129 Mich. 246 | Mich. | 1902
The plaintiff is administratrix of one Alfred Cope, and commenced this action by declaration, under the statute, to recover, for the benefit of Cope’s widow and children, for the negligent causing of his death. The declaration is in two counts, the first of which alleges, in substance, that the city was possessed, in 1894, of a lot containing 40 acres of land, upon which was an old building that had been used by the defendant as a hospital for contagious diseases, particularly smallpox. In November, 1894, the defendant began the erection of a new building designed for a similar use, and employed the plaintiff’s intestate, who was a carpenter, to work upon the same. The new building was located in close proximity to the old one, and it is alleged that said old building and the surrounding grounds were infected with smallpox germs, making it dangerous for any person to be in of upon them. The plaintiff’s intestate was attacked by smallpox, and, after an illness of a month’s duration, died from the disease. It is alleged that the defendant was negligent in not using reasonable care to furnish him a safe place to work, and in not warning him against said dangers, and in not constructing the new building at a greater distance from the old one, and in not causing the old building and the ground to be disinfected. The second count alleges that the deceased was employed to tear down the old building, and that while so engaged he was exposed to the smallpox, and by reason thereof was seized with said disease and died. This count was otherwise similar to the first, except that
The law imposes upon the city the duty of taking measures for the preservation of the public health, through a board of health, whose powers and duties are statutory. Sections 376-381, Detroit Charter 1893. See, also, 2 Comp. Laws 1897, §§ 4410-4467. Section 4448 makes it a duty of the board of health of the township to provide a hospital or place of reception whenever smallpox, or any other disease dangerous to the public health, shall break out in any township, and section 4444 authorizes the establishment of permanent hospitals by the townships, while section 4459 makes the law applicable to cities; and it seems to be admitted that the city acted under these statutes.
It is the well-settled rule that the State is not liable to private persons who suffer injuries through the negligence of its officers; and the rule extends to townships and cities, while in the performance of State functions, imposed upon them by law. This subject is fully discussed in City of Detroit v. Blackeby, 21 Mich. 84 (4 Am. Rep. 450). It was there held that cities are governmental agencies, and that their officers “are in no such sense municipal agents that their negligence is the neglect of the municipality; nor will their misconduct be chargeable against them, unless the act complained of be either authorized or ratified.” And in a large number of cases it has been held that there is no such liability on the part of such governmental agency unless it has been imposed by statute, and in such case it is necessarily limited by the statute. Commissioners of Highways of Niles v. Martin, 4 Mich.
Counsel for the plaintiff seem to admit the general rule that a municipality is not liable for- injuries received through the negligence of its officers while acting in the capacity of governmental agents. They allege, however, that the city owned the premises, and contracted with the -deceased, and owed the duty of -warning him against hidden dangers; that the city is subject to the same responsibility to warn those upon its land against pitfalls that other landowners are subject to; and that the obligation under its contract for constructing a house upon its land entitles its employes to a safe place to work, as a contract between private persons does. There is some plausibility in the suggestion, but we think it fallacious. In a moral sense, those acting for the State owe the same duty towards persons employed upon its behalf as that due from the citizen. They should also be as careful to provide safe appliances and a safe place for employes as a private person should. But if they do not, the sufferer is remediless, as against the State, for the reason that it has provided no remedy, although the State itself own the land when the injury occurs, and make the contract of •employment. It is an open question how far it is wise or just to subject citizens to taxation to pay for injuries caused by the negligence of public officers. Such officers are usually the representatives of the injured person as well as of other taxpayers. It is as much his duty to select careful and prudent officers as it is that of the tax
“It is for the legislature to determine how far, if at all,, a body whose negligence, if it is so called, is imputed, and in no sense actual, shall be made subject to suit for the misconduct of its employes. There are many cases where such liability does not exist, except against the immediate individual wrongdoer. The person injured is not harmed any more where there are several persons liable than where there is only one. Imputed negligence is purely a question of public policy, and subject to legislative regulation. No one can be bound by this record except the immediate parties to it, and it would be improper to go beyond it.”
The action of the city in obtaining and owning the land and erecting the hospital is as much an act of a governmental agent as the transportation of a patient thereto and his treatment therein would be. It is land owned for governmental purposes, by governmental authority, by a governmental agency, it is true, but not for the private purposes of the municipality as such, and for purposes in which the State has no interest. The title to the land is in the city, but so it would be were the interest merely a leasehold for the shortest practicable period. It is inconceivable that changes made upon premises owned by the city under this statute would stand upon any other footing
“The next section authorizes the council to appoint a board of health. It would appear that that was done in this case. It also appears that the action taken by the council was taken on the recommendation of the board of health. The action of the council was doubtless taken under authority of the section quoted. The fact that the wrong was committed by the officers of the village does not fix the responsibility upon the municipality, if the wrongful act was done under authority of a general statute, in the attempt to perform a public service not distinctively local or corporate. 2 Dill. Mun. Corp. (4th Ed.) § 974. It is apparently the established rule that local health officers, acting under a general statute of the State conferring their powers, are not performing corporate functions, but are representatives of the State, and that the municipality is not liable for the acts of such boards, either of misfeasance or nonfeasance.”
