This is an appeal from the granting of defendant’s motion notwithstanding the verdict following a $5,000 jury award of damages to plaintiff. The cause of action arose out of an accident between a municipal street sweeper operated by a city employee and plaintiff’s automobile. The accident occurred on September 26,1977, in the City of St. Louis. The trial court granted defendant’s motion based upon the city’s tort immunity.
The facts are not in dispute. On September 26, the plaintiff’s automobile and a city street sweeper collided. 1 There was sufficient evidence from which a jury could have found that the driver of the sweeper was negligent. Further, it was established that at the time of the accident the sweeper’s brushes were raised and it was not actively engaged in cleaning the streets. However, the driver was within the district to which he had been assigned and was returning the vehicle to the city garage at the end of his shift.
In plaintiff’s two points on appeal it is charged that the trial court erred in holding the city immune under the guise of the doctrine of sovereign immunity.
Before we address the plaintiff’s contentions the defendant city argues that regardless of the propriety of the trial court’s application of the doctrine of sovereign immunity, the lower court’s judgment should be sustained because plaintiff did
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not plead, in her first amended petition, that the city was acting in a proprietary capacity. It is fundamental to the doctrine of sovereign immunity that while municipalities are not liable for injuries which occur in the negligent performance of a governmental function they are liable for injuries which occur in the negligent performance of a proprietary function.
Hiltner v. Kansas City,
The gist of both of plaintiff’s points on appeal is that at the time of the accident, the street sweeper was engaged in fulfilling a proprietary duty. Plaintiff contends for that reason the trial court erred in applying the doctrine of sovereign immunity. We agree.
The history of sovereign immunity in this state has been one of “... chipping and whittling away at the doctrine ... as applied to municipalities. Through use of the ‘governmental-proprietary dichotomy,’ liability or non-liability of a municipality for its torts has come to depend upon the character of the act performed, not the nature of the tort.”
Jones v. State Highway Comm.,
This distinction between governmental and proprietary duties has been oft stated: A governmental duty is one which is performed for the common good of all. A duty will be deemed proprietary if it is performed for the special benefit or profit of the municipality as a corporate entity.
Krueger v. Board of Education,
This simple yet nebulous distinction has resulted in a “maze of inconsistency” in suits against cities, producing “uneven and unequal results which defy understanding.”
Jones v. State Highway Comm.,
Prior to
Myers v. City of Palmyra,
We believe it is time to recognize that street sweeping is primarily an act conducted by municipalities to maintain our thoroughfares open for the unrestricted flow of traffic. As the court in Myers found the purpose of snow removal was primarily to maintain unobstructed traffic, we too hold that the primary purpose of street cleaning is to maintain an unhampered flow of traffic on streets free of rubbish and automobiles disabled by such refuse. In addition, good sense dictates that in this age of bumper to bumper traffic the clearing of debris from street surfaces is more naturally related to and connected with maintaining passable thoroughfares than with the promotion of public health and the prevention of disease. For example, the removal of glass, nails, plastic and metal objects and other materials which can obstruct traffic or damage automobile tires does not promote the public health. The municipalities of yesteryear were charged with maintaining streets littered with large quantities of horse excrement, discarded produce and other organic matter. Obviously, the removal of such substances served to promote the public health by reducing possible sources of disease and illness. However, modern municipalities are not confronted with the noxious problem described above. The organic refuse of old has given way to new forms of litter. Today, street sweeping simply improves the condition of our street surfaces and thereby encourages the safe and orderly flow of traffic. Any benefit bestowed upon the public health as a result of sweeping road surfaces is merely incidental to its primary function of maintaining the streets for public travel. Further, we are convinced that it would be unjust to allow a municipality to escape responsibility for the negligent performance of this substantially proprietary duty simply because public health benefits incidentally from its performance. In this case the veil of governmental immunity should not be raised under the pretext of protecting the public from a “health hazard” or the municipality’s invocation of police power.
The above rule is consistent not only with
Myers
and common sense but also with well reasoned opinions from other jurisdictions. See
City of Denver v. Davis,
We find plaintiff established at the time of the accident that the defendant was performing a proprietary function and the trial court erred in allowing the defendant to invoke the defense of sovereign immunity-
*816 Reversed and remanded with instructions to reinstate the jury verdict.
Notes
. The operator of the street sweeper was originally a party defendant but was dismissed prior to trial and did not testify for either side,
