Rae v. Mayor of Flint

51 Mich. 526 | Mich. | 1883

Guayes, 0. J.

The plaintiff acted for many weeks, as a nurse of small-pox patients in the city of Flint. The service was onerous, responsible and dangerous. She charged the city for it, and called for payment which was refused. She sued and obtained a verdict. The jury found, on satisfactory evidence, that her employment was by authority of the common council and that she rendered the service on the faith of that employment.

The only question open to discussion is whether the procurement of her assistance was within the power of the council. If it was, the cityls liable and the judgment is regular.

' In the course of the argument several statutes have been referred to. The citations need not be repeated. The power is not left to implication. The law is express. In the first place, the charter requires 'the common council to .adopt measures for the preservation of the public health, and specifies as one of those measures the institution of a ■board of health. Act 372 of 1867 see. 19. In the next place it is provided by a general act that in any city where no board of health is actually organized, the duties, powers and functions shall belong to the mayor and aldermen. Pub. Acts 1879, Act 145, amending the general law. The city of Flint did not see fit to create a board of health as a ■distinct agency, but elected the policy authorized by the statute of 1879. The whole duty and the whole anthority remain, therefore, in the common council. No part of either was transferred. The duty to guard the public Jieaith and prevent the spread of contagion was imperative, *528and the power of the common council was commensurate with the duty. Neither the power nor the obligation could be lessened by the failure to designate a sub-agency.

An objection is raised that the persons cared for were of' sufficient ability to defray all the expense, and that the plaintiff should be required to obtain her compensation from them, and a provision in the general statute is cited. Comp.. L. § 1706.

It is not admitted that this provision is operative in the city of Flint. But if it is, it will not sustain the point for which it is cited. In providing that what is done shall be at the charge of individuals, it is not intended to exempt the public from immediate liability. It would be impossible under such a regulation to effectuate the general object.. Individuals would not be willing to provide necessaries and' serve as nurses and assistants, at the instance of the public,, if compelled to collect their pay of the patients or their relatives. The public is first and immediately responsible,, and the intent of the statute is to enable the public to obtain reimbursement from those who ought to 'sustain the' expense.

The plaintiff hired herself to the city. She trusted the-city and no one else. The occasion was a public one. It was an emergency to which the duty and authority of the-common council attached under the power of police, and the right and duty to act depended in no manner on the-pecuniary ability of the persons who were sick or infected.. The great object was to stay the contagion, and the proper and humane care of the individuals was a righteous incident. The question is not affected by any of the other provisions. "We are satisfied that the council was fully authorized to-employ the plaintiff, and that the city is liable.

The judgment should be affirmed with costs.

The other Justices concurred.