58 Miss. 197 | Miss. | 1880
delivered the opinion of the court. ■
The plaintiffs in error were joint owners of two plantations situated in Bolivar County, and near the Mississippi River, and they brought this action in the court below against the defendant in error to recover damages which they sustained by the overflow of said plantations in the years 1872, 1874, and 1876. A demurrer was sustained to the declaration, on the ground that the defendant was not liable for the damages, and the plaintiffs sued out this writ of error.
The declaration sets out the ownership of the two plantations by the plaintiffs and describes their location, and avers that they are “ dependent for their protection from the overflow of the Mississippi River, and their successful cultivation as well as their value, upon the levee” extending along the bank of the Mississippi from Tick’s front to Stormville, and “ without such levee would be of very little value.” The declaration then sets out the incorporation of the commissioners by the act of November 27, 1865, and various provisions of that act, averring that by its terms it was the duty of the defendants-to rebuild, strengthen, or elevate the old levees on the liver, or make new ones where they should deem it necessary ; and that they were empowered to employ all engineers and agents necessary for the work, and to determine the height, slope, and base of the levee, and to make all needful regulations and do all acts necessary, in their opinion, to secure the counties of Washington, Bolivar, and Issaquena, under their charge, from overflow by water from the Mississippi River. It also sets out the
It is necessary to inquire into the nature of the corporation sued in this action, and its purposes and powers. The act (Sess. Laws 1865, chap. 1) appoints six named persons (two residing in each of the counties of Bolivar, Washington, and Issaquena) as levee commissioners, each for the county in which he resides. It declares “they shall hold office until the first Monday in January,’ 1868, and until their successors in office are elected and qualified; ” that the commissioners thus appointed shall constitute and are hereby made a body politic and corporate, by the name of “ The Board of Levee Commissioners for the Counties of Bolivar, Washington, and Issaquena,” and by that name may sue and be sued, and have perpetual succession for the term of twelve years.” They are empowered to .have a common seal, and to make by
By :in act passed April 4, 1877 (Sess. Laws, p. 223), the corporate existence of the board was exteuded to fifteen years from the 1st of January of that year, and each member of the board was required to enter into bond, payable to the State, in the penalty of $20,000, “ conditioned for the faithful performance of the duties of his office.” By another act, passed January 27, 1877, the name of the corporation was changed to “The Board of Mississippi Levee Commissioners,” and an additional specific tax was levied.
Such are substantially the provisions of the several acts creating and continuing the board, so far as they affect the questions involved in this case. From them it is manifest that the corporation' is a'public one, the commissioners- being public officers, bound to discharge their duties by bonds
We do not think the action can be maintained. “A distinction is made between those corporations which are endowed with special grants of power for the peculiar convenience and benefit of the corporation, on the one hand, and the incorporated inhabitants of a district, who are by statute invested with particular powers, without their consent, on the other. On the latter the State may impose corporate duties and com
It is insisted, However, that, under the decisions of some English and American courts, the corporate funds are liable for the neglect of the commissioners in building the levee with a defect which has occasioned damage. We have examined maivy cases in England and in the United States on this subject, and wo find that they are irreconcilable, and some of them seem to be decided on improper principles.
As early as 1701, in Lane v. Cotton, 1 Ld. Raym. 646, it was decided that a public officer was not responsible for the acts of another whom he ivas compelled to employ. This case
The vice of this reasoning consists in regarding the commissioners, or executive body of the corporation, as being the same as the rate-payers whose funds -were to be applied to make good the damages occasioned by the personal fault of the managers. It would have been more logical to have held that, as the commissioners could only be held personally answerable for their individual misconduct, so the rate-payers would be answerable only for misconduct directly traceable to them. This obviously just view was attempted to be met by assuming that the commissioners were the representatives of the ratepa3rers. Thus, Lord Campbell, in Southampton and Itchin Bridge Company v. Southampton Local Board, 8 El. & Bl. 801, in answer to the objection that a recovery against the corporation would be a great hardship to the rate-payers, who would thus be compelled to pay for the neglect and blunders of the board of commissioners, said that the objection ivas met by
In this case the}' are not representatives, even on Lord Campbell’s theory, which derived their representative character from an election by the rate-payers ; for here they are selected without the agenc}’ of those who contribute to the fund. But we desire to put the case on a stronger and broader ground. The Levee Commissioners are simply public officers clothed with a corporate capacity solely for the convenience of administration, and are endowed with no representative character as respects the tax-payers : and if they had such character, it would be strictly limited to those duties which by law the}'- were authorized to perform.