Whether or not the village owned the land upon which the dam was built at the outlet of the lake, whereby the level of the lake was raised, does not appear. Presumably, it did, or acquired the right to use land for the purpose upon some terms. As in this case, something had to be done upon the land owned or controlled by the city or village to accomplish the duty imposed. Had some one been injured in the construction of the dam, through negligence, the case would have been parallel to the present case. In such a case, would it be proper to hold that the city was not liable for injuries resulting to one from the raising of the lake, and liable to another for injuries aris
In 2 Dill. Mun. Corp. (4th Ed.) § 977, the subject of the liability of municipal corporations for injuries resulting from maladministration of the health laws is discussed, and numerous cases cited. It has been held that a city was not liable to a nonpaying patient for injuries resulting from the neglect or misconduct of hospital officers or servants (Murtaugh v. City of St. Louis, 44 Mo. 479), or for the unskillful treatment of a resident physician (Sherbourne v. Yuba Co., 21 Cal. 113 [81 Am. Dec. 151]); or for failure to take proper precautions to prevent the spread of the smallpox, or to notify the plaintiff, who was required to assist in the removal of the corpse of a person who had died of this disease, of the dangerous nature of the service required (Ogg v. City of Lansing, 35 Iowa, 495 [14 Am. Rep. 499]); or where a person caught the smallpox from a nurse who was permitted to leave the hospital without being properly disinfected (Brown v. Inhabitants of Vinalhaven, 65 Me. 402 [20 Am. Rep. 709]); or for carrying a well person to a smallpox hospital, where he contracted the disease (Barbour v. City of Ellsworth, 67 Me. 294); or for illegally ordering a ship to leave the city (Rudolphe v. City of New Orleans, 11 La. Ann. 242); or for illegally taking possession of a vessel (Mitchell v. City of Rockland, 41 Me. 363 [66 Am. Dec. 252]; Id., 45 Me. 496; Id., 52 Me. 118; Harrison v. Mayor, etc., of Baltimore, 1 Gill, 264); or for negligence of a servant of the board of health in removing garbage (Condict v. Mayor, etc., of Jersey City, 46 N. J. Law, 157). See, also, Tied. Mun. Corp. § 332.
We have been referred to a case which seems to go far towards sustaining the contention of plaintiff’s counsel. It is Briegel v. City of Philadelphia, 135 Pa. St. 451 (19 Atl. 1038, 20 Am. St. Rep. 885). The decision is not replete with adjudicated cases. The opinion states that
Under the title of “Liability in the Capacity of Property Owner,” Mr. Dillon discusses this question, and recognizes a liability when the property is owned and used for ■private corporate purposes. The language is somewhat broad, but the text, and the cases cited in support of it, seem to imply the importance of the nature of the uses for which the property is owned. See 2 Dill. Mun. Corp. (4th Ed.) § 985, and note 1. In the same connection attention is called to the fact that, by the decisions, the distinction between acts done by a city in discharge of a public duty, and acts done for what is called, by way of distinction, its “private advantage or emolument,” is clearly made. Most of the cases cited turn on private ownership for corporate purposes.
Eastman v. Meredith, 36 N. H. 296 (72 Am. Dec. 302), was a case where a town-house floor had given way, injuring one lawfully there for the purpose of voting. It was held that the town was not liable. In the discussion of this case there is general language relating to premises owned by municipalities for certain purposes. It is said that for private injuries caused by the improper management of their property, as such, they have been held to the general liability of private persons who own and manage the same kind of property. It is not to be presumed that the township did not own its town hall, or at least have a temporary title, if nothing more than a right of possession. So in the case cited in support of the above language,' viz., Bailey v. Mayor, etc., of New York, 3 Hill, 541 (38 Am. Dec. 669), there was no dispute but that the city of New York owned the dam; but in neither case
This statute provides for a board of health, all of the members of which are chosen directly or indirectly by the city authorities; but, as to the duties, prescribed by' law, they do not represent the city, but the State. The statute contemplates that a hospital may be provided in every township, and that, when provided, it will be practically under the control and regulation of the board of health. In one contingency the board of health is charged with the duty of providing it, and in doing that it would be acting for the State, not the city. But the statute provides that the town or city may establish such a hospital without waiting until an emergency arises. Whether that provision is mandatory, and requires the establishment of such hospital in every township or city, or is merely permissive, we need not inquire. In either case the city acts as a governmental agency in performing such duty, just as it acts in such capacity in selecting officers who are charged with such duties, and in providing and collecting from its inhabitants the necessary funds to pay the expenses, or in providing a police force for the preservation of the peace, or a fire department, and prescribing regulations for the same.
