This аppeal is by the plaintiffs from a judgment against them rendered after a demurrer to their complaint hаd been sustained upon the ground that said complaint failed to state a cause of action, аnd plaintiffs had declined to amend. The complaint alleges that the plaintiffs Stephen and Ida M. Miller аre husband and wife and at the times mentioned therein were the owners of certain described real рroperty in the county of Santa Clara, California, upon which certain buildings were situated; that said buildings werе insured against fire by the other plaintiffs; that on or about the ninth day of October, 1926, the defendant, City of Palo Alto, a municipal corporation, “in the carrying out and performing of its duties and powers as such municiрal corporation, as aforesaid, caused to be taken from an incinerator construсted by it for the purpose of burning garbage collected within the bounds of said city, and to be removed tо and deposited on vacant property about one-quarter of a mile southeasterly from the premises and property aforesaid of the said plaintiffs Stephen Miller and Ida M. Miller, certain mаterials that were hot and burning, and carelessly and negligently failed to take, or cause to be taken, any care or caution of any kind or character to keep the fire that was burning in said materials confined thereto, or to prevent the fire that was burning in said materials from spreading to adjoining or other property; that, by reason of such carelessness and negligence on the part of said defendant City of Palo Alto, the fire, which was burning as aforesaid in said materials at the time they were depоsited as aforesaid on said vacant property, spread to, along and through dry grass, weeds, stubble аnd other inflammable materials on the ground between the place where said materials were sо deposited and the premises and property aforesaid of the said plaintiffs Stephen Miller аnd Ida M. Miller, and burned and completely destroyed said property and all thereof.”
It is concedеd by plaintiffs and appellants that a municipal corporation is not liable for damages caused by its negligence or that of its employees in the exercise of governmental functions, unless it is exрressly made liable *76 by statute, and it is also conceded that in the collection and disposal of garbage a municipal corporation exercises governmental functions. Appellants insist, howеver, that the complaint is not based upon negligence of the corporation or its emplоyees in the performance of governmental functions, but upon the negligence of defendant after its governmental functions had ceased. The control versy resolves itself into a determination of what is included in a disposition of garbage. The trial court held that when incineration is the method of dispоsal used by a municipality, the process is not completed until the ashes are disposed of, and wе see no escape from the logic of this conclusion.
Appellants rely upon the case of
Savannah
v.
Jones,
The case of
Louisville
v.
Hehemann,
*77 There is no merit in appellants’ contention that the injury of which they complain constitutes a taking of private property for public use. A public use is “a use which concerns the whole community as distinguished from a particular individual or a particular number of individuals; public usefulness, utility or advantage; or what is productive of general benefit; a use by or for the government, the general public or some portion of it.” (32 Cyc. 1255, and eases there cited.)
The judgment is affirmed.
Shenk, J., Seawell, J., Waste, C. J., Curtis, J., and Preston, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
All the Justices present concurred.
