84 S.W.2d 38 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1935
Affirming.
In Kentucky State Park Commission v. Wilder,
Absolute immunity from suit is a high attribute and prerogative of sovereignty. The basis and policy of the doctrine has been many times stated. This immunity has come down to us as a part of the fundamental common law and is only indirectly contained in the Constitution. Section 231 of that instrument gives the General Assembly power to direct by law in what manner and in what courts suits may be brought against the commonwealth, the implication, of course, being that they cannot otherwise be maintained. But in the absence of specific legislative consent, suits which involved the taking of property for public use, or trespass amounting to a taking, have been sustained upon the idea that the state had surrendered its immunity or authorized the suit by express constitutional or statutory provisions.
Section 13 of the Constitution declares that no "man's property [shall] be taken or applied to public use without the consent of his representatives, and without just compensation being previously made to him." This declaration of an "inherent and inalienable" right has been a part of all four Constitutions of Kentucky, and there is no exception in favor of the state or its subdivisions. Carrico v. Colvin,
Section 242 of the Constitution requires that municipal and other corporations and individuals invested with the privilege of taking private property for public use shall pay or secure the payment of just compensation before the taking thereof. This allows compensation for injury or destruction of property unattended by an actual taking. Both sections prohibit the actual taking of property without payment. Bushart v. Fulton County,
We may lay aside consideration of the authorities dealing with the right to sue municipal corporations as *193 emanating from section 242 of the Constitution and confine our thought to the state, its special creatures and counties. The distinction in the character of municipalities and of counties as drawn in Wheatly v. Mercer, 72 Ky. (9 Bush.) 704, brings the latter much closer to absolute immunity from having to answer in the courts. The paramount object of their existence is governmental. They are subordinate, political divisions and parts of the sovereignty of the state itself. There is likewise a distinction between the special commissions and bureaus or departments created by the state for convenience of operation or administration along lines not strictly governmental in their essence. In respect of quasi sovereignty, they partake of the same nature as counties.
It may be observed in passing that neither such an agency, even though functioning under special charter giving it power to sue and providing that it may be sued, nor a county is suable for personal injuries or torts not equivalent to a taking of property without express consent granted by the Legislature. Public policy prohibits it. Williamson v. Louisville Industrial School of Reform,
But those state agencies and subdivisions may be sued to enforce recognition of contracts made by them under authority of law. Gross v. Kentucky Board of Managers of World's Columbia Exposition,
The exemption of a county from suit unless the authority can be discovered in the statutes or found to exist by necessary implication from some express power given or the action is upon a contract which it could make is a well-established doctrine. Breathitt County v. Hagins,
"The provision of the constitution which requires that the municipality taking private property for public use 'shall make just compensation for the property taken, injured or destroyed by them,' necessarily implies that, if the corporation should fail to make the compensation before the taking or injury, and that, if it will not pay the damages, an action is necessarily authorized to be instituted again it; for it would be idle to give to a party a right without a remedy to enforce it. We therefore *195 conclude that, if the facts as alleged in the petition be true, — that is, that the improvement of the highway in question did so impair the plaintiff's adjacent lands and their value as to damage him, — that was a taking and injury within the contemplation and meaning of the constitution, and the language of that section necessarily implies a right upon the part of the citizen to maintain his action against the county to recover such damages, if not otherwise settled."
Other suits of like character were maintained in Moore v. Lawrence County,
That interpretation of section 242 and its application to counties under like or similar conditions or actions has been made whether the taking of the property was done directly by the county and its officers or agents or by the state highway commission in the construction of state roads, the several counties being by statute required to pay for the rights of way therefor. Letcher County v. Hogg,
So far we have dealt with agencies or divisions of the state which by reason of their separate organizations may not by in a strict sense regarded as the commonwealth itself. We have at least two cases of the same nature as those permitted against the agencies which were more particularly against the state and hence were held not maintainable.
In Norwood v. Kentucky Confederate Home,
In Hunt-Forbes Construction Co. v. Robinson,
However, upon the doctrine that a state agency whether it be a body corporate specifically made amenable to suit, or a board, or an individual vested with certain powers, may be sued by a citizen to restrain the commission of a contemplated injury or wrong, or compelled to perform acts essential to the protection of property rights, it was held in Anderson v. State Highway Commission,
Now, the Kentucky State Park Commission is a special corporation with very broad express authority, including the power to take property and to sue and be *197 sued in its corporate name. Section 3766d-1 et seq., Kentucky Statutes. It is more nearly a private corporation than the eleemosynary institutions held liable to suit under the same circumstances, and is far from a county organization and its governmental nature, all of which have been held to be suable for the taking of private property and to be liable for the value therefor. While the title to the property taken by the park commission is in the name of the commonwealth, it is not the title that is involved in this action as amended. The suit is not against the commonwealth as owner, as was the original petition asking for a partition of the land. It is against the agency for its wrongful taking of property and no such agency can claim immunity from liability for such a wrong committed in clear violation of sections 13 and 242 of the Constitution. The commission in this respect is like those agencies whose assets are made subject to liability for the value of another's property it had bodaciously taken, even as its funds might have been used for its purchase, voluntarily or by condemnation, in the first instance. Indeed, the opinion was expressed on the former appeal that the commission is subject to such a suit.
It is not necessary here to express an opinion as to what remedy an owner of property might have by reason of section 13 of the Constitution if the commonwealth directly, rather than through some agency of the character of the park commission, should take possession of it under circumstances like those alleged in this petition. It is sufficient to say here that according to this record only the agency has taken the property — not the commonwealth itself. Hence, the court erred in overruling the special demurrer in so far as the commonwealth of Kentucky is concerned. It was not error to hold the commission subject to suit. We take notice of article 18, sec. 2, chapter 155, of the acts of the Regular 1934 Session of the General Assembly (section 4618-45, Supplement to Statutes), abolishing the Kentucky State Park Commission and transferring its duties and functions to the department of public property. But this could not abrogate plaintiff's rights against it. That department should be made a party to this suit.
The judgment is affirmed as to Kentucky State Park Commission.
Whole court sitting. *198