172 Iowa 81 | Iowa | 1915
I. Plaintiff claims that a defect existed in one of the highways of defendant county, over which its board of supervisors had assumed jurisdiction under the new road law, as a part of the county road system; that this defect consisted in the washing out of a fill in a ravine, which was crossed by the highway, which washout the defendant county was attempting to obviate by the establishment of a new highway. This new highway was acquired by consent, and as it crossed the ravine hitherto mentioned, it was necessary to construct a bridge over it. The county entered upon the new highway and proceeded to grade the same by day labor and to construct a temporary bridge over the ravine.
Plaintiff alleged that the defendants, and each of them, carelessly and negligently improved and constructed that portion of the said county road so that there' was nothing on the surface of the ground between the said sharp curve and the banks of the said ditch to indicate to the traveler that he had left the road and was on the ground between the road and said ditch; that defendants negligently constructed the said road up to within twenty feet of the bank of said ditch and then caused the same to turn sharply to the south and run along the bank of said ditch to the said temporary bridge, and, after crossing the said bridge, to run along the opposite bank of said ditch in a northerly' direction, when a sharp curve was again made directly opposite the point where the aforementioned sharp curve was made; that the said defendants, and each of them, negligently and carelessly opened the said road for travel before the completion of a permanent
Plaintiff further alleges that, long prior to the 16th day of August, 1913, the above named individual defendants, and each of them, were orally warned, as aforesaid, that, unless some obstruction, guard or signal was erected in said road at said point, there was a likelihood that travelers along the said road would be precipitated into said ditch and either injured or killed; but that, notwithstanding the said warning, the said defendants, and each of them, negligently failed and refused to provide any obstruction, guard, or signal whatsoever for the protection of travelers along said road, as aforesaid, and negligently failed and refused to provide any obstruction or warning of any character to indicate the location of said ditch or of said temporary bridge; that no written notice of the dangerous condition of the said road, as aforesaid, was given to any of the above named defendants. It is further alleged that plaintiff’s intestate, who was in an automobile driven by one Clifford Townsend, was injured and afterward died as a result of the driver’s running his machine into the said open ditch, without any fault or negligence on his part.
“Counties are involuntary political or civil divisions of the state, created by general statutes, to aid in the administration of government. They are essentially public in their character and purposes. They are simply governmental auxiliaries, created bodies corporate ‘for civil and political purposes only. Rev. 221. To the statute they owe their creation, and the statute confers upon them all the powers which they possess, prescribes all the duties which they owe, and imposes all the liabilities to which they are subject. To enable them the better to exercise their powers and discharge their duties, our statute clothes them with corporate capacity. Considered with respect to their powers, duties and liabilities, they stand low down in the scale or grade of corporate existences. It is for this reason that they are ranked among what have been styled quasi corporations. This designation is employed to distinguish them from private corporations aggregate, and from municipal corporations proper, such as cities, acting under general or special charters, more amply endowed with corporate life and functions, conferred in general at*86 the request of the inhabitants of the municipality for their peculiar and special advantage and convenience. The decisions of the courts in every state of the Union, recognizing this distinction, hold incorporated cities and towns to. a much more extended liability than they do counties, school and road districts, even where the latter are declared to be invested with corporate' capacity. Thus, incorporated cities and towns, wherever they are invested by their organic or constituent acts with general supervision and control over their streets, with power to grade and to improve them, and with the power to levy taxes or raise revenue, which may be used for the purposes of such repair, are held liable, without any statute expressly giving the action, for injuries caused by unsafe and defective streets. . . . (Citing authority.) On the other hand, the decisions are almost (though not wholly) uniform to the effect that counties and other quasi corporations are not liable to private actions for the neglect of their officers in respect to highways, unless the statute has in so many words created the liability, specially giving the action to the party injured. (Citing authority.) . . . The opinion of the court is that the court below rightly held that the county was not liable to the plaintiff in respect to the injury for which his- action was brought. If the county ought to be held liable in such a case, the remedy must be sought from the legislature.”
It is needless to quote from the other cases, although it may be said that Packard v. Voltz, supra, is so nearly like' this one in its facts that the principle announced must govern here.
The new road law (chapter 122 of the Acts of the 35th G. A.) authorizes and requires counties to establish county roads, and requires them to construct these roads and to erect the necessary bridges and culverts according to approved plans.
The defendant county was in the exercise of its powers upon the road in question, and. it must be assumed that its
Appellant contends, however, that the county should be held liable on the same theory that it is responsiblé for the construction, maintenance, and repair of county bridges; and it must be confessed that the analogy is quite close. But this court, in adopting the rule of liability for defective bridges, did not follow the general rule then existing in other jurisdictions, and has, since its adoption, persistently and consistently refused to enlarge the same. See cases hitherto cited. It has refused to apply it to county jails and courthouses, to ditches and drains constructed by legislative authority, and to the care of paupers and insane; and it may well be affirmed that county bridges constitute the only exception in this state to the rule of non-liability.
The trial court was right in sustaining the demurrers - and its judgment is — Affirmed.