64 Mo. App. 273 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1896
This is an action for damages, the plaintiff charging defendant with willfully, wantonly, unlawfully, and maliciously digging and constructing a ditch upon the side of the public road along the eastern boundary of eighty acres of land of the plaintiff, so as to interfere with the access of plaintiff to his farm.
The answer is a general denial, and, as a special
The reply is a general deniah
The evidence discloses about this -state of facts: Plaintiff owns and resides on an eighty acre farm five miles south of Tipton; his dwelling is near the southeast corner of the land, and along the east side of the farm is a public road. In front of the dwelling the fence was set back about fourteen feet, so as to secure to plaintiff an easy approach to the front of his premises. The land on which the road was located sloped towards the north. At the southeast corner of the plaintiff’s land a ditch came in from the west and discharged the water onto the road, and at this point there had been for a long time a culvert constructed across the road so as to lead the accumulated water to the east side of the road, whence it had flowed north along the east side of the road, to some point north of plaintiff’s land. This had washed out the east part of the road to the depth of eight feet or more and was continuing to cut into the roadway. At the time in controversy, however,
The case went to the jury on an instruction by the court, telling them that if the defendant was, at the time he did the work, acting as road overseer, then they should find a verdict in his favor, which they did and the plaintiff has appealed.
In our opinion the plaintiff made no case against the defendant. The court was asked to give a peremptory instruction for the defendant; and while this ■ was denied, yet the instruction given was to that effect, since unquestionably the defendant was in the performance of his duties as road overseer, when he repaired the road on account of which plaintiff complains.
The defendant, as road overseer, sought to im
These road overseers are statutory officers, clothed with certain discretionary powers. It is made their duty to exercise proper diligence in keeping the roads in good repair (Revised Statutes, 1889, section 7807), and as to how this shall be done is necessarily left to their judgment. They come, then, within the scope of the rule, well established, that public officers, vested with discretionary powers in the performance of certain duties, can not be held individually liable for their' acts, unless, willfully, maliciously and oppressively exercised. Reed v. Conway, 20 Mo. 22; Edwards v. Ferguson, 73 Mo. 686. They can not be individually held for mere mistakes in judgment. They are not liable so long as they honestly and in good faith perform the work intrusted to them. The injury must be maliciously and willfully committed; and by willful, says Judge Ryland in Reed v. Conway, supra, is meant “contrary to a man’s own conviction.”
It may be, now, that this defendant did not pursue the best mode of improving the road at the point in question; it may have been better to have carried the water across the road by a culvert, rather than to lead it down in front of plaintiff’s premises, though numerous witnesses seem to have approved his conduct as.
We discover no evidence in this record that can justify the .charge that defendant acted in a malicious and willfully oppressive manner in repairing the road in question. We think there is no merit in the plaintiff’s case, 'and the judgment, which was for the defendant, will be affirmed.