34 S.E. 964 | Va. | 1900
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action on the case against the city of Lynchburg for creating and continuing a nuisance near the premises of the plaintiff, 'to the damage of the health and comfort of himself and family.
It is averred in the declaration that the defendant, while operating a rock quarry outside of the limits of the city, erected a privy for the use of its employees, including its chain gang, over a stream of water which runs under the front porch of the dwelling house occupied by the plaintiff, situated near by, and just below the quarx-y, and so polluted the stream as to render his premises unfit for habitation, and to cause serious sickness in his family.
The defendant demurred to the declaration upon the ground that the injury complained of was not caused by an act done within the scope of the power and authority of the city, but was the result of an ultra vires act, for which the city was not liable.
The trial court sustained the demurrer- and gave judgment for the defendant. To that judgment this writ of error was awarded.
The question presented for our determination is whether the nuisance complained of was created or continued by the agents or employees of the defendant city while engaged in a work- which was within its corporate powers.
“If the act complained of,” says Judge Dillon, “necessarily lies wholly outside of the general or special powers of the corporation, as conferred in its charter or statute, the corporation can in no event be liable to an action for damages, whether it directly commanded the performance of the act, or whether it be done by its officers without its express command. * * * But, if the wrongful act be not in this sense ultra vires, it may be the foundation of an action of tort against the corporation, either when it was done by its officers under its previous direct authority, or has been ratified or adopted expressly or impliedly by it, or when it was done by the officers, agents, or servants of the corporation in the execution of corporate powers or the performance of corporate duties of a municipal nature, and was done so negligently or unskillfully as to injure others, in which case the corporation is liable for the carelessness or want of skill of its officers or immediate servants or agents in the'course of their authorized employment, without express adoption or ratifying act.” 2 Dill. Mun. Corp. (4th Ed.) § 968 ; Smith v. City of Rochester, 76 N. Y. 506 ; Cavanagh v. City of Boston, 139 Mass. 426, 1 N. E. 417; Horn v. Mayor, etc., 30 Md. 218.
It is the settled law of this state that a municipal corporation possesses and can exercise the following powers, and none others : First, those granted in express words ; second, those necessarily or fairly implied, or incident to the powers expressly granted ; third, those essential to the declared objects and purposes of the corporation, — not simply convenient, but indispensable. City of Winchester v. Redmond, 93 Va. 711, 714, 25 S. E. 1001; Railway Co. v. Dameron, 95 Va. 545, 548, 28 S. E. 951; 1 Dill. Mun. Corp. § 89.
Power is given to the city councils, under the general law, to provide in or near the city waterworks, cemeteries, hospitals, and pest houses. Code, §§ 1038, 1719, 1721.
None of the provisions of the charter nor of the General Statutes above quoted expressly confer upon the city the right to acquire and operate a rock quarry. If such power can be necessarily or fairly implied from the powers expressly granted, it must be under subsections 3 and 39 of section 7, c. 6, of the charter. The power given by subsection 3, which authorizes the city to purchase, hold, sell, and convey all real and personal property necessary for its uses and purposes, must, I apprehend, be exercised within, and not without, the. limits of the city ; for the general rule is that the power of a municipal corporation is confined to its own territorial limits, and, without some special provision authorizing it, it cannot possess any control or rights in or over lands lying without those limits. Denton v. Jackson, 2 Johns. Ch. 320, 336 ; Riley v. City of Rochester, 9 N. Y. 64; City of Coldwater v. Tucker, 36 Mich. 475, 477 ; 2 Dill. Mun. Corp. § 565.
“Municipal corporations,” says Judge Dillon in the section cited, ‘ ‘being created chiefly as governmental agencies, and for the attainment of local objects merely, the general rule is that they cannot purchase and hold real estate beyond their territorial limits unless the power is conferred by the legislature. It has been expressly decided that a conveyance to a municipal corporation of lands beyond its boundaries for the purpose of a street is void, though the corporation has by its charter power ‘to purchase, hold, and convey any real property for the public use of the corporation. ’ The author, however, is inclined to think that there are purposes for which such corporation may
If it be true, as the learned author is inclined to think, that a municipal corporation without special authority may purchase and hold lands without its limits for some purposes, it must be because the lands are indispensably necessary to enable it to protect the health and well-being of its people.
It might be convenient for a municipal corporation to own and operate a rock quarry, but it is manifestly not indispensable that it should do so, in order that it may accomplish the objects of its creation.
Again, the provisions of the charter conferring special power upon the city to acquire lands without the city for workhouses, houses of correction or reformation or the reception of the poor, public squares or parks, waterworks and gasworks, electric plants, the burial of the dead, and highways in the county of Campbell, would seem to exclude the idea that it was the intention of the legislature, in granting the charter, to confer any other extraterritorial powers upon the city than those expressly named.
If the power to acquire and operate a rock quarry can be necessarily or fairly implied from the provisions of subsection 39 (section 7, c. 6, of the charter), which authorizes the city, in connection with the county of Campbell, to pave and macadamize, among other things, the highways of that county for a distance of two miles from the city, it would not aid the plaintiff ; for it is expressly provided in that section that nothing in it shall be construed as compelling the exercise of the powers conferred by it, or as fixing any liability on the city for the failure to exercise, or the improper exercise of, the powers conferred, except damages for lands condemned for public highways. The object of that provision was manifestly to protect the city from any other .or further liability than the county of Campbell (its associate in establishing and maintaining
The contention of the plaintiff in error that the question of whether or not the work in which the city officials were engaged when the nuisance complained of was created was within its powers could not be raised by demurrer, but only by a plea, is wholly untenable. Thecourts takejudicial noticeof the charters of municipal corporations. IDill. Mun. Corp. § 83 ; 4 Minor, Inst. 1210, 1211 ; Code, § 3328 ; 1 Greenl. Ev. § 4, note 3. And, if the cause of action stated in the declaration is one for which the corporation is not liable, a demurrer is the proper and usual way to raise the question. Sayre v. Turnpike Road, 10 Leigh, 474; Noble v. City of Richmond, 31 Grat. 271; Orme v. City of Richmond, 79 Va. 86; Powell v. Town of Wytheville, 95 Va. 73, 27 S. E. 805 ; Maia’s Adm’r v. Directors, 97 Va. —, 34 S. E. 617.
It follows from what has been said that the defendant was not liable in damages for the injury complained of, that the demurrer was properly sustained by the trial court, and that the judgment must be affirmed.