92 W. Va. 424 | W. Va. | 1922
The plaintiff by this writ of error seeks reversal of a judgment of the Circuit Court of Kanawha County reversing the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of that county, and dismissing her action.
The suit was brought for the purpose of recovering damages for coal taken from the plaintiff’s premises by the defendant, and converting it to its own uses. It seems that the plaintiff is the owner of a small farm lying east of the city of Charleston in Kanawha county, containing about forty-one acres, a part of which at least was underlaid with a vein of merchantable coal. She had leased this tract of land to a man by the name of Joseph Bleau by a lease in writing dated the first day of March, 1915; for the term of five years. This lease was only for the purpose of farming the land. The defendant, in the years 1916 and 1917 was engaged in constructing a county road near the farm of the plaintiff, and in .the construction of this road it used some road rollers and some engines in connection with rock crushers, and for the purpose of operating these appliances it was necessary to procure a supply of coal. There was a spring upon the land
Tne principal contention of the defendant is that the defendant, being a public corporation, is not liable for the tor-tious acts of its officers and agents, and cannot, therefore, be sued m an action of trespass on the case, this being such an action. This contention may be true if the doctrine exists as broadly as stated. It was held by this. Court in the cases of Watkins v. County Court, 30 W. Va. 657; and Douglass v. County Court, 90 W. Va. 47, that ordinarily a county court is not liable for damages resulting to another from the tor-tious acts of its agents and servants, and the doctrine as applied to these cases is undoubtedly correct. But is it entirely accurate to say that a public corporation cannot be sued at all in tort unless there is a statute specifically giving the right to sue? In this case the county court itself, by a^ solemn contract in writing, contracted to commit the tort complained of, that is, it agreed to enter upon the plaintiff’s land under a contract with one whom it knew had no right to make it, and extract therefrom the plaintiff’s coal, and. convert it to its own use. It cannot be doubted that the county court had a right to buy coal for the purposes for which this coal was appropriated by it. After thus entering into the contract it proceeded to mine the plaintiff’s coal, and after it was so mined to remove it from the land and convert it to its own .use. Not only that, but it paid to the plaintiff’s tenants considerable sums of money for the privilege of entering upon the land, and, of course, these sums of money cannot be treated as anything else than a consideration for the disturbance caused to the tenant’s occupancy. That cannot be considered as in any sense compensation for something which the defendant knew the tenant had no right to sell. We say the defendant knew the tenant had no right to give it authority to mine this coal, for the reason that the very contract that it made with the tenant shows that he was simply a tenant of the plaintiff, and that
The contention that the action of trespass on the case cannot be maintained is without merit. As before stated, under the facts in this case, the defendant is liable for its tort to the same extent as an individual, and the same form of action lies to secure vindication of the plaintiff’s rights. The authorities above cited clearly sustain this doctrine.
We are, therefore, of opinion to reverse the judgment of the Circuit Court of Kanawha County complained of, and to affirm the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas.
Affirmed.