142 P. 993 | Okla. | 1914
It is the duty of a municipal corporation to abate public nuisances, and it is well settled that a municipal corporation has, at common law, the power to cause the abatement of such nuisances, and if it cannot otherwise be abated, to destroy the thing which constitutes the nuisance. This authority has been given to municipal corporations from the earliest days of the common law down to the present time. Beach on Public Corporations, sec. 1022; Baumgartner v. Hasty,
The question as to whether the frame structure was in fact a nuisance was submitted to the jury, not upon the theory that the finding of the city council was a final adjudication of the fact that the building was a nuisance, but upon the broad question as to whether the building was in fact a nuisance. The testimony shows that the frame building had been in bad condition for more than two years prior to the time it was removed; that it had caught fire several times just prior to the date of its removal; that the building was on one of the principal business streets, and was leaning about eighteen inches over the sidewalk; that the glass windows were out, and the doors were standing open; the front door twisted in such a manner that it could not be shut and the back door was off its hinges; that the floor was uneven and that the boards in the upper part of the building were decaying and in bad shape; and that the side wall against the adjoining building had decayed from dampness. These facts were testified to by several witnesses and were not denied, and the jury found, we think correctly, that the building was in fact a nuisance, and the city was justified in summarily removing the same.
The next contention is that the introduction of the resolution in evidence was prejudicial to the plaintiff, in that said resolution was void. Assuming, but not deciding, that the resolution was void, as contended by the plaintiff, the act of the commissioner in removing the building while in the exercise of his governmental functions under a void resolution would not render the city liable for his acts under such unconstitutional or void resolution. It is said in McQuillin, Municipal Corporations (4th Ed.) sec. 2640:
"No liability is created against a municipal corporation by acts of its officers done under an unconstitutional or void ordinance enacted in the exercise of governmental powers. * * *"
Worley v. Town of Columbia, 88 Mo. 106; Trammell v. Town ofRussellville,
Independent of the questions hereinbefore decided, the street commissioner, in abating and removing the frame building which constituted the nuisance, was not acting as the agent or representative of the municipality in its corporate capacity, but was acting in the interest of the public generally and for public purposes in the enforcement of the police regulations. The abatement and removal of the frame building in the instant case by such street commissioner was an act which was essentially governmental in its character (McQuillin, Municipal Corporations [4th Ed.] sec. 2641), and as no liability is expressly declared by statute for such an act, the municipality would be immune from liability while its officers were exercising their governmental functions in the abatement of such nuisance. It was said in City of Lawton v. Harkins,
"The police regulations of a city are not made and enforced in the interest of the city in its corporate capacity, but in the interest of the public. A city is not liable, therefore, for the acts of its officers in attempting to enforce such regulations, and, further, because police officers can in no sense be regarded as servants or agents of the city. Their duties are of a public nature. Their appointment is devolved upon cities and towns by the Legislature as a convenient mode of exercising a function of government, but this does not render the cities and towns liable for their assaults, trespasses, or negligent acts."
A distinction is made between the liability of a municipal corporation for the acts of its officers in the exercise of powers which it possesses for public purposes and which it holds as agent of the state and those powers which embrace private or corporate duties and are exercised for the advantage of the municipality and its inhabitants. When the acts of its officers come within the powers which it has as agent of the state, it is exempt from *709
liability for its own acts and the acts of its officers; if the acts of the officer or agent of the city are for the special benefit of the corporation in its private or corporate interest, such officer is deemed the agent or servant of the city, but where the act is not in relation to a private or corporate interest of the municipality, but for the benefit of the public at large, such acts by the agents and servants are deemed to be acts by public or state officers, and for the public benefit. Flannagan v. City of Bloomington,
It is next contended that the court improperly instructed the jury; but upon an examination of the record, we find that the court gave eleven instructions to the jury, and as plaintiff excepted generally to such instructions and some of those given were undoubtedly correct, the exception saved is not sufficient to present to this court the error complained of. Glaser v.Glaser,
The cause should therefore be affirmed.
By the Court: It is so ordered. *710