163 N.E. 361 | Ill. | 1928
This writ of certiorari granted on the petition of the city of Chicago brings before us for review the record of a judgment of the Appellate Court for the First District affirming a judgment of the circuit court of Cook county against the city for negligently causing the death of Marie Roumbos, and the question presented is whether the city is liable for damages caused by the negligence of an employee of the street-cleaning department of the city in performing his duty. *72
Marie Roumbos, a little girl four years old, was living with her parents on the second floor of a building which stood on the north side of Hope street, flush with the sidewalk. She was sitting at the edge of the sidewalk, on the lower step of the stairway leading from the second floor to the street. A street sweeper in the employ of the city swept a pile of trash, shown to be about one or two feet high and three feet in circumference, to the curb, about five or six feet from the house, set fire to it and went away. The wind blew the flame across the sidewalk. It caught the child's dress and she was so badly burned that she died the same day. The city introduced no evidence but at the close of the plaintiff's evidence moved for an instructed verdict in its favor. The motion being denied, the cause was submitted on the evidence for the plaintiff and a verdict for $5000 was returned, upon which judgment was rendered.
The first count of the four in the declaration was based on an ordinance which the court did not admit in evidence and therefore need not be considered. The fourth count alleged that the fire was attractive to children and the child was attracted by it and unavoidably came in contact with it. This count is not sustained by the evidence. The second and third counts allege the wrongful and negligent starting of the fire in the street and negligently leaving it unguarded. The plaintiff in error argues that these counts do not state a cause of action because they do not state facts showing that the servants of the city, in doing the acts complained of, acted within the scope of their authority or that such acts were not in the performance of a governmental function. The defendant having filed a plea of the general issue after its general demurrer to the declaration was overruled, thereby admitted the sufficiency of the declaration and waived its right to assign error on the overruling of the demurrer, but the objection that the declaration was not sufficient to sustain the judgment was still *73 open to it. In the consideration of the question in this court, however, the rule which prevails on the consideration of a demurrer that the pleading is to be taken most strongly against the pleader is reversed and the pleading upon which the judgment is based will be liberally construed to sustain the judgment.
The third count stated that the defendant, by its agents and servants acting within the scope of their employment, kindled a fire of large quantities of rubbish, paper and other combustible material in the street, and it is said that the allegation that the servants were acting within the scope of their authority states nothing but a conclusion. Assuming, but not deciding, this statement to be correct, it was still an ultimate conclusion of fact, to be shown by the evidence, whether the act was within the scope of the employment of the servants or not. Even if the fact be regarded as defectively or improperly stated, the question was presented and the defendant accepted the issue offered by filing the general issue, which required proof of the fact thus defectively or imperfectly stated, without which it is not to be presumed that the judge would have directed or the jury given a verdict for the plaintiff. In such case the defect in the declaration is aided by the verdict. It is further insisted that if the count is not bad for this reason it is still defective for want of an allegation that the servants in kindling the fire were not performing a governmental function. The allegation is that the servants, while acting within the scope of their employment, kindled the fire of divers large quantities of rubbish, paper and other combustible material in the street, and after verdict this implies that in the course of their employment they were gathering and disposing of the material in the process of cleaning the street. This presents the real question in the case — whether the city is liable for the negligence of its employees engaged in cleaning the streets. *74
There was evidence tending to show that the fire was started by a street sweeper employed by the plaintiff in error in cleaning the street, who in the course of his employment collected his sweepings together in a pile and set fire to them, causing the death of the defendant in error's intestate, and the judgment of the trial court entered on the verdict of the jury and affirmed by the Appellate Court is therefore binding upon the plaintiff in error as to the facts. If the plaintiff in error were a private corporation it would clearly be liable for the injury under the doctrine of respondeatsuperior. There is a material distinction, however, in the applicability of this doctrine in the case of municipal corporations, which are not, in general, liable to a private action for damages caused by the negligence of their agents or servants in the performance of the governmental powers of such corporations unless such action is specially authorized by statute, while they are liable for injuries negligently caused by their employees while engaged in duties of a private or local nature not involving the exercise of governmental power. The division of municipal functions into public and governmental on the one hand and private and corporate on the other is not well defined but is vague and indefinite. No definition of the terms has been declared which is of much practical value or "which will precisely embrace torts for which a civil action will lie, in the absence of a statute declaring the liability against a municipal corporation." (4 Dillon on Mun. Corp. ___ 5th ed. ___ sec. 1625.) It has been said that all that can be done with safety is to determine each case as it arises. (Lloyd v. New York,
The principle upon which municipal corporations, such as villages, towns and cities, incorporated by special charters or voluntarily organized under general laws, are held liable to individuals injured by the negligent acts of their agents and servants in respect to corporate duties, while public involuntary quasi corporations, such as counties, townships, school districts and road districts, are not liable to respond *76
in damages in a civil action for negligence in the performance of public duties unless such action is given by the statute, was considered in Elmore v. Drainage Comrs.
