55 N.Y.S. 889 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
This action was brought to recover for injuries-claimed to have been inflicted upon the plaintiff by an ash and garbage cart belonging to the street-cleaning department of the defendant, which was being driven along Manhattan street. The jury rendered a verdict for the plaintiff- for the sum of $500. -The plaintiff was seeking to board a street car at the time that she was struck by the cart. The conductor testified that the cart was marked with the marks of the department, and he identified the person who was driving the cart at the time. The driver of the cart testified that he was in the employ of the department on the day in question, though he denied that any accident such as claimed by the plaintiff had happened. The plaintiff was not concluded by the denial of the driver as to the occurrence of the accident. She might well ask the jury to believe his testimony that he was in the employ of the city at the time, and to disbelieve his statement that the cart had not struck her. The evidence was, therefore, sufficient to support the verdict of the jury, and the order appealed from can only be sustained on the ground that in the service which the driver of the cart was performing at the time the defendant was not liable for his acts.
It cannot be expected, nor would it be profitable, that we should review from the earliest time the development of the law on the liability of municipal corporations for the torts of their servants or officers. The law on this subject is not the same in all the states, and it doubtless rests in many cases- upon distinctions that are wholly artificial and on legal fictions. Nevertheless, the principles of such liability and the classes of cases in which the municipality will be held liable and those in which it will be held exempt from liability in this state are well settled by authority, and we may safely start in the present discussion with the case of Maxmilian v. Mayor, etc., 62 N. Y. 160. There the court said:
“There are two kinds of duties which are imposed upon a municipal corporation: One is of that kind which arises from the grant of a special power, in the exercise of which the municipality is as a legal individual; the other is of that kind which arises, or is implied, from the use of political rights under the general law, in the exercise of which it is as a sovereign. The former power is private, and is used for private purposes; the latter is public,. and is used for public purposes.”
In the first case the municipality is liable for the torts of its officers and servants; in the second not. Accordingly, it has been held that a municipal corporation is not liable for the acts of its police officers, its commissioners of charities, its board of education, its health authorities, and generally for officers engaged in such duties or such governmental functions as the state assumes to discharge throughout its whole territory. But the duties which the law considers as imposed
“First, governmental duties, which have been delegated to the city or town by the people, acting through the legislature, and which, though performed within circumscribed territorial limits, serve to benefit the people of the state, and in the carrying out of which the municipal corporation is only an agent of the state; secondly, quasi private duties, to be exercised for the peculiar advantage of the municipal locality and its inhabitants, and exclusive of any benefit to be conferred upon any person outside of the corporate jurisdiction."
The question, then, is presented, into which class does the duty imposed by law upon the city of New York to remove the dirt accumulating on the streets, and ashes and garbage from the abutting residences, fall? That duty is imposed by section 704 of chapter 269 of the Laws of 1892, commonly called the “Consolidation Act”: “And to remove from said city or otherwise dispose of, as often as the public health and use of the streets may require, all street sweepings, ashes and garbage and to remove the newly fallen snow from leading thoroughfares and such other streets and avenues as may be found practicable.” The learned counsel for the respondents contends that this is a police regulation, imposed in the interest of public health; that it is governmental, as distinguished from municipal or corporate. The learned trial court upheld this claim so far as the obligation of the city to remove snow, ashes, and garbage is involved, and held that, as the case failed to show in what particular work the driver and vehicle were employed,—whether that of cleaning the streets or of removing ashes,—the defendants were not liable. This ruling is in accordance with the decisions in Bishop v. City of New York, 21 Misc. Rep. 598, 48 N. Y. Supp. 141, and Davidson v. City of New York, 24 Misc. Rep. 560, 54 N. Y. Supp. 51. It has also the support of two cases in other states. In Love v. City of Atlanta, 95 Ga. 129, 22 S. E. 29, it was held that the removal of garbage from the street was the exercise of a purely governmental function, affecting the welfare of the citizens of the state generally; and that a municipal corporation was not liable for the acts of employés engaged in the discharge of such work. In Connelly v. Mayor, etc. (Tenn. Sup.) 46 S. W. 566, substantially the same doctrine of nonliability was held by the courts of "Tennessee in the case of a watering cart engaged in sprinkling the
The order appealed from should be reversed, and judgment ordered on the verdict, with costs to the appellant. All concur.