I. That any persons may “ raze houses to the ground to prevent the spreading of a conflagration,” without incurring any liability for the loss to .the owner of the. houses destroyed, is a doctrine well established in the common law. The maxim of the law is, that' “ a private mischief is to be endured rather than a public inconvenience.” 2 Kent’s.Com., 338. Lord Coke says: “For the Commonwealth, a man shall suffer damage; as for the saving of a city or town, a house shall be plucked down if the next be on fire. This every man may do, without being liable to an action.” Mouse's Case, 12 Coke, 63; Id., 13. In Respublica v. Sparhawk, 1 Dall., (Pa.), 383, McKean, Chief Justice, says: “ Of this principle, there are many striking illustrations. If a road be out of repair, a passenger may lawfully go through a private inclosure. So, if a man is assaulted, he may fly through another’s close. In time of war, bulwarks may be built on private ground. * * * Houses may be razed to pre-. vent the spread of fire, because of the public good.” In Dillon on Municipal Corporations, Sec. 756, the learned author states the common law doctrine as clearly and succinctly as it is any where to be found. He says: “ The' rights of private property, sacred as the law regards them, are yet subordinate to the higher demands of the public welfare. Solus populi
The plaintiff does not, however, seek to recover against the mayor who directed, and the persons who assisted in the destruction of his buildings, but he seeks to make the city liable on the principle of respondeat superior. It is claimed that the destruction of plaintiff’s buildings was not necessary in order to extinguish the conflagration then in progress; that the act- was, therefore, not justifiable at the common law, under the rule of necessity; and that since the city, by its ordinance, had authorized the mayor to judge of the emergency, and direct the destruction of the buildings, an act which any individual might do at his peril, without any statute, it thereby made the act that of the corporation.
In Fisher v. City of Boston,
It is further held, in the same case, that it makes no difference whether the legislature itself prescribes the duty of the officers charged with the repair and management of fire engines, or delegates to the city or town the power to define those duties by ordinance or by law.
In McDonald v. The City of Red Wing,
In Wheeler v. The City of Cincinnati,
In Western College, &c., v. The City of Cleveland,
In Dunbar v. The Alcalde, &c., of San Francisco,
In Russell v. The Mayor, &c., of New York,
In Stone v. The Mayor of New York, 25 Wend. 156, it was held that the lessee of a building in the city of New York, destroyed by fire by order of the Mayoi-, to prevent the spread of a confiagi'ation, was not exxtitled to x*ecover damages for merchandize in the building at the time of its destructioix not belonging to him but the property of others, aixd which was in his possessioxi as a factor, or merely oix storage. The ground of this decision, like that in Russell v. The Mayor, etc., supra, is that thex’e was no liability on the part of the city to make compensation for property destroyed, except as, and to the
. This is the doctrine of all the cases we have found with the. single exception of Bishop & Parsons v. The Mayor, etc. of Macon, 7 Geo., 200. There the city was held liable for blowing up the building of the plaintiff. No authority is cited except Lord v. The Mayor, etc. of N. Y.,
In Taylor v. Plymouth, 8 Met. (Mass.,) 462, which was an action to recover against the town for a building torn down to stop.a lire, Cu. J. Shaw, says: “In order to charge the town, the remedy being given by statute only, the case must be clearly within the statute. Independently of the statute, the pulling down of a building in a city or comjtact town, in time of fire, is justified upon the great doctrine of public safety, when necessary, * * * . But if there be no necessity, then the individuals who do the act shall be responsible. This is the more reasonable, as the law has vested an authority in the proper officers to judge of that necessity. But the town is responsible by force of the statute only, and such responsibility is confined to the cases specially content-plated.” In support of the same doctrine of the non-liability/ of the corporation in the absence of an express statute,- seej the following additional cases. Weightman v. Washington, 1 Black., (U. S.) 49; Coffin v. The Inhabitants of Nantucket,
In the case before us the statute (Bev., § 1057,) authorizes municipal corporations to “ protect the property of the municipal corporation and its inhabitants.” Section 1058 empowers them to make “ regulations for the purpose of guarding against danger from accidents by fire.” Section 1071 confers the power upon the city “ to make and publish from time to.
We will not stop to determine whether these statutory provisions do or do not confer authority upon the city to pass the ordinance under which plaintiff’s property was destroyed, for if they do not confer such authority, the city, in its corporate capacity, could not be made liable for the unauthorized act of' any of its officers. The ordinance would be void, and would confer no authority on the Mayor or other officers to do the act complained of, and the city would not be liable therefor; See Dunbar v. San Francisco, supra, and cases cited on p. 356. If, on the other hand, the ordinance is valid, and authorized the Mayor to judge of the emergency and do what, by the common law, any individual might do at his peril without a statute upon the cases cited, the city is not liable for the consequences of his acts in the absence of a statute creating such liability. ■ *
There are several satisfactory answers to this position; First, the power of eminent domain is vested in the' State,
Third, in addition to the reasons above given, the great weight of judicial authority holds that the destruction of property under authority conferred by law upon officers of municipal corporations is not an exercise of the power of eminent domain, but is a regulation of the right which individuals possess to destroy private property in cases of inevitable necessity, to prevent the spreading of fire or other great calamity. The following cases hold that, the destruction of property under such circumstances is not the exercise of the right of eminent domain: Russell v. Mayor, etc., of N. Y., supra; The Am. Print Works v. Lawrence, 3 Zabriskie, 595, 615; McDonald v. City of Red Wing,
While there are to be found in the opinions of judges in some cases, expressions leading to a different view, we have found no case directly holding a doctrine different from that of the cases above cited on this point.
We find no authority, either in the adjudged cases or in legal principles, upon which to hold the municipal corporation liable for the act of the mayor in ordering the destruction of plaintiff’s buildings. The judgment of the Circuit Court, in sustaining the demurrer to the plaintiff’s petition, must be
Affirmed.
