as alleged in the complaint, omitting all the merely nonessential allegations and the pleader’s conclusions of law, is substantially as follows: Defendants, as such city trustees, duly appointed one J. P. Lampert chief of police and city marshal, under the authority assumed by them by reason of the above-mentioned ordinance, under which ordinance, it is alleged, the trustees ran the city and assumed the power of selecting and appointing subordinate officers; Lampert, by virtue of his appointment as chief of police *762 and city marshal, “did, on or about the ninth day of January, 1920, negligently and carelessly select and appoint one Guy Wilson to the position of a patrolman in and for said city . . . and did . . . permit and allow said Guy Wilson, who was then and there a careless, reckless and incompetent person for such position, to assume said position and its duties as said patrolman”; prior to the appointment of Lamport as chief of police and city marshal, defendants, as such trustees, had appointed one T. W. Watson city manager; Watson negligently and carelessly approved, at the time thereof, all the acts and omissions of Lamport, and negligently and carelessly reported Lamport’s acts to be satisfactory to him as city manager. Then follows an account of the negligent shooting of plaintiff by Guy Wilson, the patrolman.
Appellant’s theory seems to be that the ordinance establishing the five city departments was
ultra vires,
and that, therefore, the defendants, without any authority whatever, assumed to carry on and conduct the government of the city in their own way and beyond their legal powers. Hence, so it is argued, the doctrine of
respondeat superior
applies. We fail to see any force in this argument. In the first paragraph of the complaint it is alleged that at all the times in that pleading mentioned defendants were and still are “the duly elected, qualified and acting trustees of
*763
said city of Glendale,” and that “each and all of their acts and omissions hereinafter complained of were performed by them under color of said office of Trustees and Board of Trustees in and for said city, and while acting in their official capacity.” If, as the complaint alleges, defendants, at all times, were the duly elected, qualified and acting trustees of the city, and if, as alleged, each of their acts was performed by them in their official capacity, then, at all the times mentioned, defendants were, and were acting as, the agents of the city, and the city marshal was a coservant or subagent, as was also the patrolman, if we assume that he ever was appointed by an authorized agency. For if, as appellant asserts, defendants were without power to adopt the ordinance, then that attempted municipal by-law was a nullity, in which event defendants’ powers as trustees must be measured by, and their official acts referred to, the General Municipal Corporation Act, which provides for the appointment of a city marshal and police officers. By section 852 of that act as amended by Stats. 1919, p. 19, it is provided that the board of trustees of a city of the sixth class “shall appoint . . . the marshal . . . and . . . may also, in their discretion, appoint . . . such other subordinate officers as in their judgment may be deemed necessary. ’ ’ Section 880 provides that “the department of police of said city or town shall be under the direction and control of the marshal.” So that, whether the municipal affairs of the city of Glendale may be deemed to have been administered under the ordinance, or whether, that ordinance being a nullity, the affairs of the city must be deemed to have been conducted under the General Municipal Corporation Act, in either event it appears from the allegations of appellant’s complaint that the defendants were the agents of the municipality, and that the chief of police, the city manager and the patrolman were subordinate agents employed in the service of the common principal—the city. This being the situation, the doctrine of
respondeat superior
is inapplicable. As the agents of the city, defendants are not liable in an action of tort to plaintiff, a stranger, for the negligence of their eoservant or agent.
There are certain general averments of the complaint, mere legal conclusions, respecting the duty that defendants, as trustees of the city, owed to plaintiff as a resident of the municipality. These allegations add nothing to the force of the complaint. Defendants’ duties as trustees are fixed by statute, and may not be expanded by the pleader’s conclusions of law.
The demurrer was properly sustained, and the judgment is afBrmed.
Works, J., and Craig, J., concurred.
A petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on February 20, 1922.
All the Justices concurred, except Sloan, J., and Lennon, J., who were absent; Richards, J., pro tem., was acting.
