95 N.Y. 83 | NY | 1884
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We may admit, without criticism or limitation, most of the appellant's propositions, reserving comment upon them, if need be, for some other occasion, since we shall thus approach more promptly what seems to be the determining question on this appeal. That municipal corporations, accepting chartered powers from the State, and so by their own consent assuming duties not previously imposed, become liable in consideration of the grant for the due exercise of the powers and the proper performance of the duties thus conferred and imposed (Conrad v. Village ofIthaca,
Two powers conferred upon the common council by the charter are invoked. It authorizes them "to establish, publish, modify, ordain, amend or repeal ordinances, rules, regulations, and by-laws" for a large number of purposes, among which is "to raze or demolish any buildings or erections which by reason of fire, or any other cause, may become dangerous to human life or health, or may tend to extend a conflagration." This power is without doubt one of local legislation, to be exercised by the establishment of general rules and regulations under which the desired purposes could be accomplished. Such a power is in its essential elements necessarily discretionary; when it shall be exercised, in what manner exerted, by what sanctions enforced, must inevitably rest in the sound judgment of the legislative board. It can no more found a civil action that the common council has not legislated, than that, having done so, its ordinance proved ineffective to prevent or redress some private injury. In Griffin v. Mayor, etc., (
Even in the cases where the subject of action is wholly within the corporate as distinguished from private control, the duty of the city authorities is not always absolute and imperative, but is often discretionary. Power may be given to build sewers. Whether they shall be constructed, in what places and to what extent, is discretionary with the local legislature; while if the work is begun, the duty of proper care, and afterward of necessary repair, becomes an absolute duty. (Wilson v. Mayor,etc., 1 Den. 595; Mills v. City of Brooklyn,
But the question here respects corporate action as affecting private property. We have already observed that the charter abstains from conferring power to invade it, and permits only that indirect action which operates upon the owner through the influence of a penalty. Conceding then that the common council might have passed a resolution directing dangerous walls on private property to be taken down by the owner, or even commanding this specific owner to take down these identical walls, it is evident that the corporate negligence, if any, consisted but of two things, viz.: first, in not discovering that the walls were dangerous; and second, in not ordering the owner by resolution to take them down. A general resolution respecting all dangerous walls, and operating upon a class of cases would come within the scope of that local legislation which we have already described as necessarily and inevitably within the corporate discretion and upon an omission of which no corporate negligence can be predicated. But a specific resolution aimed at the very case before us might have been within the power of the common council. *91
Assuming that it was, without so deciding, did a duty result so absolute, certain, and imperative, as to found a right of action upon the omission? We must consider the nature and scope of the duty, and in so doing must not be misled by the test which makes permissive words absolute and a command. That test is applicable only to solve a doubt, and determine between a ministerial and judicial duty when such duty may possibly belong to either class, but will not serve to make a duty which is inherently and inevitably discretionary, nevertheless ministerial because the public have an interest in its exercise or the rights of individuals may be affected by it. (Kelley v. City ofMilwaukee,
We see at the outset that the power is not absolute but conditional. The walls must be in fact unsafe. The common council cannot act unless they are, and if it orders them to be taken down, must prove the want of safety in order to enforce its resolution. Before these walls fell the question of their safety was an open one. If the common council had gone in a body and examined them and brought experts to their aid, it is not certain or even probable, that they would have judged them unsafe. We have read the evidence carefully, and it has left the conviction that any prudent and skillful man might have examined the walls in question and without negligence adjudged them not dangerous. The adjoining owner showed no fear of them. Ritchie, who built them, indicated none. Hoffman, who was a builder and appraised the damages, did not think there was any immediate danger. Hayes thought it was all right. Connelly had observed no movement or swaying of the wall. Mason, another builder, could not be made to say it was unsafe. These were all plaintiff's witnesses, and while others testified to some swaying or movement of the walls, the whole evidence shows that a prudent man after examination might have deemed the wall not *92 unsafe. That the members of the common council knew of the fire and had seen the ruins is a reasonable supposition. That they passed no resolution ordering the removal of the wall may indicate an error of judgment, but is far from proving a negligent omission. The adjoining owner had no absolute right to a contrary judgment on their part. The general public were not interested in the result. Whether the resolution should be passed and enforced by consequent penalties lay in the discretion of the board and for an error of judgment the corporation is not liable.
There was no such notice of the dangerous character of this wall as to make an omission to act, negligence. Nobody asserted danger to the board or its officers. Nothing in the condition of the wall so warned of its unsafety as to charge the common council with knowledge of the fact. Assuming that they had all the notice which would have resulted from a personal examination, it was no more than that, and was not notice of unsafety or danger but at most only of a possibility or a doubt. We have no right to assume that they had notice enough to make it their duty to examine, and were negligent for not making an investigation which was the final position of the appellant on the argument. They were not bound to consult experts. If they had done so the experts would probably have differed, as usual. No proof shows that every member of the board did not see this wall after the fire, and form a judgment that it was not so unsafe as to warrant corporate action against the owner. That they did not act does not prove negligence in a case where not acting is consistent both with knowledge and ordinary prudence. If there was error, therefore, it was a mistake of judgment. They had no right to act upon a doubt, or a fear, or a bare possibility, when the public were not imperilled, and only private rights were to be protected. Those rights were already shielded by the law. The adjoining owner could have pulled down the wall if he could have shown it to have been a nuisance. He had and still has his action for the resultant injury if it flowed from a culpable negligence. But neither he nor the plaintiff had an absolute right to the *93 interference of the common council of the city. A different rule would almost make every municipal corporation the responsible guarantor to the individual citizen of the absolute safety of every wall, building and structure standing within the corporate limits.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur, except RUGER, Ch. J., not sitting.
Judgment affirmed.