It has been intimated that an officer, though a represen
It is manifest that one cannot be held liable under an application of the rule of respondeat superior where he would not be liable for the same act of negligence if done by himself, and notwithstanding his agent may be liable personally. Thus in Forbes v. Board of Health, 27 Fla. 189 (9 South. 862, 13 L. R. A. 549, 26 Am. St. Rep. 63), the board was held not liable, although a corporation subject to being sued, for the reason that it was performing a public duty. In Iowa a statute gave to the city of Lansing power to establish a board of health, and to invest it with power and duties necessary to secure the people of the city against contagious and dangerous diseases. It was held that the city was not liable for negligence of its board of health. Ogg v. City of Lansing, 35 Iowa, 495 (14 Am. Rep. 499). City of Richmond v. Long’s Adm’rs, 17 Grat. 375 (94 Am. Dec. 461), is a similar case. In Nebraska a statute provided that cities should have authority to provide protection from fires. A driver of the fire department injured a pedestrian, and it was héld
This distinction is hinted at in a note to Sheldon v. Village of Kalamazoo, 24 Mich. 383, though it is in the nature of a negative assertion of the proposition, through the medium of an implied exception. It is there said:
“But such corporation is not liable for the negligence or malfeasance of officers or public boards acting in obedience to the mandates of the legislature, and for the public good, rather than for the peculiar benefit of the corporation, when in the performance of a duty imposed upon such officer or board instead of upon the corporation.”
Maxmilian v. Mayor, etc., of New York, 62 N. Y. 160 (20 Am. Rep. 468), is a leading case. The negligence complained of was that of a driver of an ambulance, who
“If the act of the officer, or the subordinate of the officer, thus appointed, is done in the attempted performance of a duty laid by the law upon him, and not upon the municipality, then the municipality is not liable for his negligence therein.”
This language was descriptive of the case, rather than a limitation upon the city’s immunity. It, however, furnishes a convenient peg to hang a limitation upon, and too many lawyers and courts accept such expressions as authority of greater or less weight. As the case shows, it turned on the general proposition that the act was in the performance of a public, not a private, duty, and that, therefore, there was no liability.
In New York, etc., Lumber Co. v. City of Brooklyn, 71 N. Y. 580 (a similar case in principle), it was said:
“It is clear, therefore, that, unless the legislature has devolved the duty of rebuilding the docks upon the corporation, it is not liable for any neglect or omission to perform it.”
It is seen that this case is not a positive authority.
There is a broad distinction between an agent (i. e., an officer) of the government, and a municipal corporation performing delegated functions pertaining to government. The latter becomes vested with a portion of the political power. As said by Mr. Justice Gray in Springfield Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Village of Keeseville, supra:
“In such a case — and I speak, of course, of legislative acts which are general in their nature and scope — the assumption by the municipal corporation is of a further function of self or local government; and such a power is discretionary in its exercise, and carries with it no consequent liability for nonuser or misuser. In the legislature reside the power and force of government, confided to it by the people under constitutional restrictions. In the creation of municipal corporations, subordinate commonwealths*258 are made, upon which certain limited and prescribed political powers are conferred, and which enjoy the benefits of local self-government. People v. Common Council of Detroit, 28 Mich. 228 (15 Am. Rep. 202). When, in addition to those general powers which are prescribed upon the creation of a municipal corporation, general statutes permit the assumption of further powers as a means of benefiting the portion of the public in the particular locality, they invest the corporation availing itself of the permission with just so much more governmental power. Just as the general powers deposited with the various municipalities are exercised by them in a quasi sovereign capacity, so would any added powers designed for the general public good, though optional with the corporation as to their assumption, and in their exercise and performance local, be exercised.”
The true theory is that the township or city represents the State in causing these things to be done, and, like the State, it enjoys immunity from responsibility in case of injury to individuals, leaving liability for such injuries to rest upon the persons whose misconduct or negligence is the immediate cause of the damage. The township and city must always act through officers. If it builds or repairs a road, constructs a bridge, collects a State or county tax, erects a town house, provides for the poor or the infirm, preserves the public peace, or provides a smallpox hospital, it must do it through persons selected for the purpose; and whether the law broadly directs that it shall do these things, or shall select officers whose duties are prescribed by law, its obligation is the same. The State relieves itself from the burden of multitudinous detail by delegating to and imposing upon aliquot parts of the body politic the power, and perhaps the duty, of doing for the State what it would otherwise have to supervise for itself. These powers are frequently legislative as well as ministerial. In this sense the township or city is a political agency, and the persons selected to perform the details whereby the result is accomplished are no more agents of the city or township, and no less the agents of the State, than as though the legislature had been more definite in
It was a cruel thing to permit the decedent to enter the valley of the shadow of death unwarned, if those who sent him knew of the danger. A case involving a stronger .appeal to the sympathy of a tribunal can hardly be imagined. But we feel constrained to say that, if there is culpable negligence here, the plaintiff’s remedy is limited to the persons to whose negligence the deplorable event is due, if there be a remedy. It is not a case where the doctrines of imputed negligence' and respondeat superior can be applied.
The judgment is affirmed.