This is an action against the individual defendants to recover damages for personal injury resulting in the death of the plaintiff's intestate. Shepherd Jones, Luther Brown, and Richard Crowder are the school committeemen of Peachland high school, to and from which pupils are carried in a motor school bus. The committeemen elected Wilson Jones, a son of Shepherd Jones, as the driver of the bus over the protest of many of the patrons of the school who regarded him as reckless and unfit for the position. It is alleged "that on or about 10 March, 1932, at 8:00 a.m. while the said Wilson Jones was driving said school bus, transporting children forty in number on said bus on the way to Peachland high school on a sand-clay road known as Mineral Springs, about 3 miles from Peachland, and while operating said bus at a high and reckless rate of speed, to wit, about fifty miles per hour or more, he lost control of said bus, causing it to plunge from the road into a wide ditch full of water in Brown Creek swamps, turning the bus over in said ditch in water six feet deep, partially submerging the bus in the water and throwing Eddie Pearl Betts into water, injuring her painfully and to such extent that she died in a few hours after she was rescued from the water."
Among the several alleged acts of negligence is this: that the conduct of the committeemen in the selection of Wilson Jones as driver of the bus was wilful, wrongful, malicious, and corrupt. *Page 591
All the defendants demurred — the school committee on the ground that in employing a driver for the bus they exercised a governmental function and performed a public duty as an agency of the State for which they are not liable in damages; and the defendant Wilson Jones, on the ground that in driving the bus he was acting for the committee and was likewise in the exercise of a governmental function for which he cannot be held liable.
The trial court overruled the demurrer and the defendants appealed.
The plaintiff alleges that the school committeemen, disregarding known facts and the repeated protests of many patrons of Peachland high school, in employing Wilson Jones "secured a driver known to them to be unfit, unsafe, nondependable, and reckless," and that they acted wilfully, wrongfully, maliciously, and corruptly. By demurring the defendants admit these allegations. Andrews v. R. R.,
The law as generally administered recognizes a distinction between public duties which are ministerial in character and those which require the exercise of judgment or discretion. This Court has held that as a rule a private action for tort cannot be maintained against an agency of the State, but for the negligent breach of a public duty which is administrative and imposed entirely for the public benefit an officer may be held individually liable to a person who has been injured by his negligence if the statute creating the office or imposing the duty makes provision for such liability. It has also been held that where the powers conferred upon a public officer involve the exercise of judgment or discretion he is not liable to a private person for neglect to exercise such powers or for the consequences of the lawful exercise of them if he acts within the scope of his authority and without malice or corruption.Hipp v. Farrell,
We may assume that a school committee in the discharge of the duties imposed by law generally acts as an agency of the State; but this action is not prosecuted against the committee in its representative capacity as such agency, and in this respect it differs materially from Benton v. Board ofEducation,
Affirmed.