119 Minn. 396 | Minn. | 1912
The city of Canby, Minnesota, maintains a municipal gas plant to light its streets, and also to sell gas to private consumers. Plaintiff was occupying a building fronting on the main street in the city; in
The appellant claims that there was proof of a leak in that part of the service pipe over which defendant had no control, therefore a verdict in plaintiff’s favor could rest on no better foundation than a mere guess as to whether the gas in the cellar came from the leak near the goose neck or came from that part of the service pipe under plaintiff’s exclusive control. From an examination of the testimony we are of opinion that, had the jury found that the gas escaped from that part of the equipment over which defendant exercised sole dominion, it could not have been said that the finding was without support.
The main contention of appellant is: Assuming that the gas came from the leak at the connection with the street lamp, and that the leak was due to defendant’s negligence, the city is nevertheless not liable to the individual injured in respect to the operation of its lighting system, because the negligence occurred in the performance of a governmental function, namely, lighting its streets for the public
In this state a city, in maintaining a board of health, a police or a fire department, discharges a governmental function pure and simple, and we believe as to these or similar functions, it has no power to escape the burden imposed by granting a franchise to any
In this day, when the doctrine of public ownership by municipalities of public utilities is rapidly gaining ground, so that nearly all public utilities, so-called, which have heretofore been supplied by those who have been granted franchises therefor are now overtaken by the municipalities themselves, it occurs to us that private rights-may be jeopardized unless it be held that in overtaking such utilities-the municipality must exercise the same care towards the person and property of the individual that was required of one having obtained a franchise to maintain the same utility. The conclusion herein arrived at is supported by able opinions in Dickinson v. City, 188 Mass. 595, 75 N. E. 68; Esberg v. City, 34 Ore. 282, 55 Pac. 961, 43 L.R.A. 435. It may also be stated that in Hodgins v. Bay City, 156 Mich. 687, 121 N. W. 274, the language relied on to support appellant’s position in this case, was obiter.
Order affirmed.