91 S.E. 831 | N.C. | 1917
The action was to recover damages for physical injuries caused by the alleged negligence of defendants, as individual members of the highway commission of Lee County, in failing to repair a certain (168) bridge on the line of Lee and Chatham counties and known as the Lockville bridge, and by reason of which plaintiff, driving a wagon over same, was caused to fall with his team some 15 feet and thereby receive serious injuries. On denial of liability, issues were submitted to the jury as to negligent default and damages incident thereto, and, on the issue as to negligence, there was verdict for defendants. Judgment, and plaintiff excepted and appealed.
The cause was before the court on a former appeal and will be found reported in
(169) This opinion having been certified down, a trial was had on appropriate issues, wherein it appeared that this was a county-line bridge, primarily under the control of the county commissioners in conjunction with the commissioners of the adjoining county, Revisal, sec. 2696; that the defendants had not undertaken the repair or upkeep of the bridge as a physical proposition, either under an arrangement with the county commissioners or in the exercise of any authority claimed by themselves, but their default, if any existed, was in negligent performance of the duties imposed upon them by statute, as a governmental board having general charge and supervision of the highways of the county; defendants' evidence tending strongly to show that the roads in the county where they lately took charge were in bad condition; that the calls upon them for funds were exacting and general throughout the county, and that, while they received notice of the condition of the bridge, they then had no funds available for its proper repair; that they had been advised by a competent engineer that the approach to the bridge should be of steel, and with this in view they had endeavored to arrange for temporary repairs by a reliable and competent contractor, but the bridge had fallen in before it could be done.
Upon this evidence there was no error — to plaintiff's prejudice, certainly — in submitting the question of individual liability to the deliberations of the jury, and his Honor might well have charged the jury that no such liability would attach. It is held in this State that public officers, in the performance of their official and governmental duties, involving the exercise of judgment and discretion, may not be held liable as individuals for breach of such duty unless they act corruptly and of malice. Templeton v. Beard,
It is also the recognized principle here, and the position is sustained by the great weight of authority elsewhere, that in case of duties plainly ministerial in character the individual liability of such officers for negligent breach of duty should not attach where the duties are of a public nature, imposed entirely for the public benefit, unless the statute creating the office or imposing the duties makes provision for such liability, and this principle was approved and applied here in the case ofHudson v. McArthur,
The same principle was also present in the case of Amy v. Barkholder,
It may be well to note that we speak throughout of the action of public officers within the course and scope of their official duties, and have in no way considered the effect of their conduct when they act in excess of authority and without warrant of law.
Applying these principles to the case before us, on the full disclosure of the facts, the Court could well have charged that no cause of action had been established. While there is no general legislation protecting these defendants from personal liability, as in the Fore and Feimster cases, the testimony all tends to show that said defendants had not taken any physical charge of the repairing of this bridge either by arrangement *219 with the county commissioners or otherwise, but the breach of duty, if any existed, was in their failure to perform their public duties involving the exercise of judgment and discretion, and, further, (172) that these duties were of a public nature and imposed upon them entirely for the public benefit.
On careful consideration of the record, we find no error to plaintiff's prejudice, and the judgment on the verdict is affirmed.
No error.
Cited: Marshall v. Hastings,