16 App. D.C. 323 | D.C. Cir. | 1900
delivered the opinion of the Court:
Upon the exception taken by the plaintiff to the ruling of the court below, and the assignments of error founded thereon, two principal questions are presented for determination : (1) Whether the Metropolitan police organization of the District of Columbia is a branch of the municipal organization known as the District of Columbia, or a distinct
1. Whatever may have been the legal relations between the District of Columbia as a municipality and the organization of the Metropolitan police force of the District prior to the act of Congress of June 11,1878 (20 Stat. 102), which established a permanent form of government for the District of Columbia, we are satisfied that, since the passage of that act, the police organization has been merged in that of the municipality. By the sixth section of the act of June 11, 1878, two previously existing independent or semi-independent organizations of governmental character, and apparently the only organizations of the kind that then remained in existence, the board of Metropolitan police and the board of school trustees, both of which had maintained a separate existence, not only from the old corporations of Washington and Georgetown, and the levy court of the county of Washington, but likewise from the subsequent municipality which succeeded these under the act of February 21, 1871, the District of Columbia, were abolished, and their powers and duties were transferred to the Commissioners of the District
By the express provisions of the act it was determined by Congress that the District of Columbia should “remain and continue a municipal corporation,” as constituted by the act of February 21, 1871 (16 Stat. 419); and that the Commissioners provided for in the act and in whom the charge and control of the affairs of the municipality should be vested, were to “be deemed and taken as officers of such corporation.” Yet not a single power of any kind is given by express terms in that statute to the corporation thus continued in existence. By the act of February 21, 1871, by which the District of Columbia had been created a corporation for municipal purposes, it had received the usual corporate powers to “contract and be contracted with, sue and be sued, plead and be impleaded, and have a seal,” and a further very general grant to “exercise all other powers of a municipal corporation, not inconsistent with the Constitution and laws of the United States and the provisions of this act.” And it received what was designated and understood to be a territorial organization of government to carry these powers into effect. With the repeal and overthrow of the territorial organization, first by the temporary expedient of the act of June 20, 1874 (18 Stat. 116), and afterwards by the permanent arrangement under the act of. June 11,
When the Congress transfers the control and management of the police force to the Commissioners, why should not the grant of authority here also be construed as being made to them as the officers and agents of the municipality of the District of Columbia for the use and benefit of such municipality? Congress itself has expressly provided that the Commissioners are to be deemed and taken as officers of such corporation; and this is equivalent to a command that, in the construction of its own enactments the Commissioners are to be construed as receiving for the corporation all powers conferred upon them, and not otherwise.
It is very evident that it was the purpose of Congress in the act of June 11, 1878, to consolidate all the branches of municipal and local government in the District of Columbia in the hands of the Commissioners as administrators of the municipality, and to put an end to all independent or semi-independent organizations exercising governmental or municipal functions within the territory of this District. And when such was the evident purpose, we do not see why a strained construction should be given to its enactments that would tend to defeat or thwart that purpose, and re-establish
While perhaps none of the cases cited on behalf of the appellant on this branch of the case is directly upon the point here considered, it is clear to us that the rulings in all of them tend to sustain the contention of the appellant in this regard. Barnes v. Dist. of Col., 91 U. S. 540; Eckloff v. Dist. of Col., 135 U. S. 240; Dist of Col. v. Woodbury, 136 U. S. 450; Dist. of Col. v. Hutton, 143 U. S. 18; Dist. of Col. v. Bailey, 171 U. S. 161. In one of these cases, that of Eckloff v. Dist. of Col., the Supreme Court of the United States said :
“When to a board having general administrative supervision of the affairs of a community and with plenary power in the matter of the appointment and removal of subordinates, is added the control of another department, and no express words of limitation are found in the act making the transfer, it is to be presumed that such board has the same plenary power in respect of this new department, and is not hampered by limitations attached to the board which theretofore had control of it. The presumption against implied repeal obtaining, in the construction of ordinary statutes yields to the inferences arising from the subject matter of legislation. Plenary powers having been found by experience valuable in the management of affairs already under the control of the board, the transfer of another department to the same control carries with it a strong implication that the added department is subject to the same plenary powers. The primary thought is not a mere transfer of authority, but the bringing of the added department within the control of the general supervising board. It is a unity of administration, and not change of commission.
“ But our conclusions are not controlled by this construction alone. The court below placed its decision on what we conceive to be the true significance of the act of 1878. As said by that court, it is to be regarded as an organic act, intended to dispose of the whole question of a government
In view of these considerations, we conclude that it was the intention of Congress, in the sixth section of the act of June 11, 1878, to make the management and control of the Metropolitan police of the District of Columbia an integral part of the municipality, and intrusted as such to the Commissioners as the administrators of the affairs of the municipality; and that such was the effect of the statute. The action of the Commissioners in the premises is, therefore, the action of the municipality.
2. But greater reliance seems to be placed by the appellee upon the proposition that the District of Columbia is exempt from liability in this case in consequence of the nature of the duties exercised by the police force, which are claimed to be governmental or public duties, and not duties of a merely municipal character.
In the exercise of the powers conferred by the State upon municipal organizations the distinction between purely municipal functions and governmental duties is undoubtedly well established, with the resulting consequence that, while the municipality is held to liability in the courts of law in
The mere maintainance or location of an ambulance stable, although possibly annoying and inconvenient to the residents of a neighborhood, may not of itself be held to be a nuisance, since it is a necessary and proper appliance of governmental authority; but the negligent, improper, and
3. That the District of Columbia is liable for the existence and maintainance of this nuisance, if nuisance there is, which of course remains to be established, seems to us to be very plain. Even if the contention of the appellee were well founded, that the control of the Metropolitan police force did not become a municipal function by virtue of the act of June 11, 1878, and that the duties of the police force were purely governmental, yet we would not hesitate to hold the District of Columbia liable as a municipality in this case. We would regard it as an absurdity to hold that the Commissioners, as administrators of the affairs of the District of Columbia, and- as such authorized and required to abate nuisances within the territorial limits of the District, were without control over themselves as administrators of the police force to prevent or abate this nuisance. It is conceded, or at least it must be conceded, that, if a nuisance exists here, the Commissioners, as a board of police, permit, and therefore authorize, its maintainance. It would be a mere'juggling with phrases to say that the Commissioners, as the executive officers of the municipality, for whose action or inaction the municipality is responsible, were powerless to abate the nuisance.
But not only the reason of the thing, but the express provisions of statutory law, require that the District of Columbia be held to liability in this case. Section 371 of the Devised Statutes of the United States for the District of Columbia, which is section 16 of the act of August 16, 1861 (12 Stat. 323), which is the act that first organized the Metropolitan police force, provides that “ it shall be the duty of the proper authorities of the District to provide, at the expense of the cities of Washington and Georgetown respectively, all necessary accommodations within their respective
Some argument has been based upon the theory that a municipality can not be held liable at the suit of a private person for the failure to perform a public duty, when it receives no profit or special advantage to itself from the performance of such public duty. But the matter of profit or absence of profit has no place in the present case. A municipality owning property stands in no different position from a natural person in respect of the duty not to permit it to become a nuisance. It would be strange indeed if the question of the liability of a municipality for a
From what we have said it follows, in our opinion, that there was error in the ruling of the court below in directing a verdict for the defendant, and in entering judgment thereon. The judgment of that court must, therefore, be reversed; and the cause will be remanded, with directions to vacate such judgment, to set aside the verdict, and for further proceedings in the cause according to law. And it is so ordered.