198 A.D. 144 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1921
This action was brought against the defendant town to recover for damage caused to the plaintiff’s crops because of the overflowing of a ditch constructed by the defendant and which, it is alleged, was permitted to fill up and overflow through the negligence of the defendant. The property in question is situated in the valley of Conewango creek. The soil consists of muck and the ground is level and swampy. The creek had been dredged and straightened, and ditches had been dug through the flat land to the creek to drain the land. That had resulted in making a large portion of the land useful. However, at certain times of the year the creek still overflowed, and at times water covered the plaintiff’s premises. North of the plaintiff’s premises and extending in an easterly and westerly direction there is a highway known as the Kent Switch road. North of the highway is a farm known as the Peck farm. Peck dug a ditch through his farm in a southerly direction to the highway and then dug a ditch
The plaintiff alleges that the town was negligent in permitting the ditch to fill up. It also alleges that the plaintiff caused to be served and filed a verified statement of the cause of action in due time and in due form of law. The answer denies that, and there is no proof in the case that a claim was filed in accordance with section 74 of the Highway Law (as amd. by Laws of 1913, chap. 389; since amd. by Laws of 1918, chap. 161). No claim was made upon the trial that the ditch was not properly constructed or that it was inadequate. The sole question submitted to the jury was whether or not the defendant was negligent in permitting the ditch to fill up and in failing to keep it open.
If the plaintiff had a cause of action under the Highway Law, he should have filed his notice of claim as required by section 74 of that law. The failure to file it constitutes a complete defense if the cause of action lies thereunder. (Lutes v. Town of Warwick, 149 App. Div. 809; Soper v. Town of Greenwich, 48 id. 354.)
The trial justice submitted the case to the jury on the theory that the town, having dug the ditch, owed to the plaintiff the duty to use reasonable care and caution in maintaining it. The theory of the plaintiff’s attorney and of the court was that this is a common-law action. The defendant duly excepted to that portion of the charge and the question
In order to sustain this judgment it is necessary to hold that the town, under the circumstances, may be held liable for common-law negligence, as the verdict cannot be sustained under the Highway Law because of the failure to serve the required notice and that question was not submitted to the jury. It is urged that this judgment should be affirmed on the theory that the town, being the owner of the land upon which the ditch is located, and having assumed to dig it upon its land and to gather the waters into the ditch, owed a duty to use reasonable care in maintaining it. There would be no question but what such principle would apply as against an individual or a private corporation, and no doubt the same rule would apply against a village or city that had constructed a ditch under the same circumstances by virtue of statutory authority. It seems to be well settled, however, that at common law a town was not liable for the negligent acts of its officers and agents except in those cases where the officers or agents acted or failed to act imder the authority of some statute.
Towns exist only for the purposes of general political government of the State, and in performing the duties which they perform they are performing duties of the State by virtue of authority delegated by the State; and in carrying out the governmental duties assigned to them they represent the sovereign power of the State, which sovereign power is not liable at common law for the negligence of its officers and agents. While the State may impose duties upon the town and compel their performance, the town is not considered in the same light as a person or private corporation which undertakes to perform certain acts or duties for a consideration and is thereby made liable to persons who are injured as a result thereof. The powers and duties of a town are of a
It has been suggested that under the decision in the case of Bowman v. Town of Chenango (227 N. Y. 459) a liability might be held to exist in this case under the Highway Law. However, that question is of no importance here as the notice required by that statute was not served. Neither is the question here as to whether or not the town officials, as individuals, are liable for their negligence, as they are not parties to the action as was the town superintendent of highways in the case of Short v. Town of Orange (175 App. Div. 260) where it was held that where sparks escaped from a tractor owned by the town and set fire to the plaintiff’s barn, the tractor being owned by the town and operated by the town superintendent, the town was not liable although the town superintendent might be personally liable. In that case Mr. Justice Cochrane said: “ That towns are not liable for the negligent acts of their officers in the absence of statutory provisions making them so liable is familiar law. They are involuntary subdivisions of the State, constituted for the purpose of the more convenient exercise of governmental functions by the State for the benefit of all its citizens. The relation of respondeat superior does not exist between towns and its officers.”
The case of Litchfield v. Bond (186 N. Y. 66, from p. 80 to the end of p. 83) makes very clear the grounds upon which political subdivisions are exempt from common-law
I advise that the judgment and order be reversed, with costs, and the complaint dismissed, with costs.
All concur.
Judgment and order reversed, with costs, and the complaint dismissed, with costs.