Cities become incorporated by the voluntary act of their inhabitants, for the benefit of the territory incorporated and the people residing within the corporation. By their incorporation they receive certain powers and privileges and assume certain duties and obligations. So far as they are exercising these privileges and duties in the interest of the general public (the people of the State at large) they represent the sovereignty of the State and are not liable for the *78 negligence of their officers and agents in the performance of such duties, but so far as their acts concern merely the interest of the particular locality and its inhabitants they are responsible, the same as private corporations. The legislature has the power, within constitutional limitations, to determine to what extent the city shall be liable for injuries negligently committed by its officers and agents in the exercise of its powers. "The rule of law is a general one that the superior or employer must himself respond civilly for the negligence or want of skill of his agent or servant in the course or line of his employment by which another who is free from contributory fault is injured." (2 Dillon on Mun. Corp. sec. 968.) The application of this rule to municipal corporations in cases of torts by their employees and servants tends more to the securing of justice than the release of the corporations from the results which follow for private corporations or individuals.
It has always been the doctrine of this court that while the legal obligation of a city to construct gutters and sewers is one which is voluntarily assumed, yet having assumed the obligation and constructed these improvements for the benefit of the public it then becomes the duty of the city to see that they are kept in repair. (City of Chicago v. Seben,
"Seventh. To lay out, to establish, open, alter, widen, extend, grade, pave or otherwise improve streets, alleys, avenues, sidewalks, wharves, parks and public grounds, and vacate the same. * * *
"Eighth. To plant trees upon the same.
"Ninth. To regulate the use of the same.
"Tenth. To prevent and remove encroachments or obstructions upon the same. *79
"Eleventh. To provide for the lighting of the same.
"Twelfth. To provide for the cleansing of the same.
"Thirteenth. To regulate the openings therein for the laying of gas or water mains and pipes, and the building and repairing of sewers, tunnels and drains, and erecting gas lights."
Under these clauses of the statute we have held the city liable for negligence in the construction of a sewer, (City ofChicago v. Seben, supra;) in the construction of a city hall, (City of Chicago v. Dermody,
The clauses which have been quoted from section 1 of article 5 of the Cities and Villages act all refer in the same way to the same subject — the care and maintenance of the streets. If in laying out, establishing, opening, altering, widening, extending, grading, paving or otherwise improving the street the city was in the exercise not of governmental functions but of a corporate or private function and was liable for an injury occasioned by its negligence, and if in removing an obstruction from the street it was liable, and if in the construction of sewers it was liable, and if in placing and maintaining electric wires for lighting the street it was liable for the negligence of its employees, no reason is apparent why it was not liable to a person *80 injured by their negligence in planting trees upon the street, or stringing electric wires for lighting the street, or cleansing the street, under powers granted for the same purpose and in the same language.
A city in the use of the police powers conferred upon it by the legislature does not act in its private capacity or in the local interest but in the exercise of a governmental function — a part of the political and governmental authority of the State and in the general public interest — and it is therefore not liable for the acts of its officers in the enforcement of police regulations. So it has been held that an incorporated town is not liable for the imprisonment of a person by one of its officers upon a verbal order of a police magistrate for a violation of an ordinance, (Town of Odell v. Schroeder,
The fire department maintained by a municipal corporation is also regarded as belonging to the public or governmental branch of the municipality so as to relieve the municipality of liability for injuries to person or property resulting from the negligence of officers or employees connected with the maintenance and operation of the department. (Wilcox v. City ofChicago,
Police regulations include ordinances passed for the purpose of securing the safety, health, welfare and good order of the public, and persons charged officially with the execution and enforcement of such orders are engaged in the performance of a public duty, and the city, under whose authority they act, is not liable for injuries negligently caused by them in the performance of such duties. The erection and maintenance by a city on its property of a small-pox hospital gives no right of action to a person owning other property in the vicinity for damages to its value. (Frazer v. City of Chicago,
It is argued that the city was acting under the police power for the preservation of the public health by causing the streets to be cleaned. The language of the Court of Appeals of New York in an action brought against the city of New York to recover damages for the death of a child run over and killed by an ash-cart of the cleaning department of the city is a fitting answer to this argument: "The fact that the discharge of this duty might incidentally benefit the public health did not make the acts of the commissioner of street-cleaning a public function. It is clear upon principle and authority that the city of New York in the ordinary and usual care of its streets, both as to repairs *83
and cleanliness, is acting in the discharge of a special power granted to it by the legislature, in the exercise of which it is a legal individual, as distinguished from its governmental functions, when it acts as a sovereign." (Missano v. City ofNew York,
It is argued that the great weight of authority in the decisions of the courts of final jurisdiction in other States is contrary to the conclusion we have reached. We have not overlooked or failed to consider those decisions. Those denying the liability of the city are more numerous than those to the contrary, but in our judgment the view which we have expressed is sustained not only by our own decisions but by the better reason and is more just in its operation than the other view.
Some objections were made to instructions. They were based on the plaintiff in error's theory of the case that it was not liable under the law, and it is unnecessary to discuss them.
The judgment is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.