36 N.W.2d 132 | Minn. | 1949
The appeal presents four questions for decision:
(1) Whether the city of St. Paul is exonerated from liability for torts committed by the board of water commissioners by provisions of the city charter of St. Paul to the effect that the board of water commissioners may sue and be sued; that a cause of action based on an act or omission of the board, its servants, agents, or employes, shall be brought and maintained by the claimant against the board, anything in the statutes of the state to the contrary notwithstanding; *66 and that any judgment against the board shall be paid out of any of its moneys in the hands of the city treasurer;
(2) Whether §
(3) Whether it is necessary under §
(4) Whether the defense of res judicata by a prior judgment of this court not referred to in the complaint can be raised by demurrer.
The answers to these questions depend partly on provisions of the city charter of St. Paul and partly on §
In 1900, the city adopted a home rule charter (see, State ex rel. Smith v. City of St. Paul,
"Sec. 34. And all causes of action, either at law or in equity, which may now exist, or which may hereafter occur by reason of any act or omission by or on the part of the board of water commissioners, or of any of its servants, agents, employes or otherwise, shall be brought and maintained by such claimant or claimants against the said board of water commissioners, anything in the statutes of the State of Minnesota to the contrary notwithstanding. And any and all judgments recovered against said board of water commissioners shall be paid out of any moneys in the hands of the city treasurer of the City of St. Paul belonging to said board, as other indebtedness are paid."
and
"Sec. 35. Before any action shall hereafter be maintained in any court of this state having jurisdiction thereof, against said board of water commissioners, for any cause whatever, the subject matter thereof, together with the evidence in support of the same, must have first been presented and submitted to said board for its investigation and approval, and that, too, within sixty (60) days after said cause of action accrues. If, upon and after such investigation by said board, the same shall by it be rejected, then and in that case action thereon must be commenced within one (1) year thereafter, or forever be barred from maintaining an action thereon, or recovering a judgment against said board upon said claim or cause of action."
By Sp. L. 1881, c. 188, the city of St. Paul was authorized to acquire in its name a privately owned water company then serving the city and to pay for the same with public funds. Provision was made in c. 188 for the creation of a board of water commissioners, composed of five members, as an agency to operate and maintain the waterworks. Section 5 thereof, which authorized the board to enter into contracts in its own name, contained a provision as follows: *68
"* * * all contracts and engagements, acts and doings of the said board within the scope of their duty or authority shall be obligatory upon, and be in law as binding as if done by the common council of said city."
Sp. L. 1883, c. 75, amended c. 188 in numerous respects not here material. Sp. L. 1885, c. 110, consolidated and amended Sp. L. 1881, c. 188, and Sp. L. 1883, c. 75. Chapter 110 repealed the quoted portion of § 5 of c. 188, supra, and added, among other provisions, §§ 34 and 35, quoted supra.
1. It is for the legislature to determine whether a city shall be liable for the torts of a city department performing functions of the city government, whether the department shall be solely liable for torts committed by it, or whether both the city and the department shall be liable for the department's torts. Scott v. Village of Saratoga Springs,
That this is the meaning of § 34 is also clear from its legislative history. The provision of Sp. L. 1881, c. 188, § 5, quoted above, to the effect that all contracts, acts, and doings of the board shall be obligatory upon and in law as binding as if done by the common council of the city, which is substantially the same as the provision of the home rule charter of Waseca construed in American Elec. Co. v. City of Waseca,
It follows, therefore, that the adoption of § 34 as part of § 455 of the city charter constitutes local legislation by the city to the effect that the city shall not be liable for the board's torts and that the board shall be solely liable therefor. *70
2. Prior to the enactment of L. 1897, c. 248, statutes, special laws, and city charters contained dissimilar provisions as to presentation of notice of claim against municipalities and the method and procedure of presenting the same, with resulting confusion, which that statute was enacted to remedy. Chapter 248 in effect provided that before a city, village, or borough shall be liable for negligence the claimant within 30 days shall present to the governing body thereof a notice of claim stating when and where the loss or injury occurred, the circumstance thereof, and the amount of compensation or the nature of the relief demanded. Thereby, a uniform rule, avoiding the confusion arising out of dissimilar provisions then in effect, was prescribed for all municipalities. Freeman v. City of Minneapolis,
In 1907, we held in Peterson v. City of Red Wing,
While the home rule charter of St. Paul was adopted in 1900, and probably under the rule of the Peterson case operated as a reënactment of L. 1885, c. 110, § 35, no such claim was made here; but if it had been made it would have been of no avail, for the reason, as we shall presently show, that L. 1913, c. 391, operated to supersede and repeal it.
L. 1913, c. 391 (effective July 1, 1913), repealed R. L. 1905, § 768, which was L. 1897, c. 248, "and all other acts and parts of acts inconsistent" *71
therewith. Section 768 (c. 248) was reënacted as § 1 of c. 391. Unlike § 768 (c. 248), c. 391 contained a provision (§ 5) that it shall apply to cities having home rule charters. Aside from the question as to what the effect of the simultaneous repeal and reënactment of § 768 may have been under the rule that the effect of simultaneous repeal and reënactment of a statute is to continue the repealed statute in force without interruption (§
Chapter 391, §§ 1, 2, 3, and 5, as supplemented by an act not material here (L. 1943, c. 525, § 1), is now M.S.A.
3. The point is made that §
"* * * and the board of water commissioners is not an entity separate and independent of the city, but a mere agency or department of the city provided for and governed by the city charter; and its authority to exercise the power of eminent domain rests upon such charter and must be exercised thereunder. As condemnation proceedings brought by the city itself do not come under chapter 41, neither do those brought under the charter of the city by the subordinate agencies of the city, in the absence of a statute to that effect."
There the question was determined under provisions of the city charter; but the rule is the same where it arises under a statute. In Morton v. Power,
"* * * The contracts which the board is thus authorized to make, though made in the name of the board, are made by it as the representative and agent of the city, and therefore they are, in substance and effect, made with as well as for the city."
Section 34, as we have pointed out, is an instance of where it is "otherwise" provided by statute. We think that because it was the legislative intent of §
Because Biron v. Board of Water Commrs.
4. Presentation of notice of claim for trespass is not required under §
5. The complaint did not in any way refer to our decision in Mitchell v. City of St. Paul,
Our conclusion is that the order should be affirmed insofar as it sustains the city's demurrer and that it should be reversed insofar as it sustains the demurrer of the board of water commissioners.
Affirmed in part and reversed in part in accordance with opinion.