50 Neb. 535 | Neb. | 1897
Joseph H. Taylor brought this suit in the district court of Douglas county against said county, the individuals composing its board of commissioners, and the city of Omaha, to recover damages which he alleged his real estate had sustained by reason of the grading of a street or highway in front thereof. At the close of the evidence the district court directed a verdict returned in favor of the gentlemen composing the board of commissioners and the city of Omaha, which was done and a judgment entered dismissing them out of the action. The case proceeded to trial against Douglas county and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of Taylor, and the county brings the same here for review on error.
(a.) The first contention is that since Taylor’s land and the south half of the street or highway north thereof were in the limits of the city of Omaha, that it, and it alone, had jurisdiction and authority to work and repair the south half of said street in front of plaintiffs property; that the county had no jurisdiction or authority to work or repair the south half of said street in front of plaintiffs property, and that the act of its commissioners in constructing the grade and cut in the south half of said street was ultra vires, was void, and that the county is not bound by their action. The property of Taylor and the south half of the street in front thereof was in the city of Omaha, and because of that fact the city had jurisdiction and control over the south half of said street in front of Taylor’s propex’ty, and it was the city’s duty to woxdc,
(6.) A second argument under the contention that the petition does not state a cause of action is that the petitioner seeks to recover damages from the county by reason of a tort committed by it, and that an action of tort will not lie against a county in the absence of an express statute authorizing it, and that no such statute exists. To sustain this contention we are cited to Wehn v. Commissioners of Gage County, 5 Neb., 494. In that case Gage county had constructed a jail near the residence of Wehn, and he claimed that criminals and drunken men were permitted “to be loose and go at large around said premises, whereby ' * * * offensive and frightful noises, wild and terrible yells, shrieks, and ravings, vile, profane, obscene, and indecent language and words, noxious and offensive swills and stenches were permitted therein, * * * entered the dwelling house and premises of plaintiff nightly and daily and rendered the same unwholesome and uninhabitable, and incommoded and exposed to insult and injury the plaintiff and his family, to his great damage.” In other words, it was a suit of Wehn against the county for damages because the latter was maintaining a nuisance, and the court held that the action would not lie. We are also cited by counsel for the county to Woods v. Commissioners of Colfax County, 10 Neb., 552. It was held in that case that a county was not liable, in the absence of an express statute, for injuries one had received by the breaking down of a public bridge negligently constructed by authority of the county. But these cases are not in point here, and Woods v. Commissioners of Colfax County, at least, is no longer in force since the enactment of section 4, chapter 7, Session Laws of 1889, which made counties liable for damages sustained by any person resulting from a defective highway or bridge. (See, also, Hollingsworth v. Saunders County, 36 Neb., 141.) Section 21 of the bill of rights (Constitution, art. 1, sec. 21) provides that the property of no person
(c.) A third argument in support of the contention that the petition does not state a cause of action is that Taylor does not aver therein that he filed his claim for damages-with the county clerk of Douglas county, and that it had been passed upon by the county commissioners thereof. To sustain this contention counsel cite us numerous authorities, among which is Brown v. Commissioners of Otoe County, 6 Neb., 111. Brown’s claim against the county in that case was for publishing the delinquent tax list of the county, and it was held that the jurisdiction of the district court over Brown’s cause of action against the-county was appellate only; that his claim should have been filed with the county clerk of Otoe county and passed upon by the commissioners thereof in order to invest the district court with jurisdiction. Another case cited is Board of Commissioners of Dixon County v. Barnes, 13 Neb.,. 294. The claim of Barnes against the county was for services which he claimed he had rendered for the county as an attorney in a litigation in which the county was interested, and it was held that such claim must be filed with the county clerk of said Dixon county and passed upon by the commissioners of said county in order to in7 vest the district court with jurisdiction to hear it. Richardson County v. Hull, 24 Neb., 536, was an action brought originally in the district court of Richardson county by Hull against the county to recover a sum of money he had
Affirmed.