229 S.W. 1050 | Mo. | 1921
This is an action for personal injuries brought in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis by plaintiff against the Board of Education, the City of St. Louis and James Wilson. The Board of Education demurred to the petition. The demurrer was sustained and exceptions saved. Upon a trial before a jury a demurrer to plaintiff's testimony filed by the City of St. Louis was sustained, and the court's action in regard thereto was preserved by plaintiff for review *217 on appeal. The result of the trial was a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $250 against James Wilson. The trial court thereupon entered judgment for plaintiff against him, dismissed the suit as to the City of St. Louis and entered judgment in favor of the Board of Education. Plaintiff appealed to this court.
The alleged liability of the City of St. Louis and its joinder as one of the defendants is the basis of this court's appellate jurisdiction.
The defendant James Wilson owned a large theatre building in the City of St. Louis called the Odeon. This building, No. 1042, is located on the east side of North Grand Avenue. Immediately south, with a driveway or open space between, is located one of the high school buildings of the city, belonging to and under the supervision of the Board of Education. The space between these two buildings was covered with granitoid, and near the high school building there were ten or twelve steps leading from the level of Grand Avenue to the grounds of the high school building. The space between these two buildings, affording an opportunity for passage by pedestrians from Grand Avenue to School Street orvice versa, was used as a thoroughfare by persons in going from one of these streets to the other. The plaintiff having been directed, as she says, by the manager of the Odeon in her efforts to enter the building, was passing over the high school grounds, which were not lighted, when she fell down a flight of steps and received the injuries for which she claims damages. The plaintiff assigns error in the court's sustaining the demurrer of the Board of Education to her petition; in sustaining the demurrer of the City of St. Louis to plaintiff's evidence; and in entering judgment on a grossly inadequate verdict rendered in her favor against James Wilson. These in their order.
I. As to the first assignment, it is not a question as to the sufficiency of the formal allegations of the petition, but do those alleged state a cause of action *218
against the Board of Education? This board is aLiability of quasi-corporation and hears a like relation toSchool the State or its educational system to thatDistrict. sustained by a school district. [Art. XIII, chap. 106, R.S. 1909; Art. XVI, chap. 102, R.S. 1919.] Even more definite in terms and comprehensive in scope than the laws defining the corporate existence of ordinary school districts is that in relation to such a district as is authorized to be created in a city of 500,000 inhabitants or over, or that at bar. [Secs. 11030 et seq., R.S. 1909; Secs. 11456 et seq., R.S. 1919.] The reasons prompting legislative action in the creation of school districts has been judicially defined many times, nowhere perhaps more fully or clearly than in Freel v. School of Crawfordsville,
"They are involuntary corporations, organized, not for the purpose of profit or gain, but solely for the public benefit, and have only such limited powers as were deemed necessary for that purpose. Such corporations are but the agents of the State for the sole purpose of administering the state system of public education. It is the duty of the school trustees of a township, town, or city, to take charge of the educational affairs of their respective localities, and, among other things, to build and keep in repair public school buildings. In performing the duties required of them, they exercise merely a public function and agency for the public good, for which they receive no private or corporate benefit. School corporations, therefore, are covered by the same law in respect to their liability to individuals for the negligence of their officers or agents, as are counties and townships. It is well established that where subdivisions *219 of the State are organized solely for a public purpose by a general law, no action lies against them for an injury received by a person on account of the negligence of the officers of such subdivision, unless a right of action is expressly given by statute. Such subdivisions, then, as counties, townships and school corporations, are instrumentalities of government and exercise authority given by the State and are no more liable for the acts or omissions of their officers than the State."
The question as to the liability of quasi-corporations for the negligence of their directors, officers or employees has, in regard to other than school districts, been frequently considered by this court. In Reardon v. St. Louis County,
The basis for this ruling, briefly stated, is that counties arequasi-corporations created by law for purposes of public policy and are not answerable in damages for a failure to perform the duties enjoined on them unless the right of action is given by statute.
