32 Barb. 634 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1860
By the Court,
It is claimed by the defendant’s counsel that this case is controlled by Cole v. The Village of Medina, (27 Barb. 218,) decided in this, district. The plaintiff’s counsel has attempted to show a distinction in the cases, and also insists that the decision at the circuit is in conflict with certain recent decisions of the court of appeals, to be hereafter noticed. It will be proper to bring into view all the statute law having a relation to the question we are to consider. By the act of April 9, 1853, (Laws of 1853, ch. 140,) “the village of Batavia” was incorporated. There were to be five trustees. By section 9, title 4, it is declared that the trustees shall have power to cause the side-walks, on the streets and highways in said village, to be leveled, raised, graveled, flagged and repaired, and ornamented with trees; and to compel the owners or occupants of any lands or lots adjoining such side-walks, to make such improvements upon such side-walks as aforesaid, and to determine and prescribe the manner of doing the same, and the materials to be used thereon, and the quality of such materials; in case the owner or occupant of such land or lots shall neglect or refuse to complete such required improvements, within such reasonable time as may be required by the trustees, the trustees may cause such improvements to be made and completed, and the expenses thereof may be then assessed upon such owner or occupant, and added to the next annual village tax upon said land or lots; or the trustees may direct the collection of the same by suit against the owner or.occupant. By sec. 1, tit. 6, it is declared that the village shall constitute a highway district,-
I think I have referred to all the provisions of the statute which can be claimed as having any relation to* the ■ 'question to be considered. It is seen that the statute contains special provisions relating to side-walks. Thé tax is a local tax, and there is no power to make it general “upon the taxable inhabitants and property in said village,” as-in the case of highway taxes. It is nowhere made the- duty, imperative or discretionary, of the corporation, to make and repair the side-walks. Certain powers, relating to side-walks, are conferred upon the trustees. These powers are discretionary. Ho absolute and imperative duty is imposed. The case comes clearly within the decision in Cole v. The Trustees of Medina,
I am somewhat in doubt whether the learned justice intended to maintain the position that all powers of a public nature, conferred upon a corporation, raise the duty of exercising the power. Such a provision would be extremely comprehensive and sweeping in its operations. It would be only necessary to turn to any of the numerous charters incorporating the cities and villages in this state, and read the powers conferred, generally, upon the mayor &c. or trustees, to be exercised, in the language of the opinion in Conrad v. The Trustees of the Village of Ithaca, by them, “as the agents of the corporation in such a form as to make the latter responsible for their acts or omissions according to the law of master and servant.” I am inclined to think that the learned justice did not intend to maintain such a position. It was not necessary to the decision of the case, nor to the position that the liability of corporations has its foundation in contract express or implied; nor do the cases cited by him inculcate such a principle. If the obligation arises out of contract, then we must, of course, ascertain what the contract is, and this at once presents the question of construction in all cases where the contract is to be found in the statute. In Henly v. The Mayor &c. of Lyme, (5 Bing. 91,) cited by the learned justice, the contract clearly appeared. It was contained in a grant made by the
How I admit the language of our statutes relating to highways and bridges, is sufficiently comprehensive to justify a construction raising an imperative duty on the part of commissioners of highways to cause the highways to be kept in repair. Indeed the reading of the statute is, that it shall be their duty to cause the highways and bridges to be kept in repair. (1 R. S. 508, § 1.) And yet, notwithstanding such injunction, it has been almost universally understood in this state, since the decision of Bartlett v. Crozier, (17 John. 438,) that no action would lie against commissioners of highways for an omission of the duty as enjoined in the statute. Chancellor Kent, as a member of the court for the correction of errors, discussed the question very elaborately, and went fully into the English law, in his opinion, from p. 451 to 461. After stating that there is no certain stable absolute duty in the case, he adds: “It is not like the case of an individual bound by a private statute, or by a certain tenure, to keep a road or bridge in repair, nor like the case of turnpike companies. There the duty is perfect, and binding at all times, and is founded on a valuable consideration. The roads and bridges