On May 28, 1977, a fire at the Beverly Hills Supper Club in the City of Southgate, Kentucky, resulted in a great number of deaths and personal injuries. Shortly thereafter numerous injurеd parties and personal representatives of those who had lost their lives filed damage suits in the Campbell Circuit Court. In all of these actions, which in due course were consolidated, the City of Southgate and the Commonwealth of Kentucky were named as defendants. The plaintiffs now appeal from separate judgments dismissing the actions, on the pleadings, as to the city and the Commonwealth. Each of the two appеals is submitted on an agreed statement under CR 75.15 and has been briefed and argued accordingly.
We shall discuss the city case first, because its resolution disposes of the Commonwealth case without requiring consideration of the sovereign-immunity question.
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It was settled in
Haney v. City of Lexington,
Ky.,
As observed in
Frankfort Variety, Inc. v. City of Frankfort,
Ky.,
Broadly speaking, the theory on which the city’s liability is premised is that it failed to enfоrce laws and regulations, including its own, establishing safety standards for the construction and use of buildings within its corporate limits, and that its failures in this respect wеre a substantial factor in causing the tragedy. In other words, the charge is that the city did not enforce a law or laws designed for the safety of the public and that its taxpayers must therefore bear a loss occasioned by someone else’s failure to comply with the law.
Though aрpellants indulge the facile assumption that under similar circumstances a private individual would be liable at common law, we do not believe that the common law, as applied to individuals, offers any reasonably comparable analogy. There is, of course, the familiar principle that one who undertakes the care of another, or of his property, even though it be voluntary and without consideration, owеs him the duty of reasonable care. But in the enactment of laws designed for the public safety a governmental unit does not undertake to pеrform the task; it attempts only to compel others to do it, and as one of the means of enforcing that purpose it may direct its officеrs and employes to perform an inspection function. The failure of its officers and employes to perform that function “does not constitute a tort committed against an individual who may incidentally suffer injury or damage, in common with others, by reason of such default.”
City of Russellville v. Greer,
Ky.,
The law that apрlies to this case has been carefully considered, clearly enunciated, and firmly settled in
City of Louisville v. Louisville Seed Company,
Ky.,
In
Modlin v. City of Miami Beach,
Fla.,
We cite this line of reasoning by the Florida court not because we find it a satisfactory answer, but in order to illustrate that even by resort to common-law logic the appellants have no case against the city. We acknowledge, however, that a legal problem of this magnitude shоuld not be resolved by the tricks of mechanical logic. The answer must find its source in conscious. public policy, and the fundamental policy-viеwpoint on which this court has settled during the 15 years since
Haney v. City of Lexington,
Ky.,
What we have said thus far with regard to the city’s responsibility аpplies with equal force to the Commonwealth. There being no basis for tort liability, the question of governmental immunity becomes irrelevant. The answer to the argument that federal constitutional rights are violated by any result that has the effect of shielding governmental bodies from liability that would аttach except for their status is that the principles articulated in our previous cases and applied here do not have that effect. To the contrary, that status would be the only basis for holding a city or state liable, because only a governmental entity possesses the authority to enact and enforce laws for the protection of the public. Hence it is that in delineating the areas and extent of publiс responsibility we are dealing with a subject quite apart and different from the world of individual and corporate relationships. There being no reasonable basis for comparison, there can be no discrimination.
The judgments are affirmed.
