68 P. 525 | Ariz. | 1902
On the thirteenth day of October, 1900, the justice of the peace and the constable of Gila Bend, in Maricopa County, telegraphed to the board of supervisors of said county stating that there were a number of cases of diphtheria at Gila Bend, that there was no doctor there, that the parties were unable to send for a doctor, and requesting the board to send a doctor at once. The board sent Dr. Woodruff to Gila Bend,. with instructions to do whatever he thought right and proper to eradicate and prevent the spread of the disease. Dr. Woodruff left Phoenix Saturday evening, Oe
Did the court err in directing a verdict for the defendant? It is now well settled in this territory that, where the evidence for the plaintiff, taken as true and in its strongest light against the defendant, presents no case upon which the plaintiff is entitled to recover, the court may instruct the jury to return a verdict for the defendant. Root v. Fay, 5 Ariz. 19, 43 Pac. 527; Roberts v. Smith, 5 Ariz. 368, 52 Pac. 1120; Haff v. Adams, 6 Ariz. 395, 59 Pac. 111. We have therefore to determine whether, under the agreed facts, regarded in their most favorable light for the appellant, a case is presented upon which, as a matter of law, a recovery could be had against the county in its corporate capacity for the destruction of his property. A county is the local subdivision of a state or territory. It is created by the state for the purposes of government. Its functions, political and administrative, have direct relation to the policy of the state. It is possessed of only such powers as the state chooses to give it. It can incur no liability except in pursuance of law. It cannot be made to respond for wrongs committed by its officers or agents unless the statute so declares. The provisions of our territorial law which bear upon the case at bar are to be found under title 13 (“Counties”) of the Revised Statutes of 1887. Paragraph 381 provides that “every county is a body politic and corporate, and as such has the power specified in this act, and such powers as are necessarily implied from those expressed.” By paragraph 383 it is declared that these powers “can only be exercised by the board of supervisors, or by agents and officers acting under their authority, or authority of law.” It is provided by paragraph 397 that “the board of supervisors, in their respective counties, have jurisdiction and power, under such limitations and restrictions as are prescribed by law, . . . (19) to adopt such provisions for the preservation of the health of their respective counties as they may deem necessary, and to provide for the expenses thereof. . . . (25) to make and enforce all such local, police, sanitary, and other regulations as are not in conflict with general laws.” With the exception of the further expressed authority to provide for the care and maintenance of the indigent sick, and to erect hospitals there
The action in this ease was based upon contract, it being alleged “that the said property was taken and destroyed by the defendant to prevent the spread of a contagious disease, and the said defendant then and there promised the plaintiff to pay him the full value thereof.” The question of the liability of counties for torts, discussed to some extent in the briefs, is not one with which we have to deal. Nor does the case, as we view it, necessarily involve a consideration of the principles which relate to the exercise of the right of eminent domain. It is the theory of the appellant, 1. That the board of supervisors had power under the law, acting for the preservation of the public health, to contract with him for the taking and destruction of his property, and for his reimbursement to the extent of the actual value thereof; 2. That Dr. Woodruff, as the authorized representative of the board, contracted, on behalf of the county, to pay for the said property, and thereupon destroyed the same; and 3. That the board ratified the contract and recognized the county’s liability thereunder. Counsel for the appellee strenuously dispute the proposition that the board of supervisors could, under the law, bind the county to a contract of this nature, and insist that such an agreement, if entered into by the board, would be ultra vires and void. It is pointed out that a public corporation always possesses the common-law power to abate a nuisance, without liability, even to the destruction of the thing constituting it, and that it is expressly admitted by the complaint in this case “that the said property was taken and destroyed ... to prevent the spread of a contagious disease.” It is not a question here of whether liability could have been avoided by the adoption of a different course of action, but rather, one as to whether, under the law and the procedure taken, an obligation has been created against the county. In addition to the enforcement of suitable police and sanitary regulations, the supervisors are empowered “to adopt such provisions for the preservation of the health of their respective counties as they may deem necessary, and to provide for the expenses thereof.” The language used indicates a broad grant of power, and that it was intended to intrust to the board a large discretion concerning the means
Sloan, J., and Doan, J., concur.