We affirm. We are of the opinion, as was conceded by counsel for appellant on oral argument, that there could be no question but that the officers seeking to locate the body of the murder victim were acting under the police powers of the State.
“The police power is that inherent and plenary power in the state over persons and property, when expressed in the legislative will, which enables the people to prohibit all things inimical to the comfort, safety, health, and welfare of society, and is sometimes spoken of as the law of overruling necessity.” 23 111.
*567
Law R. 186. “Police powers have their origin in the law of necessity,” and “are inherent in every sovereignty.” Prentice, Police Powers (1894) pp. 4, 6. The power extends to “the protection of the lives, health and property of the citizen, and to the preservation of good order and public morals,” Northwestern Fertilizing Co. v. Village of Hyde Park,
It is not to be confused with the power of eminent domain, under which property is acquired for the making of public improvements upon condition that the owner be compensated for the taking or damaging of his property. “This police power or the law of overruling necessity is not controlled by the constitutional limitation that private property shall not be taken for public use without compensation, which was not designed for, and should not be extended to such cases.” Prentice, Police Powers, supra, p. 6. And see, 2 Kent Com. 338; B1. Com. IV, 30.
“Under certain circumstances and conditions, a municipality may, acting under its police power for the general welfare of the public, take or use the property of a person or corporation without paying compensation therefor . . .”
Atlantic C.L.R. Co. v. Southern R. Co.,
At common law the State might destroy buildings in. an effort to stop the spread of a conflagration under its police power, and
*568
the owner was entitled to no compensation. 2 Kent Com. 339; Bowditch v. Boston,
In a general way the police power extends to all the great public needs. It may be put forth in the aid of what is sanctioned by usage, or held by the prevailing morality of strong and preponderant opinion to be greatly and immediately necessary to the public welfare.
“[F]or the state or a municipal corporation to take private property without compensation, except where it does so under a valid exercise of the police or other sovereign power, constitutes a deprivation of property without due process of law within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment.” (Emphasis supplied). 5 McQuillin on Municipal Corporations (3d Ed.) p. 519, § 19.19.
But the exercise of police power is not so proscribed, for "neither the [Fourteenth] Amendment—broad and comprehensive as it is—nor any other amendment, was designed to interfere with the power of the State, sometimes termed its police power . . .” Barbier v. Connolly,
“All property is held subject to the police power of the State . . . The due-process clauses are not intended to limit the right of the State to properly exercise the police power in the enhancement of public safety . . . Damages can not be recovered by one because he incurs expense in obeying a police regulation enacted for the common welfare and safety of the public . . . The police power has never been surrendered by the State . . . [and] to the exercise of police power all rights of natural persons and corporations are subject.”
Atlantic C. L. R. Co. v. State,
“The safeguarding of society by the prosecution of crimes against it is a sovereign attribute inherent in all governments, and for mistakes in exercising this sovereign right there can be no liability against the government without its consent.” U. S. v. Keegan, 71 FSupp. 623.
The eminent domain provisions of the Constitution are, as we have observed, a thing apart from the police power. Under these the property owner is entitled to compensation if his property is taken or damaged “by reason of the construction or operation of any improvements made for the use of the public.”
Campbell v. Metropolitan Street R. Co.,
“The power of eminent domain is that sovereign power to take property for a public use or purpose, and this cannot even be done without just and adequate compensation. On the other hand, the police power is that power by which the Government may destroy or regulate the use of property in order to ‘promote the health, morals and safety of the community/ and the police power may be exercised without making compensation for the impairment of the use of property or any decrease in the value of *570 property . . .” Adams v. Housing Authority of City of Daytona Beach, (Fla.) 60 S2d 663.
The facts, including the nature of the damage done, in Gillmor v. Salt Lake City,
In Tzatzken v. City of Detroit,
In all of these cases the recovery was denied because the officers were acting under the police or governmental power.
Concerning the State as a party defendant, it is well settled that no action can be maintained against it without its prior consent or a constitutional provision.
Roberts v. Barwick,
As to the county, no suit can be maintained against it unless there is a law which in express terms or by necessary implication so declares.
Millwood v. DeKalb County,
It has long been recognized that a loss suffered from the exercise of police power is
damnum absque injuria.
As was asserted by Justice Lumpkin in
Georgia Military Institute v. Simpson,
Perhaps the time has come when a State Tort Claims Act, somewhat similar to the Federal Tort Claims Act of 1945, affording a legal remedy against the state or local government for these and other losses should be adopted. State, as well as Federal, government is now big business, operating in so many ways and to such extent that there is hardly a time or place when the citizen is not exposed to the danger of injuiy and damage from the actions of servants, agents and employees.
“The unexampled expansion of the police power in the United States daily illustrates the uncompensated sacrifices to which the individual is exposed by rightful operation of the State’s public powers.” Borchard, Government Liability in Tort, 34 YLJ 1.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
To afford some remedy for this situation the General Assembly in 1952 created a Claims Advisory Board which, concurrently with the General Assembly, might authorize payment to one suffering the loss (Ga. L. 1952, p. 169). The board as constituted by that Act was abolished and another with similar functions created by the Act of 1963, now found in Code Ann. § 47-504, et seq. (Ga. L. 1963, p. 624). This remedy was open to the plaintiff, but he did not see fit to pursue it.
