Wе have consolidated these cases because they require that we reexamine our conclusion in
Boggs v. Board of Education of Clay County,
We find that Syllabus Point 3 of Boggs 1 was wrong in its conclusion that local school boards have immunity from suit; and it is overruled.
I.
W.Va.Const. art. VI, § 35 provides:
The State of West Virginia shall never be made defendant in any court of law or equity, except the State of West Virginia, including any subdivision thereof, or any municipality therein, or any officer, agent, or employee thereof, may be made defеndant in any garnishment or attachment proceeding, as garnishee or sugges-tee.
The state and its agencies performing state functions statewide are entitled to this absolute immunity.
Hesse v. State Soil Conservation Committee,
“In determining whether a commission or other body or entity created by the state is in truth and effect a part of the state, all of the features or characteristics must be considered and consequently eaсh case must rest upon the provisions of the entity’s own creation.”
Hope Natural Gas Co. v. West Virginia Turnpike Commission,
Factors to consider are whether the body functions statewide,
Hesse, supra;
whether it does the State’s work,
City of Morgantown,
supra; whether it was created by an act of the Legislature,
Woodford v. Glenville State College Housing Corp.,
This court denied immunity to the West Virginia Turnpike Commission in
Hope Natural Gas
emphasizing the corporate nature of the entity, its “power to sue and be sued, to hold and acquire property including the right to do so by the exercise of the power of eminent domain.”
Id.,
We conclude with the thought that morality is just as much to be practiced by the state in its creation and operation of any separate entity for special purposes, whether public or not, as the state demаnds and expects of its citizens, and the following quotation from the opinion of Judge Johnson in the case of Tompkins v. Kanawha Board, supra, 19 W.Va. at pages 263 and 264, is appropriate:
“It seems to me the test is, was there a corporation created charged with a duty and with rights and franchises incidеnt to corporations, among which is the right to sue, without which the corporation would be without vitality, and the corresponding liability to be sued, without which it would be a legalized despot trespassing upon the rights of the citizens, who wоuld be powerless to protect themselves. The State creates no such irresponsible entity. The Legislature never intended, that such corporations should be without legal liability, notwithstanding the State owns its property. * * * It would be against all our ideas of State government, if a corporation created by the State to carry on a work of improvement should not be liable like any other corporation for the damage it inflicted, notwithstanding the State might own the property of *242 the corporation. Sovereignty does not reside in such a corporation. The State cannot delegate her sovereignty. There is no creature of the State above the law and irrеsponsible. If this were so, the corporation might deny to certain individuals all benefits to be conferred by the corporation, and yet it being sovereign or representing sovereignty it could not be sued.”
Hope Natural Gas, supra,143 W.Va. at 930, 931 ,105 S.E.2d, at 640 . (Emphasis supplied.)
In Hesse v. State Soil Conservation Committee, supra, Judge Caplan wrotе for a unanimous Court that the State Soil Conservation Committee was constitutionally immune from suit but a soil conservation district was not. The committee was similar to the State Board of Education, i.e., its members were appоinted by the Governor, it was represented by the Attorney General, it functioned statewide. The district had the same local character as a county school board: its authority was within a limited geographic area, its members were required to be residents thereof and were elected locally, it had power to sue and be sued and to obtain land by condemnation.
All of the matters discussed herein, in relation to a soil conservation district, reveal that such a district is local in nature, that its jurisdiction is confined to a specified area of the state and that it has no attributes of a state- agency. We are of the opinion, therefore, that such еntity is not immune from suit under the provisions of Article VI, Section 35 of the Constitution ....
Hesse v. State Soil Conservation Committee, supra,153 W.Va. at 116 ,168 S.E.2d, at 297 .
We may consider other expressions of legislative intent (although the Legislature cannot waive immunity, its pronouncements represent attitudes that we may notice). Our Court of Claims Act, allowing claims against the State to be decided by that court, specifically excluded political and local subdivisions of the state, and county boards of education, from its listing of “State agencies”. Code, 14-2-3. 2
This exposition by the Legislature is very persuasive to us, upon the pivotal question about whether a government operation is “State of West Virginia” in the constitutional sense.
Education is a statewide concern. W.Va. Const, art. XII, §§ 1, 2, 3, 5, 6 and 7, art. X, §§ 5, 7, 8 and 10;
Pauley v. Kelly,
County boards of education are heavily financially dependent upon the State. Yet, that alone will not justify a conclusion that they are entitled to State immunity.
Boggs, supra,
161 W.Va. at
*243
475,
From a fiscal standpoint both counties and municipalities depend on the Legislature for funds. The same is true of county boards of education. The fact that they receive the right to obtаin funds from legislative enactments of the State does not convert them into a State agency.
