Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
Barbourville is a city of the fifth class. The Board of Council of the city enacted the following ordinance:
“That if any person shall smoke a cigarette or cigarettes within the corporate limits of the city of Barbour-ville after such person shall have had actual notice of the passage of this ordinance, he shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction shall be fined not less than one dollar nor more than fifteen dollars, for each offense. ”
The police judge issued a warrant against Henry M, Hershberg, in which he was charged with having violated the ordinance by smoking cigarettes in the city. He was arrested by the Marshal under the warrant and taken before the police judge for trial. Upon a trial of the case he was found guilty and fined. He failed to pay the fine and was committed to jail upon its non-payment. Thereupon he brought this suit against the city alleging that the ordinance was illegal and void, and that he was unlawfully arrested and imprisoned by reason thereof to his damage in the sum of $5,000 for which he prayed judg
The circuit court in a written opinion held the ordinance void as an unreasonable invasion of the citizen’s right of personal liberty. We concur in the conclusion that it is not a reasonable ordinance, and that the circuit court properly so held. (Commonwealth v. Campbell,
It is insisted for appellant that as the ordinance is void, his arrest was unwarranted, and the city is liable to him therefor. In support of this conclusion his counsel cites the case of McGraw v. Town of Marion,
“Had there been no statute imposing a fine etc., for a breach of the peace, then the question as to the effect
In Bean v. Middlesboro,
“Though his arrest was unlawful, the city was not responsible for the tort of the police. ’ ’
See also to same effect Pollock v. Louisville,
The city is a branch of the State government created by the legislature for local purposes. Legislative authority is conferred upon the city council in certain matters. Where the council acts in its legislative capacity for governmental purposes, the municipality is no more liable than the State would be for similar action taken by the Legislature. The ordinance in question was passed in the attempted exercise of the police power. Cigarette smoking being regarded by the council as injurious, especially to the young-, it pased the ordinance in the attempted exercise of its governmental functions, and not in the line of its corporate business or its corporate affairs. The city is only liable for what the council does in the line of its corporate business or corporate affairs not relating to matters of a governmental nature. That a city is not liable in damages to a person arrested under a void ordinance passed in the exercise of its governmental functions, see McFadden v. San Antonio,
Judgment affirmed.
