(after stating the facts). The sole issue raised by the appeal is whether or not the city of Little Rock has the power to build a city hospital.
' In Spaulding v. City of Lowell, 23 Pick. (Mass.) 71, Chief Justice Shaw, speaking of municipal corporations, said: “They can exercise no powers but those which are conferred upon them by the act by which they are constituted, .or such as are necessary to the exercise of their corporate powers, the performance of their corporate duties, and the accomplishment of the purposes of their association. This principle is fairly derived from the nature of corporations, and the mode in which they are organized, and in which their affairs must be conducted.”
In Ottawa v. Carey,
On the same point in Dillon on Municipal Corporations, 5th Ed.-vol. 1, par. 237 (89), it is said: “It is a general and undisputed proposition of law that a municipal corporation possesses and can exercise the following powers, and no others: First, those granted in express words; second, those necessarily or fairly implied in or incident to the powers expressly granted; third, Ihose essential to the accomplishment -of the declared objects and purposes of the corporation, not simply convenient, but indispensable. Any fair, reasonable, substantial doubt concerning the existence of power is resolved by the courts against the corporation, and the power is denied.”
The principle laid down above is one of universal application throughout the United States and has been recognized and applied by this court in several cases according to the particular facts of each case.
■ Sec. 7529 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest contains a specific enumeration of powers granted by the Legislature to municipal corporations. It is conceded that there is no express power given by the statute to municipal corporations to construct and maintain city hospitals.
Sec. 7493 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest provides that municipal corporations shall have the power to make and publish ordinances not inconsistent with.the laws of the State for carrying into effect or discharging the powers or duties conferred by the provisions of the act.
Sec. 7494 of the Digest concludes as follows: “And they shall have power to make and publish such by-laws and ordinances, not inconsistent with the laws of this State, as to them shall seem necessary to provide for the safety, preserve the health, promote the prosperity, improve the morals, order, comfort and convenience of such corporations and the inhabitants thereof.”
This clause, or a similar one, is contained in the statutes of many of the States and is usually called the “general welfare clause.” Reliance is placed upon this clause to sustain the decree of the chancery court.
Counsel for the plaintiff insist that this contention is against the authority of Tuck v. Town of Waldron,
This is an application of the rule that where the statute specifically enumerates various powers which the common council may render effectual by means of ordinances, this enumeration is an implied exclusion of the right to act otherwise than as specifically directed. In other words, the statute having prescribed what powers the common council might exercise with regard to intoxicating liquors, additional powers could not be implied from the “general welfare clause.”
■ If municipal councils could exercise no authority except with regard to the particular things enumerated in sec. 7529 of Crawford & Moses’ Digest, it is manifest that no useful purpose could be served by enacting the general welfare clause. The purpose of the general welfare clause was to extend the powers of the city in addition to those specifically enumerated to other things which are necessary to accomplish the purposes of municipal government as explained above in the quotations from Dillon and the decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States and of the Supreme Court of Massachusetts.
As we have already said, the principles announced by those authorities have been expressly upheld and applied by this court according to the peculiar facts of each case.
In the Town of Jacksonport v. Watson,
Again, in Russell v. State,
Again, in Newport v. Railway Company,
In Torrent v. Common Council of Muskegon,
“ We have had occasion several times to refer to the historical character of municipal institutions, and to the duty of courts to read all laws and charters in that light. ’ ’
In discussing the subject in Clark v. Inhabitants of Brookfield,
•In Spaulding v. Lowell, 23 Pick. (Mass.) 71, and Wartman v. Philadelphia,
Without approving these last-two decisions, it is undoubtedly true that a municipal corporation may erect a city or town hall and appropriate its money therefor under the general welfare clause of sec. 7494 of the Digest quoted above.
We are also of the opinion that the power to erect a city hospital is a necessary incident of municipal life. In a growing city, a city hospital may be necessary for the preservation of the public health and the care of sick paupers. We can see no difference in principle between the right of a city to erect and maintain a hospital and to erect and use city halls, jails, and the like. Most cities of any considerable magnitude have city hospitals subject to the regulation of its own local authorities. It is true there is express statutory authority to erect them in many of the States, but we are also of the opinion that such authority is essential to carry out the object' and purpose of organizing municipal corporations.
A municipality is a governmental agency, and in cities the erection of hospitals to preserve the public health and to care for indigent people within its borders is highly essential and may be absolutely necessary.
It results from the views we have expressed that the city had the power under the general welfare clause to erect a city hospital, and the decreee of the chancery court must therefore be affirmed.