Boggs v. Board of Education of Clay County, supra,161 W.Va. at 485 ,244 S.E.2d, at 807 .
We emphasize that these public corporations are localized in their management and authority. An agency must hаve statewide authority to be the “alter ego” of the State.
Accord, Moor v. County of Alameda,
All these elements compel our conclusion that boards of education are not entitled to the State’s constitutional immunity.
II.
The doctrine of common law sovereign or governmental immunity is different from that of constitutional immunity, and has been held to protect a governmental body from liability for acts performed in its governmental, as opposed to proprietary funсtions. 3
We traced the history of common law immunity in
Long v. City of Weirton,
The foregoing decisions comparatively illustrate the inherent uncertainty and incomprehensibility of рredictable results attendant to the “governmental-proprietary” distinction. It is so unworkable in application that it has caused both judicial confusion and oversight in respect to prior decisions....
For the foregоing reasons, we believe the rule of municipal government immunity from tort liability previously applied in this jurisdiction to be unsound and unworkable....
The previously discussed “governmental-proprietary” distinctions are intended to be abrogated and declared obsolete by the force of this ruling....
Long v. City of Weirton, supra,158 W.Va. at 783 ,214 S.E.2d, at 858, 859 .
Justice Miller recognized that county school board immunity “arises from the same common law historical source which was disposed of in
Long.” Boggs, supra,
There is little to recommend governmental immunity, even if it were historically predicated, which it is not. It was
*244
judicially created, and it may be judicially abolished,
Adkins v. St. Francis Hospital,
County school boards are not entitled to a common law governmental immunity. They were not even a part of “common law” government.
Reversed and remanded.
*245 McHUGH, J., deeming himself disqualified, did not participate in thе decision of No. 15249, Whitlock v. Jackson.
Notes
. Boggs v. Board of Education of Clay County, supra, Syllabus Point 3:
"County boards of education are instrumen-talities of the State of West Virginia, created by statute in furtherance of a State purpose mandated by W. Va.Const., art. 12, § 1, receive substantial funds from the State, and are under such direct State control and supervision as to bring them within the constitutional immunity from suit of the State of West Virginia established by W.Va.Const., art. 6, § 35.”
. W.Va.Code, 14-2-3:
"For the purpose of this article:
“State agency" means a state department, board, commission, institution, or other administrative agеncy of state government: Provided, that a “state agency" shall not be considered to include county courts, county boards of education, municipalities, or any other political or local subdivision of this State rеgardless of any state aid that might be provided."
. For illustrations of this distinction
see Cunningham v. County Court,
. Municipalities were denied State constitutional immunity in
Higginbotham v. City of Charleston,
. Some states have totally abrogated the doctrine, and others retain certain distinctions between governmental and proprietary functions. These cases reflect judicial opinions significantly altering governmental immunities for local political subdivisions or entities:
Cook v. County of St. Clair,
Several states have made legislative adjustments to waive immunity or accommodate the abrogation of immunity, including Torts Claims Acts. Others havе legislatively overturned judicial abrogations.
. Borchard, Government Liability in Tort, 34 Yale L.J. 1 (1924); David, Tort Liability of Local Government: Alternatives to Immunity From Liability or Suit, 6 U.C.L.A.L.Rev. 1 (1959); Eng-dahl, Immunity and Accountability for Positive Governmental Wrongs, 44 U.Colo.L.Rev. 1 (1972); Fox, The King Must Do No Wrong: A Critique of the Current Status of Spvereign and Official Immunity, 25 Wayne L.Rev. 177 (1979); Potter, Foreward: Sovereign Immunity in Pennsylvania: An Open Letter to Mr. Justice Pomeroy, 38 U.Pitt.L.Rev. 185 (1976); Taylor, A Re-Examination of Sovereign Tort Immunity in Virginia, 15 U.Rich.L.Rev. 247 (1981); Van Alstyne, Governmental Tort Liability: A Decade of Change, 1966 U.Ill.L.Forum 919; Comment, Judicial Abrogation of Governmental and Sovereign Immunity: A National Trend With a Pennsylvania Perspective, 78 Dick.L.Rev. 365 (1973-74); Comment, Governmental Immunity Statutes-Unconstitutional Deprivation of Due Process and Equal Protection, 15 Washburn L.J. 155 (1976); Note, The Role of the Courts in Abolishing Governmental Immunity, 1964 Duke L.J. 888; Note, Assault on the Citadel: De-Immunizing Municipal Corporations, 4 Suffolk U.L.Rev. 832 (1970); Note, Sovereign Immunity in Missouri: Judicial Abrogation and Legislative Reenactment, 1979 Wash. U.L.Q. 865. See generally, W. Prosser, Law of Torts (4th ed. 1971).
