CITY OF ATLANTA et al. v. MITCHAM
S14G0619
Supreme Court of Georgia
FEBRUARY 16, 2015
769 SE2d 320
THOMPSON, Chief Justice
Attаway Burton, Deputy Attorney General, Paula K. Smith, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Ryan A. Kolb, Assistant Attorney General, for appellee.
We granted a petition for writ of certiorari in this case to determine whether the Court of Appeals used the proper analysis when it determined that the provision of medical care by the City of Atlanta to inmates in its custody was a ministerial function for which the City of Atlanta‘s sovereign immunity had been waived. See City of Atlanta v. Mitcham, 325 Ga. App. 481 (751 SE2d 598) (2013). Because we find that the care of inmates in the custody of a municipal corporation is a governmental function for which sovereign immunity has not been waived, we reverse.
Appellee Barto Mitcham filed a negligence action against appellants, the City of Atlanta (the “City“) and George Turner, in his official capacity as the Chief of Police for the City of Atlanta Police Department, alleging that Mitcham was seriously injured as a result of appellants’ failure to provide him necessary medical treatment while in their custody. Mitcham specifically alleged that after he was arrested by the City of Atlanta Police Department, he became ill because of low blood sugar associated with diabetes. He was taken to the hospital, and upon his discharge and release back into the custody of the City, Atlanta Police Department officers were informed of his diabetic condition and the need to monitor and regulate his insulin levels. He alleged they failed to do so, causing him further illness and serious and permanent injuries.
Appellants answered the complaint and filed a joint motion to dismiss on sovereign immunity grounds. See
1. A motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim should not be granted unless the allegations of the complaint demonstrate to a certainty that the plaintiff would be entitled to no relief under any state of facts which could be proved in suppоrt thereof. Anderson v. Flake, 267 Ga. 498, 501 (2) (480 SE2d 10) (1997). Appellants moved to dismiss Mitcham‘s claims on the ground of sovereign immunity. Under Georgia law, municipal corporations are protected by sovereign immunity pursuant not to Article I of the Constitution but rather
2. Governmental functions traditionally have been defined as those of a purely public nature, intended for the benefit of the public at large, without pretense of private gain to the municipality. See Cornelisen v. City of Atlanta, 146 Ga. 416, 419 (91 SE 415) (1917). The exemption from liability for governmental functions “is placed upon the ground that the service is performed by the corporation in obedience to an act of the legislature, is one in which the corporation has no particular interest and from which it derives no special benefit in its corporate capacity.” Wright, supra, 78 Ga. at 243, quoting Dillon (2 Municipal Corp. § 976, 3rd ed.). Ministerial functions, in comparison, are recognized as those involving the “exercise of some private franchise, or some franchise conferred upon [the municipal corporation] by law which it may exercise for the private profit or convenience of the corporation or for the convenience оf its citizens alone, in which the general public has no interest.”3 Love v. City of Atlanta, 95 Ga. 129, 131 (22 SE 29) (1894).
A municipal corporation has a dual character, the one public and the other private, and exercises correspondingly two-fold functions, the one governmental and legislative, and the other private and ministerial. In its public character, it acts as an agency of the State to enable it the bеtter to govern that portion of its people residing within the municipality, and to this end there is granted to or imposed upon it, by the charter of its creation, powers and duties to be exercised and performed exclusively for public governmental purposes. These powers are legislative and discretionary, and the municipality is exempt from liability for an injury resulting from the failure to exercise them or from their imрroper or negligent exercise. In its corporate and private character there are granted unto it privileges and powers to be exercised for its own private advantage, which are for public purposes in no other sense than that the public derives a common benefit from the proper discharge of the duties imposed or assumed in consideration of the privileges and powers conferred. This latter class of powers and duties are not discretionary, but ministerial and absolute; and, for an injury resulting from negligence in their exercise or performance, the municipal-
ity is liable in a civil action for damages, in the same manner as an individual or private corporation.
Mayor and Council of Dalton v. Wilson, 118 Ga. 100, 102 (44 SE 830) (1903), quoting Jones v. Williamsburg, 97 Va. 722, 723-724 (34 SE 883) (Va. 1900).
This Court on occasion has acknowledged the difficulty in determining to which of the two classes a function belongs, the proper classification depending in each case on an interpretation of the powers and duties delegated to the corporation and the character of the function being performed. See Mayor and Council of Dalton, supra, 118 Ga. at 102-103; Love, supra, 95 Ga. at 131. Our courts, however, have had no difficulty concluding that the operation of a jail and the care and treatment of individuals in police custody are purely governmental functions related tо the governmental duty to ensure public safety and maintain order for the benefit of all citizens. See Hurley v. City of Atlanta, 208 Ga. 457, 457-459 (67 SE2d 571) (1951) (dismissing writ of certiorari as improvidently granted while approving Court of Appeals’ ruling that “keep and maintenance of the convict . . . was a governmental function, for the negligent performance of which the city was not liable to him in damages“); Gray v. Mayor and City of Griffin, 111 Ga. 361, 363 (36 SE 792) (1900) (when city “maintains a prison wherein to confine offenders . . . for safekеeping until they can be tried, it is exercising” a governmental power); Nisbet v. City of Atlanta, 97 Ga. 650 (25 SE 173) (1895) (municipality not liable for death of convict while doing work in police custody and caused by city foreman‘s failure to provide medical treatment because at the time the municipal corporation was “exercising governmental powers and discharging governmental duties“); Thomas v. Williams, 105 Ga. App. 321, 325 (2), (3) (124 SE2d 409) (1962) (municipality not liable for negligent acts of city officer in care of prisoner in city custody). See also
The Court of Appeals acknowledged the constitutional and statutory duty of state and local governments to provide medical treatment to inmates in their custody but found the mandatory nature of this duty, i.e., the absence of any discretion in whether the duty should be performed, supported its conclusion that the provision of medical treatment to inmates by a municipal corporation is a “ministerial act.”7 See City of Atlanta v. Mitcham, supra, 325 Ga. App. at 484. This analysis and its reference tо a municipal corporation‘s “ministerial acts” rather than its “ministerial functions” reflects a confusion regarding the separate doctrines of sovereign and official immunity and the substantive differences between the ministerial functions performed by a government body and the ministerial acts of an individual.
As stated, a municipal corporation is immune from liability for acts taken in the performance of its governmental functions but it may be held liable for the negligent performance of its ministerial functions. The determination of whether a function is governmental
The analysis of the Court of Appeals is further flawed in its application of Cantrell v. Thurman, supra, to this case. Cantrell involved the constitutional waiver of a county‘s sovereign immunity under
3. Because there has been no waiver of the City‘s sovereign immunity in this case, Mitcham is precluded from pursuing his negligence claims against both the City and Turner in his official capacity. See Cameron v. Lang, 274 Ga. 122, 126-127 (3) (549 SE2d 341) (2001); Campbell v. Goode, 304 Ga. App. 47, 50 (695 SE2d 44) (2010) (claim against city police officer in his official capacity is, in reality, a suit against the city and subject to a claim of sоvereign immunity). Accordingly, the decision of the Court of Appeals affirming the trial court‘s denial of appellants’ motion to dismiss is reversed.
Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur.
DECIDED FEBRUARY 16, 2015.
Cathy Hampton, Laura S. Burton, for appellants.
Charles H. McAleer, for appellee.
Dubberly & McGovern, Joseph D. McGovern, Brown, Readdick, Bumgartner, Carter, Strickland & Watkins, Richard K. Strickland, Paul M. Scott, amici curiae.
