199 Ky. 250 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1923
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
In May, 1920, appellee was one of the occupants of a buggy driven by another going south on Maple avenue in Danville. The buggy came in contact with a pile of stone about four feet high on the driveway of that street and was overturned, whereby she was injured. This happened about eight o’clock at night, or shortly thereafter, when it was dark.
This is an action by her against the city of Danville and Lampton & Burks, contractors, wherein she seeks damages because .of- such injuries. The negligence complained of is that the contractors had placed upon and
The separate answers of the two defendants put in issue the material facts alleged in the petition, and in separate paragraphs each relied upon contributory negligence; and in still a separate paragraph they each alleged that the city under authority of law had contracted with -Lampton & Burks to construct and pave with asphalt the street in question and other streets within the city, and that the city was charged with the governmental duty and function of constructing and keeping its streets in safe condition for public travel, and that the stone was placed in the street for the purpose of constructing and paving the same, and relied upon its alleged exercise of such governmental function as defeating the right of the plaintiff to any recovery for damages resulting from the tort sued on.
To this latter paragraph a demurrer was sustained by the trial court.
On the trial plaintiff was awarded a verdict for five hundred dollars in damages, upon which judgment was entered, and the defendants have appealed.
Three reasons are urged for reversal:
(1) Because of the erroneous action of the court in sustaining a demurrer to the paragraph pleading the exercise of a governmental function;
(2) Because of the court’s refusal to give the peremptory instruction asked for at the conclusion of all the evidence for the reason, as claimed, that all the evidence showed defendants had used reasonably sufficient means to warn the traveling public of the presence of the obstruction; and
(3) Because the damages were excessive.
A municipality in the exercise of certain of its corporate powers does perform governmental functions, because such powers are exercised by it for the benefit of the public generally, and in their exercise it represents and is an arm of the state. For instance, in matters pertaining to the public health and to the maintenance of charitable, penal, reformatory and similar public institutions it acts in its public capacity because the public generally is vitally interested in such activities. But when the municipality exercises only such powers and privileges as are peculiarly for its own benefit or the benefit of its own citizens or those of its immediate locality, it is acting in its private or strictly corporate capacity as distinguished from its capacity as an arm of, and part of, the state. The state has a direct interest in maintaining the'prtblic health throughout its borders, and in maintaining charitable reformatory and penal institutions therein; while.the state as a whole has no vital interest in the maintaining by a municipality of the streets within its borders, so they may be safe for public travel.
The distinction between these several kinds of functions exercised by municipalities has often been pointed out by this court. Twyman v. Frankfort, 117 Ky. 518; Smith v. Commissioners of Sewerage, 146 Ky. 562. It follows that the court properly sustained the demurrer.
The evidence shows that the pile of stone was about four or four and a half feet high and occupied about one-half of the driveway for a distance of one hundred and fifty feet or more, and that the agent and employe of the contractors had placed at the southern end of the pile of stone a red light, and that at or near the northern end there was an incandescent street light upon which they relied to give warning of the obstruction at that end.
This injury occurred at the northern end, and there is evidence to the effect that the incandescent light near that end, upon which appellants placed reliance, some
“It is the duty of the city when the obstructions are placed in the street to use such means as are reasonably necessary to warn those using the street of the presence of the obstruction, and it is a question for the jury, under the particular facts in each case, to determine whether or not the means used for 'this purpose were reasonably sufficient. ’ ’
We are unwilling to say under this state of case that the verdict of five hundred dollars was excessive.
Judgment affirmed.