In Swineford v. Franklin County,
In Clark v. Adair County,
In Cunningham v. St. Louis,
In Reed v. Howell County,
In Lamar v. Bolivar Road District, 201 S.W. 890, this court ruled that a special road district, being a quasi-corporation, is not liable for an injury occurring upon a highway. This ruling was but a reiteration of the doctrine which has been announced in this State since the Reardon case in 1865.
In Moxley v. Pike County,
"When, for convenience in the administration of its laws, the State, through the Legislature, calls to its aid those territorial organizations sometimes called, with more or less accuracy, quasi-corporations, such as counties, townships and school districts, the question has frequently arisen whether these agencies share, with the State itself, immunity from common-law liability for the negligence of their officers in the exercise of their territorial duties. The answer, from the courts of this State, has generally been a negative one. From Reardon v. St. Louis County,
The only variance from the uniformity of this ruling in regard to the non-liability of quasi-corporations is found in the case of Hannon v. County of St. Louis,
While the political subdivisions whose rights, powers and liabilities were discussed and determined in the cases cited were not school districts, the latter possess all the characteristics of quasi-corporations of the former, and may, with a reasonable regard for the rules of construction, be thus classified and held to be immune from liability in actions for damages for like reasons. *222
An exhaustive review of the authorities on this subject will be found in 37 L.R.A. 301, in a note appended to the Freel case, supra.
On the ground, therefore, of its legal character alone as aquasi-corporation the Board of Education is not answerable in this connection for the negligence charged.
Independent, however, of the foregoing, another reason exists for the non-liability of the Board of Education in a proceeding of this character. Public education is a governmental function. This is clearly recognized in our organic law, which declares that "a general diffusion of knowledge and intelligence being essential to the preservation of the rights and liberties of the people, the General Assembly shall establish and maintain free public schools for the gratuitous instruction of all persons in this State between the ages of six and twenty years." [Art. XI. sec. 1, Const. Mo.]
Prompted by this provision, the General Assembly has legislated liberally concerning public schools and especially so in the statute creating the Board of Education of the City of St. Louis (Art. XIII. chap. 106, supra,) which is clothed with the supervision, control and management not only of the public schools but of the school property of said city, and to effect the purpose of its creation such powers have been conferred and duties enjoined upon it as the Legislature in its wisdom deemed necessary. In defining the corporate character of the Board of Education this court has said; "The School Board of St. Louis is an instrumentality created by the laws of the State to administer the trust created and assumed by the State for the education of the children of the State." [State ex rel. O'Connell v. Board, 112 Mo. l.c. 218.]
Speaking of school districts generally, we said in the later case of State ex rel. School District v. Gordon,
These conclusions are sufficiently indicative of the nature of school districts to authorize their classification as instrumentalities engaged in the performance of governmental functions and hence subject to the same rules as to nonliability for negligence as other subdivisions of the State charged with the performance of like duties.
In Murtaugh v. St. Louis,
In Ulrich v. St. Louis,
In Cassidy v. St. Joseph,
If the operation of a city hospital, the maintenance of a workhouse or the collection of garbage are properly referable to the governmental functions of a city, no argument is required to establish the fact that the education of youth partakes of the same, although it may be of a higher character, and that the instrumentality, namely, a board of education, through which this function is exercised is consequently immune from actions for damages on account of negligence. Cases from courts of last resort elsewhere give added force to this conclusion. [Hill v. Boston,
Finally, as conclusive of the rule stated in the cases cited, it is appropriate that the conclusions of the learned author of a leading treatise on Municipal Corporations be quoted in this connection:
"When a municipal corporation is charged by charter or statute with the duty of erecting and maintaining public schools for the education of the children of the municipality, the weight of authority is to the effect that in the exercise of the power so conferred it performs a public or governmental duty and not a special corporate or administrative duty, as distinguished from a state or public duty, and it is not impliedly liable for the wrongful acts and negligence of its officers or agents in maintaining and repairing school buildings." [4 Dillon on Munic. Corps. (5 Ed.) sec. 1658.]
