This case is properly before the Court upon a certified question from the Circuit Court of Webster County, asking us to decide whether a county commission can be held liable in a tort action for personal injuries caused by negligence of its employees. The circuit court in denying the county commission’s motion to dismiss ruled that county commissions no longer have common-law governmental immunity. We affirm that decision.
Rachel Gooden brought this civil action alleging that she sustained personal injuries on March 21, 1980, when she stumbled and fell over a cinderblock negligently placed in a public corridor of the Webster County Courthouse. The operation and maintenance of a county courthouse is a purely governmental function. W.Va. Code, 7-3-2 provides:
“The county commission of every county, at the expense of the county, shall provide at the county seat thereof a suitable courthouse ... together with suitable offices for the judge of the circuit court and judges of courts of limited jurisdiction, clerks of circuit courts, courts of limited jurisdiction and of the county commission, assessor, sheriff, prosecuting attorney, county superintendent of schools, and surveyor, and all other offices as are or may be required by law: ... The county commission shall keep the courthouse, jail and other offices in constant and adequate repair, *131 and supplied with the necessary heat, light, furniture, record books, and janitor service, and, except as to the office for the judge of the circuit court, with the necessary stationery and postage, and other things as shall be necessary .... ”
In
Petros v. Kellas,
County commissions have enjoyed only a limited immunity for many years. Traditionally, they, and boards of education, and municipalities were liable for acts of negligence occurring in performance of proprietary functions.
Ward v. County Court,
In
Boggs v. Board of Education,
“County commissions (formerly county courts) are not instrumentalities of the State of West Virginia such as to bring them within the constitutional immunity from suit of W. Va. Const, art. 6, § 35.”
Because county commissions lacked constitutional immunity, the Boggs court upheld the constitutionality of W.Va.Code, 17-10-17 (1969), that permits a county commission to be sued when its failure to keep a road or bridge repaired causes personal injury.
Traditionally, county governments were considered political subdivisions of the state created for public convenience in the administration of state government, while cities were private, municipal corporations created by individuals for private advantage.
See, Watkins v. County Court,
Boggs changed this perspective of county government, and clearly removed the major underpinning for tort immunity for county governments.
The incipient demise of common-law immunity for local governmental units began even before
Boggs. Long v. City of Weirton,
Long
also relied on cases from numerous jurisdictions abrogating this antiquated doctrine. The continuing viability of tort immunity for county government, however, was not addressed but it was recognized that county government immunity represents “an analogous and similar but different body of law in this jurisdiction.”
Id.,
We recently reiterated the reasoning of
Long
in
Ohio Valley Contractors v. Board of Education,
Most scholars and students of government have urged abolition of local government immunity. In our view the various justifications advanced to support immunity, almost all of them economic, are not sufficient in reason to perpetuate the social injustice of requiring citizens injured by their government to bear costs, which in fairness and justice, should be borne by the responsible governmental entity.
County commissions are now expressly authorized by law to purchase public liability insurance, thus protecting the county and its officers, agents, and employees from financial losses because of negligent performance of official duties. W.Va.Code, 7-5-19 [1981]. 1 Where liability insurance is present, the reasons for immunity completely disappear. We take the legislature’s action in authorizing expenditure of public funds to purchase liability insurance to be a recognition that payment of liability claims is a legitimate part of the cost of performing public functions. 2
Accordingly, those of our cases that have recognized common-law governmental immunity for county commissions are overruled. A county commission shall be liable, just as a private citizen, to members of the general public, for injuries proximately caused by negligence of its employees performing their duties.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Prior to that time, county commissions had no express or implied statutory authority to purchase liability insurance covering governmental activities. Op. Att’y Gen., Nov. 13, 1974. By virtue of W.Va.Code, 6-12-1 [1975], county commissions, however, were expressly authorized to expend public funds to protect against risks created by the performance of proprietary functions. W.Va.Code, 6-12-3 provides that Article 12 is not to be construed to authorize a right of action where none had heretofore existed. When the Legislature explicitly authorized the purchase of public liability insurance in 1981 by enacting W.Va.Code, 7-5-19, it included no such injunction.
. In Syllabus Point 5 of
Cunningham v. County Court,
See Notes 5 & 6 of Ohio Valley Contractors, supra; J. Dooley, Modem Tort Law, §§ 20.03.50, 20.04 (1982).