Justice Mellor, in Coe v. Wise, 5 Best & S. 440, undertook to make a classification of the cases by which the individual and corporate liability of such bodies was to be determined. He said: “The cases on this subject are not easily reconcilable, but those which establish the liability of trustees or commissioners acting gratuitously in the execution of a public trust may be classed as follows: Firstly, cases of indiyidual liability,- where trustees or commissioners have exceeded or abused their powers. Secondly, cases in which the duty or obligation imposed on such trustees or commissioners has been violated by reason of directions or- orders given by them for the doing of the very acts from which damage to others has resulted. Third!}’-, cases of commissioners, trustees, or corporations authorized to construct or maintain works for trading, or the like profitable purposes, — such as dock trustees, corporations acting as proprietors of gas or water-works, and the like, —in which cases, although they may act without reward, yet the object of their incorporation or constitution is to make or maintain works yielding profitable returns, either by tolls and dues or payment for services rendered, and in their very nature are mere substitutions on a large scale for individual enterprise.”
In this third class the learned judge thought the liability of
But the extension of the rule thus far was resisted in England by many eminent judges. In Mersey Docks v. Gibbs, Lord Wensleydale agreed to the judgment expressly on the ground of authority, stating if the matter were res integra he would hold that the trustees were public officers, and not responsible for the negligence of their empernes. Duncan v. Findlater, 6 Cl. & Fin. 914 ; Baker v. Harris, 4 Mau. & Sel. 26 ; Humphreys v. Mears, 1 Man. & R. 187 ; Hall v. Smith, 2 Bing. 156 ; British Cast-Plate Co. v. Meredith, 4 Term Rep. 794 ; Sutton v. Clarke, 6 Taun. 29 ; Coe v. Wise, 5 Best & S. 440 ; Feoffees of Heriot’s Hospital v. Ross, 12 Cl. & Fin. 506 ; Metcalf v. Heatherington, 11 Exch. 257 ; Holliday v. St. Leonard’s Shoreditch, 11 C. B. (n. s.) 192, all announce principles more or less at variance with those recognized in Mersey Docks v. Gibbs.
In the United States we find but two cases on this precise principle. In one, Glavin v. Rhode Island Hospital, 9 Cent. L. J. 329, the principle of Mersey Docks v. Gibbs was applied so as to make the funds of a charity hospital, raised by donations, liable for the negligence of its employees in treating a patient; in the other, McDonald v. Massachusetts General Hospital, 120 Mass. 437, the contrary conclusion was reached. But the general principle that absolves from liability the tax-payers whose funds constitute the treasury of the public corporation established as a State agency, and without their consent, has full recognition in American jurisprudence (see Cooley’s Const. Lim. 247), and received the sanction of the High Court of Errors and Appeals in Sutton et al. v. Board of Police, 41 Miss. 236, and in Chandler v. Bay St.
In all the cases on the subject of the liability of these corporations, it is admitted that the liability in each case depends on the true construction of the statute creating the corporation. The difference in the cases seems to be in the mode of arriving at the intention of the Legislature. In some it is held that the liability arises from the constitution of the body and the business it is charged with, if there be no restrictive language ; in others it is said there ought to be an express provision for liability before it can attach. In this case the meaning of the act seems to be clear. The tax is levied, as expressed in the statute, “for the purpose of repairing and constructing the levees, and for carrying into effect the object and purpose of securing the counties of Bolivar, Washington, and Issaquena from overflow from the Mississippi Liver.” This does not include the very different object of paying damages for the default and misconduct of the persons charged with the execution of the act. This expression of the purpose of the tax in the act is an exclusion of all other purposes. If such damages were chargeable on the fund, their payment might prevent the accomplishment of the purpose for which the tax was levied. The whole fund might be consumed in compensating landowners for a failure to receive that protection from the levees which they were designed to afford. The taxes levied, instead of being a fund for securing this protection, would be converted, as was said by Lord Mansfield in an analogous case, into the capital of an insurance company to indemnify against losses from floods. The tax-payers would becom'e insurers against damages, instead of contributors to a fund to be used
Judgment is affirmed.