Another equally cogent reason why the Board of Education cannot be required to respond to an action of the character of that at bar is the nature of the fund entrusted to its care and distribution. School funds are collected from the public to be held in trust by boards of education for a specific purpose. That purpose is education. An attempt, therefore, to otherwise apply or expend these funds is without legislative sanction and finds no favor with the courts. Cases in which hospitals have been held exempt from actions for damages for negligence on account of their character as charitable *225 institutions may not inappropriately be cited in this connection.
In Nicholas v. Evangelical Hospital,
In Adams v. University Hospital,
In Whittaker v. Hospital,
There may be grounds, not necessary to be discussed here, for exceptions to this rule in its application to hospitals commercially conducted and which might seek shelter under the ample cover of charity in the broadest acceptation of that term. This, however, is aside in the determination of the matter at issue.
If it is against public policy as ruled in the foregoing cases to divert charitable funds, so-called, from other than the purpose for which they have been collected, how much stronger is the case where the funds are the fruit of taxation, belong to the people and are to be used for the beneficent purpose of free education. Their immunity from the payment of damages for negligence need not rely, however, upon the analogous rule applicable to the funds of charitable institutions but finds express approval in Freel v. School of Crawfordsville, supra; Ford v. School District,
In the Weddle case at page 344, the doctrine in regard to the sacredness of public school funds is thus succinctly declared: "There is no power given the board of School Commissioners to raise money for the purpose of paying damages, nor are they supplied with means to pay a judgment against them. All of their funds are appropriated by law to specific purposes and they *227
cannot be diverted by them. The Constitution of the State (Sec. 3, Art. 8) provides that the school fund of the State shall be kept inviolate and appropriated only to the purposes of education. In Perry v. House of Refuge,
While there are cases which have held school districts liable for torts, the great weight of authority is to the contrary. In view of the foregoing we hold that the Board of Education is not liable.
II. The liability of the City of St. Louis under the facts is dependent wholly upon whether the space between the Odeon and the high school building can be classified as a public highway. It is elementary that land may become a public highway byLiability either dedication, condemnation or prescription. It isof City. not contended that the property was either condemned for or formally dedicated to a public use. It is undisputed that the Board of Education owned the land on which the steps were located where the plaintiff was injured. This being true, there could have been no condemnation of the property for a public highway, on the ground that it was already devoted to a public use; and, as we held in St. Louis v. Moore,
If this property could not be subjected to condemnation and was not affected by adverse user, as we are authorized in holding from the Moore case and the statute, supra, what gloss is needed or can be supplied to give strength to the conclusion as to the non-liability of the city? Waiving for the nonce, however, these reasons, which we deem ample, that appellant's contention may be viewed from every point of vantage, what are the facts as tending to show such user as would constitute the space a public highway? There was an entrance to the high school building on the north side of same, access to which was afforded by the space referred to. This was much used by children attending the school and by others as affording a readier and more convenient means of passing to and from Grand Avenue. As disclosed by the testimony, this use, so far as the public was concerned, was purely permissive on the part of the board and was not otherwise claimed by those who enjoyed it. No one testified that the passageway was used as matter of right and hence that it was regarded as a public highway, but simply because such use was not prohibited. Technically considered, such users, instead of being clothed with a right, might not inaptly be termed trespassers. If not so regarded, however, there is no such continuous use shown for a term of years as to cause same to ripen into a prescriptive right to use the passage as a highway. Absent this evidence, there is nothing to sustain the contention as to the city's liability.
III. In plaintiff's appeal from the judgment in her favor against James Wilson, assignments of error based on the alleged improper admission and exclusion of testimony and the giving and refusing of instructions are not matters for ourErrors consideration. Errors thus alleged to have beenAgainst committed were cured by the jury's finding inRespondent. plaintiff's favor. [Craton v. Huntzinger, 187 S.W. 48; Baker v. Mod. Woodmen,
It is only the adverse rulings of the trial court that can form the basis of complaint by an appellant. [Shull v. Railroad, 221 Mo. l.c. 146; Harrison v. Lakenan,
Thus limited to a review of such errors as have been preserved by the appellant, it is futile for the respondent Wilon to urge here and now that there was no evidence on which to base the verdict; he acquiesced in its rendition, has not appealed, and in the presence of any substantial evidence to sustain the same we will not disturb it, even upon the contention of appellant. [Ross v. Presbyterian Church, 272 Mo. l.c. 107; Imp. Co. v. Harv. Mach. Co., 268 Mo. l.c. 369.]