must, at all events, be kept in repair according to ordinary diligence. It is a condition of the grant. The duty is not casual or contingent, but inevitable. In the case, however, of these commissioners and overseers, the duty depends upon a train of circumstances: it is very indefinite, and is varied and regulated by discretion. There is not that precision and certainty of duty that ought to make them responsible to individuals, to any extent, and for any damage. The law hás not supplied them with pecuniary means, or armed them with coercive power requisite to meet and sustain such an enormous and dangerous responsibility.” We here see the ground upon which the chancellor placed his opinion, and I shall have occasion to refer to this extract hereafter. I will here remark that he was giving construction to the statute, and
Why should the statute receive a construction different, when applied to a municipal corporation, from that given to it when applied to commissioners of highways ? For, before the liability of either, to a private action, can be established, the duty, certain, stable and absolute, or in the language of some of the judges, absolute and imperative, not discretionary or judicial, must be found. When so found, either from the nature of the case, or from the construction given to a statute, the liability for a neglect to perform the duty may, in a proper case, exist. As I understand the cases referred to by the learned judge, they do not sustain the position upon which I am remarking. They contain no intimation that the same statute may be so construed as to impose an imperative duty upon a municipal corporation, in the form of a contract, where such duty would not exist when the same statute is applied to public officers, hi or do I find any such distinction in the English cases. I agree that by the common law, grantees of franchises, whether corporations or individuals, have been held to a strict performance of every condition of the grant, either express or implied ; • and that the grantee of a ferry is bound to keep and maintain a suitable boat, and the grantee of the right to erect a bridge or construct a turnpike road and take toll, to keep such bridge or road in repair, whether so expressed in the charter or not. And I consent that this obligation or duty arises out of contract founded on a valuable consideration. The grantees have the exclusive privilege of taking tolls, and the privileges conferred upon them are for the mutual benefit of themselves and the public. Chancellor Kent, in the opinion referred to, speaks of this class of cases. But the question constantly recurs, what are the duties imposed, and what are their character, imperative or discretionary ? And what are the conditions of the grant, as expressed or implied ? The duty sometimes arises out of a simple power, or authority to do a thing, and
If it be conceded that an action will lie at the suit of an individual, sustaining peculiar damages, against an officer or corporation, for an omission to perform a duty enjoined by law, it must of course be first established that the duty has been imposed absolutely and imperatively. So, I insist, are all the authorities. This of course brings us to the statute— our highway act—and I have said above, its general language might have been construed as imposing an imperative duty to cause the highways to be kept in repair. But in considering the entire statute, and the system it establishes, it was decided more than thirty years ago, that no such imperative duty was imposed. The question was elaborately considered by Chancellor Kent, in Bartlett v. Crozier, (supra.) And the views expressed by him have been concurred in and approved more than a fourth of a century, and I am not aware of any authority to the contrary. The case in 3 Hill, (supra,) had reference to the repairing of sewers, and many satisfactory reasons may exist for holding a city that has constructed sewers, bound imperatively to keep them in repair so that they shall not become nuisances, when such reason may not exist for holding a city, village or town, imperatively bound to keep the streets and highways in repair. Justice Selden, in West v. The Trustees of the Village of Brockport, held that town commissioners of highways were'not Hable, but that a municipal corporation to which the statute was appHed might be Hable. This latter position was not necessary to the decision of the case, as the case came clearly within The
Marvin, Davis and Grover, Justices.]
In the case under consideration it was a side-walk that was out of repair. The power given'to the trustees, or the defendant, over this subject, is specified in the statute, and is clearly discretionary. It is independent of the powers and duties pertaining to commissioners of highways, as their powers and duties relate to highways and bridges, and not to side-walks in incorporated villages. I do not regard Hickok v. The Trustees of the Village of Plattsburgh as in point. But Cole v. The Village of Medina is. A new trial is denied, and judgment ordered for the defendant.