119 S.E. 869 | S.C. | 1923
December 10, 1923. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The plaintiff was employed as a fireman or assistant engineer in the power house of the Town of Walterboro. He was injured by the blowing out of the cylinder head of a steam engine installed in the power house and used to produce power with which to operate the electric light plant and waterworks system of the town. He *253 brought action against the town for damages, alleging, among other things, that the lighting plant was operated "for lighting and making safe its streets for traveling"; that the power house was located within the corporate limits; and that his personal injury was due to the negligence and mismanagement of the defendant (1) in not providing him with a safe place to work, (2) in not properly installing said steam engine, (3) in continuing to operate said defective engine with knowledge of its unsafe condition, and (4) in furnishing, maintaining, and operating an engine which was defective in the manner stated. The defendant demurred to the complaint upon the ground that the cause of action stated did not fall within the provisions of the Enabling Statute, Section 3053, Civ. Code, 1912, now Section 4478, Vol. 3, Code 1922. From an order of the Circuit Court overruling the demurrer, the defendant appeals.
We think the demurrer should have been sustained. The Enabling Statute, above referred to, conferring a right of action for actual damages upon one "who shall receive bodily injury or damages in his person or property, through a defect in any street, causeway, bridge or public way, or by reason of defect or mismanagement of anything under control of the corporation within the limits of any town or city," has been construed by this Court in numerous decisions to limit the liability of the municipality to misfeasance or nonfeasance connected with the keeping of any street, causeway, bridge or public way in proper repair. Dunn v. Barnwell,
It is the respondent's contention that the complaint discloses that the work in which plaintiff was engaged at the time of his injury was connected with the repair of the streets, in that the steam engine he was operating supplied the power to furnish the electric lights upon which the adequate lighting of the streets depended (Sexton v. RockHill, supra), and hence that plaintiff's case falls within the principle announced and applied in Barksdale v. Laurens, supra, and in Strait v. Rock Hill, supra. In the Barksdale case the employee was upon the street, using the street for the legitimate purpose of repairing it, at the time of the injury. In the Strait case it seems to have been assumed that the injured employee was in the legitimate use of the street for a *255 like purpose. The point there decided was merely that the city's contention that the Statute gave no cause of action to an employee, but "was intended to protect the pedestrian" or other members of the public using the street for travel, etc., could not be sustained. Neither of the cases is authority for the proposition that the mere fact that the employee's work is more or less directly connected with the repair of the streets gives such employee the right to assert a cause of action, substantially that of a servant against the master under the doctrine of respondent superior, which right is not conferred by the Statute upon other classes of municipal employees. Even if limited to such employees, the extent to which the liability of the city would be enlarged in that view is apparent. If the fireman of the steam engine in a city power house is within the enabling provisions of the Statute because the product of his labor or the instrumentality upon which he works ultimately contributes to keeping the streets in a state of repair, then the man in the stables who feeds the mules that haul material for repairs, the man in the municipal rock quarry or gravel pit who digs out street material, the employee who mends the standpipe containing the water used to flush the street gutters or drains, and many other employees engaged in similar services, would be equally entitled to maintain an action. But if, as we have seen the duty for a breach of which the Statute confers a right of action is the municipal duty to keep the streets, etc., in repair, then it would seem clear that the class of persons to whom that duty is owed and to whom the right of action is given for a breach of such duty may not soundly be extended beyond those who, whether members of the public or employees of the city, are at the time of injury engaged in some legitimate use of the streets, causeways, bridges, or public ways.
In the light of the prior adjudications of this Court, construing and applying the Enabling Statute, and of the settled rule that municipal corporations in this *256 State are liable for torts only when made so by legislative enactment, it follows that appellant's contention that the Statute may not properly be construed to cover liability for the cause of action here alleged must be sustained.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is, accordingly, reversed.
MESSRS. JUSTICES WATTS, COTHRAN and FRASER concur.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE GARY concurs in the result.