IV. This leaves for consideration, therefore, the question as to the inadequacy of the verdict.
Well considered cases establish the right of an appellant to have a verdict set aside either excessively large or ridiculously small in actions for personal torts, where the resultInadequate indicates passion, prejudice or misconduct on theVerdict. part of the jury. The rulings of this court upon this question have been carefully collated by LAMM, J., in Fischer v. St. Louis, 189 Mo. l.c. 577, and their repetition here would serve no useful purpose. They abound in subtle distinctions or nice refinements and are so dependent upon their particular facts as not to be subject to any general rule governing the conclusions reached. In regard to them this much may be stated generally; that in arriving at a conclusion the presumption is in favor of the good conduct of the jury, and if upon the whole record the case preponderates in favor of the defendant or the testimony is evenly balanced, the courts will refuse to interfere with nominal verdicts although at first view they may appear illogical.
In Pritchard v. Hewitt, 91 Mo. l.c. 550, quoting with approval 1 Graham Waterman on New Trials (2 Ed.) p. 451, this court says that the reason for holding so tenaciously to the damages found by a jury in cases of personal torts is that in this class of cases there *230 is no scale by which the damages may be graduated with certainty. They admit of no other test than the intelligence of the jury, governed by a sense of justice.
To the jury, therefore, is committed the exclusive task of examining the facts and circumstances to enable them to estimate the injury and award compensation therefor in damages. The law conferring this power and exacting the performance of this trust favors the presumption that the jury will be actuated by proper motives; and not until the result of their deliberation is manifested in such a form as to shock the understanding and indicate in no uncertain manner the presence of passion and prejudice will the courts interfere with their findings.
Than the amount of the verdict itself there is no indication here that the jury was influenced in their deliberations except by the facts. We have never held that the inadequacy of damages for personal injuries will of itself furnish the basis for such a presumption of passion and prejudice as will authorize a reversal of the judgment.
The reports are replete with declarations as to the superior opportunity afforded the trial judge over the appellate court by reason of the participation of the former in the moving panorama of the trial to correctly weigh the testimony and rightly determine the truth of the matter at issue. In recognition of this fact appellate courts defer largely to the actions of the trial courts, especially when the interference sought is based solely on the ground of an alleged excessive or inadequate verdict. Panoplied with this superior knowledge, which the letter of the record alone cannot afford, that sound discretion which it must be presumed the trial judge exercised in refusing to disturb the verdict, will not be accounted error. [Devine v. St. Louis,
Furthermore, the appellant is not entitled as a matter of right to have this verdict set aside unless her case *231
is such that if the finding had been for the defendant she would have been entitled to have it set aside. Or, more concretely stated, if the jury has returned a verdict for nominal damages in a case where the plaintiff is entitled to no damages, the verdict will not be set aside by the appellate court at the instance of the plaintiff. [Haven v. Mo. Railroad,
Waiving the lack of definite particularity in alleging that the plaintiff received her injuries on the premises in charge of and under the control of the defendant Wilson, there is no evidence of such control on his part. The permissive use by the public of such premises sometimes perhaps as a means of egress or ingress to the defendant's building, or the fact that his employee directed the course pursued by plaintiff at the time of her injury, does not constitute evidence of such control or use. The trial court, therefore, would have been justified in sustaining a demurrer to the evidence. In this state of the record we will not disturb the verdict at the behest of the plaintiff, and the defendant, not having appealed, has no ground of complaint. [Leahy v. Davis, 121 Mo. l.c. 236; Overholt v. Vieths, 93 Mo. l.c. 426.]
In view of all of which the judgment of the trial court is affirmed. It is so ordered. All concur.